ravine saab

Ravine Saab is thirty-five acres of sub-tropical forest on the Carribean island of St Lucia which was planted many years ago as a coconut and citrus plantation. It has been little harvested or maintained in recent years. The Ravine Saab Collective currently comprises 4 people - one from St Lucia and 3 from England - who would like to use this area for sustainable production of fruit, vegetables and flowers. Produce already available includes coconuts, grapefruit, oranges, avocadoes, mangoes, yams, breadfruit and cashew nuts. There is also a flower garden of tropical lilies. Both the orchards and the flower garden can be expanded. This would not involve removing any trees but clearing of fast-growing bamboo. There are two buildings already on the site and an abundance of wild and cultivated food for workers. Further buildings can be constructed from bamboo. The aim is to disturb the forest as little as possible. There is a supply of clean river water which is suitable for drinking and there are places to swim nearby. The Ravine Saab farm is very remote at 45 minutes walk from the nearest road.

 

Many St Lucians are concerned about economic dependence on producing bananas for the world market which involves unhealthy and unsustainable farming practices and does not provide a reliable income due to worldwide capital shifts. Our project will demonstrate a more sustainable alternative and one of our aims is to generate enough income to employ local workers at a fair wage. Income will be generated by selling produce to local hotels, health food shops and at market. We will consider obtaining organic and fair-trade certification to export to the USA. A possible side project is cultivation and processing of medicinal plants. This has been done in rainforest projects in Brazil and Costa Rica.

 

The three English volunteers will be leaving for St Lucia in early November. Two of the volunteers are vegan and all food cooked communally on the farm will be vegan. We are looking for other volunteers to join us in this exciting project which will help to build a model for sustainable production in sub-tropical forests and provide an opportunity to taste the life of nature's abundance in the world's most hospitable climate zone.

 

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the farm

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the island of st lucia

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