← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by Tara A. Inniss. PhD (UWI) MSD (UNSW) BA (York). Department of History and Philosophy, Cave Hill Campus, The University of the West Indies, Barbados, innisst@yahoo.com, The History Forum Blog

When Gabby wrote ‘Jack’ in the early 1980s, he was responding to hoteliers asserting their rights over beach front property. Some almost 40 years later, Barbadians have felt secure in the notion that ‘The Beach Belong to We’. But no more. Many downplay beach access issues proclaiming that beaches in Barbados are public. However, we have witnessed increasing tension among property owners, watersports operators and beachgoers over the past 5-10 years with property owners asserting their rights over beach space above the high-water mark. But, to me, a disturbing trend has been the use of lines of (usually empty) beach chairs that create an artificial barrier (like a wall or fence) between beach users and properties. One only has to look at the aerial drone footage of beaches like the Crane, Mullins and even Carlisle Bay for evidence of this phenomenon. I believe that it is a way for property owners or even beach chair operators to conduct a ‘land grab’ at the expense of beach users. Although some complain that watersports operators harass their patrons, which is a legitimate concern, the majority of beach users pose little harm to their businesses.

In the context of access to recreational space, Barbados’ beaches have historically been the one of the few refuges that Barbadians have had access to for sporting activity and relaxation since Independence. Given the high incidence of Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases (CNCDs), these spaces are very important to providing access to free physical activity such as swimming, beach cricket, running, walking, etc. which Barbadians need to prevent diseases such as diabetes, obesity and hypertension. Access to these spaces and activities should not be limited because of predatory business practices which privilege the needs of the visitor over the Barbadian. Also, given that beach chairs are being used in this way, we should ask ourselves if a lazy day at the beach for the visitor should be prioritized over the potentially active lifestyles that we want Barbadian families to pursue.

Moreover, given our changing coastline, beach erosion is a severe and ongoing problem for property owners and insurers. We only have to look at the high surf conditions experienced in recent weeks to see the damage that is done to coastal properties which extend their structures on to beach spaces because the high water mark has altered over time. Carlisle Bay is a good example. When the Deep Water Harbour was built in the 1960s, it changed the entire coastline of Carlisle Bay with now increasing land accretion due to sand depositing in the Bay — but that is only one hurricane or storm surge away from changing and given the threat of Climate Change, Government should be making a move to ensure that coastal properties are protected — not expanded into beach zones! There is an economic and environmental cost to all of us when unregulated coastal development occurs.

I have done some quick research on how this matter has been dealt with in some jurisdictions. When concerns are raised, the use of beach frontage can be curtailed or regulated by the state through by-laws or other legislation.

In 2015, in a Florida town, residents complained about a similar phenomenon being promoted among condominium developments along the beach. The City intervened and only a percentage of beach frontage could be used for the purpose of beach chair provision. Since then, tensions have decreased significantly. http://www.nwfdailynews.com/1.488270 In Barbados’ case, we may wish to pursue a similar provision which allows only a certain percentage of beach frontage to be reserved for beach chair use and only when that is satisfied can property owners put out more chairs within the boundary of their properties.

Other jurisdictions go much further. In Phuket, Thailand, officials conducted a ‘Beach Clean Up’ meaning that ALL structures, temporary amenities (beach chairs, etc) were to be removed from the island’s beaches leaving them clutter free http://www.phuket.com/phuket-magazine/phuket-beaches-clean-up.htm. In Australia, nothing permanent is allowed on beaches including beach chair rental although some jurisdictions are experimenting with this kind of rental enterprise within regulations. http://www.bobinoz.com/blog/18397/whats-really-different-about-the-beaches-in-australia/. I think these measures might be too restrictive especially to the small beach chair concessionaire, but they do indicate that some major popular tourism destinations take a hardline.

These are matters that should be taken up with haste with the National Conservation Commission (NCC) and it would not be the first time that they were asked to help regulate the beach chair situation. With increased tourism development along the island’s coastline and our current economic, social and health challenges, regulation of beach spaces is an important consideration.

Photo credit of featured image: ecaribonline

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

331 responses to “‘The Beach Belong to We’”


  1. The Beach Belong to We

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    No it doesn’t … it belongs to the sea!!


  2. @John

    Do you understand what context means compared to your literal trivial interpretation?

  3. Bernard Codrington Avatar
    Bernard Codrington

    A balanced article which touched on an issue I raised yesterday. The beach is for recreation not for plying trade. It also underlines a clash of cultures. The tourists like sun tans while the natives prefer sea baths.
    There is also the question of eco-overload. Check the Carlisle Bay and Enterprise Bay beaches when cruise liners are in port.

    Future tourist development may require hotels be built on lots away from the shoreline.


  4. The problem at the Crane is the beach is disappearing.

    It belongs to the sea!!!

    It so happens that there is also a full moon and there have been high spring tides.

    https://www.tide-forecast.com/locations/Bridgetown-Barbados/tides/latest

    “Last Spring High Tide at Bridgetown, Barbados was on Wed 21 Mar (height:0.77m 2.5ft). Next high Spring Tide at Bridgetown, Barbados will be on Fri 30 Mar (height:0.81m 2.7ft)”

    The area of the beach on which the Vendors ply their trade with tourists who arrive via the public access is the area most affected by the sea.

    It is possible that as the phase of the moon changes and the tides fall, there will be more beach and the Vendors complaints will disappear.

    The sea is the determining factor at the Crane … Moon too … not WE!!!

    Hopefully a lot of Bajans will go there tomorrow and access the beach using the Public Access.

    From the time you arrive and look at the beach and the sea it is obvious what the problem is!!

    Tomorrow, High Tide will be at 3:24 pm.

    So, it is likely that if Bajans actually go they will see the obvious!!

    High Tide will be 0.8 metres.

    It will then fall and in a weeks time, say on the 6th April, the highest level will be at 0.68 metres.

    It will be just 12 centimetres lower, 5 inches but you will see a lot more beach in the area where the Vendors operate … on Melnyck’s property if you like.

    Neither Melnyck, the Vendors, the NCC, the law or the GOB can do anything about this!!!

    Not even Sir Kyff can change these facts!!

    How difficult is this to understand!!

    It must have been hell up there in December and January during the two Super Moons with high tides at 0.9 metres!!

    Tomorrow it will be 0,8 because the Moon will not be as close to the earth as it was back then.

    Besides this, there is the issue of beach erosion!!

    This is the problem … pure and simple!!

    This is not rocket science!!


  5. Take some pictures and compare them with the old ones you have up here and you will see!!!

    This is simplicity itself!!


  6. @Bernard

    What you suggest is practiced in Bahamas as one example.


  7. Did I read/hear that a hotel is planned for the Enterprise area in the vicinity of “Miami Beach”? if that information is correct then the available beach will be overrun with tourists and hotel/rental chairs. At present most tourists lounge on the eastern side of the beach while most locals relax on the western side which is calmer.

    The dividing line seems to be the lifeguard hut.


  8. BC

    There is absolutely no overload when all the beaches of Barbados are considered!!!

    There are two equivalent beaches which are largely unused and which are both bigger than the Crane!!

    Foul Bay and Long Bay

    Just look at Google Earth.

    There are no vendors on either … and probably few if any tourists.

    All GOB has to do is to commandeer either and relocate the vendors!!

    Of course that is idiotic because the tourists go to the Crane because they are either guests at the hotel or they arrive by car at the public access because they know the Crane Beach is relatively safe …. Hotel Security, Life Guards probably too.

    The Vendors cannot survive without the Hotel but the Hotel can survive without the Vendors.

    Ditto Cruise Ships and Carlisle Bay.

    Of course plying business can occur on beaches it is part of the recreation tourists enjoy!!!

    Why would we want to deprive our guests of that!!


  9. We want business to happen on beaches … vendors get money and spend it and the economy grows


  10. The dividing line seems to be the lifeguard hut.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++

    Are there any inhabitants?

    Does NCC still provide a lifeguard?


  11. The other issue at the Crane as it is on many beaches in Barbados is … seaweed .. moss.

    The Crane Beach was covered in it today!!!

    Saw someone raking it away from the beach chairs.


  12. @Bernard Codrington March 30, 2018 at 8:58 PM ” balanced article which touched on an issue I raised yesterday. The beach is for recreation not for plying trade. ”

    Not quite true Bernard.

    When you and I were born people were already plying trades on the beach–true these people were mostly fishers–but there were traders never the less.

    And the beach was also used for recreation of course.

    So the chair vendors are traders.

    The Crane hotel owners are also traders.

    Human beings have used the sea and the shore for recreation and to conduct business for tens of thousands of years.

  13. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Bernard, yours is a very perplexing view …you seemingly address the issue raised by the author in almost blunt, draconian ways.

    Dr Inniss said “Government should be making a move to ensure that coastal properties are protected — not expanded into beach zones!”

    Is your remark that “[t]he beach is for recreation not for plying trade” an affirmation of that and a further push that we need to move ALL vendors/jetski entrepreneurs et al off the beaches?

    Frankly, if “…tourists like sun tans while the natives prefer sea baths” then let’s use the beaches at different times of day: the tanners during the blazing mid morning to mid afternoon sun premium and the natives earlier morn and later eve!

    But of course its not so simple obviously.

    Realistically, the writer (as I believe the Blogmaster and others noted yesterday) highlighted the actual simple resolution as “…the use of beach frontage can be curtailed or regulated by the state through by-laws or other legislation” thus as usual it comes right back to the actions or lack thereof of the DoLittle govt officials to immediately speak to the matter and propose effective policies to resolve this, full stop.

    Issues like this CANNOT continue years ahead and they need not, quite frankly.

    BTW, how exactly does the “… tourist development …built on lots away from the shoreline resolve the issue??…

    The tourist come to relax at our normally tranquil, lovely beaches. I suspect they can suntan anywhere in a concrete enclosure so as much as it’s feasible is it really an economically practical option??

    Incidentally @Mr Blogmaster, although I have not visited The Bahamas in recent years I certainly recall a surfeit of hotels along a lot of their pristine shoreline also…they also as memory serves have lots of gambling spots among those hotels…which we do NOT.

    Thus when you say that @Bernard’s suggestion is practicsed there I would offer that the two locales are actually QUITE different re tourist appeal for non-beach front properties.


  14. Long ago when I would sometimes go to Cattlewash and venture into the sea I was told if you get caught in the rip tide do not fight it, swim parallel to the shore and get out of it.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=berm+rip+wave+action&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiv5qi5yJXaAhUOrVkKHZFiBdwQsAQIMw&biw=1366&bih=651#imgrc=SQ1zdyFnU21JcM:

    Well, I rarely ventured into the sea down there so never had to use the advice but this diagram also shows why the vendors are having problems.

    Wave action delivers water to the beach and in its return to the sea it concentrates and digs a channel.

    There is a riptide created because the volume of water flows faster as it exits the beach in the channel.

    At the Crane, wave action is into the shore but towards the cliff.

    At an angle to the beach.

    The cliff can’t move so the water slows down, stops, drops sand and is reflected back along the beach.

    The result is a berm of sand in the region of the hotel where the deck chairs are rowed off.

    You can’t see the berm in the satellite photo but it is there ,,, go look … or look closely at the very top picture and you will see it.

    No water gets up there … and no moss.

    For a deck chair user, this is the optimal location on the beach!!

    As the reflected water flows laterally along the shore and then back to the sea it takes sand so the beach is lower in this area away from the berm.

    That’s why the major erosion is up by the public access.

    It leaves a line of moss where it travelled if there is moss in it.

    No berms!!

    The beach is pretty flat in this area.

    Just a few inches increase in tide level swamps the area.

    This is where the vendors operate.

    When tides are low, no sweat, beach chairs and umbrellas are rented by the vendors.

    When it rises a few inches, problems … but the Hotel’s beach chairs on the berm are unaffected as they are out of reach of the waves.

    You can get an idea of the area of the berm by the row of deck chairs deployed.

  15. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    What has always amused me, is we have beaches, which are public. Yet hotels etc, will place chairs and umbrellas on these beaches and when you avail yourself of the chair, you are asked to vacate it, as it is for ‘registered guests only”.

    Now if I stack the hotel chairs and move them, so I can use the beach previously occupied by the chairs, those in charge get upset.

    Part of the “control” of the NCC is they permit and allow hotels to operate like this. The idea ‘dah beach is mine’ is a joke….de water maybe, because we bathe in the water not the beach.


  16. I thought mother nature sorted out the beach chair problem in phuket,

  17. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    The NCC already has the powers to restrict how many chairs hoteliers can barricade the beaches with to prevent the public from using it or to prevent vendors from using their small number of chairs on the beaches, all they have to do is enforce those powers….and set boundaries for hoteliers.

    Teach hoteliers how to share with local black business people and the public., end this crap.


  18. @Northern Observer

    A valid observation. What is happening at the Crane and elsewhere is more about the preferred business model where they control the space guests frequent.


  19. No Northern

    You’re much too kind

    It represents the old business model where the slaves are as separated from the White people as possible

    Hotels in Barbados have always erected these barriers to entry foe the slaves. And they have done this with the compliance of successive governments

    And the complicity of this society more generally


  20. @Pacha

    It is not only hotels or White owned, let us look at the Boat Yard, Harbour lights, same. Let us go up the street to the Hilton, there is the spot where locals and guests frequent but the beach to the South (adjoined to the Drill Hall) can be easily labeled ‘private; based on how it is managed.


  21. Beaches in Barbados are public areas.Nobody should be allowed to ply any trade whatever on the beach.Its the same on the public roadways.I notice a trend in a village where a house almost in the road is selling meals and liquid refreshment catering to the mini bus trade.The result is traffic blockage all through the day.The vehicle stops,the conductor disembarks and go to the house.Comes back out with the purchase.Because the roadway is very busy,traffic comes to a standstill.This nuisance will soon have to be brought to Dr Gabby’s attention for the mandatory march!!


  22. BU agrees with the view that vendors should not be allowed on the beach. They should be provided for in an area close by. Not too long ago the issue was beach harassment. Let the beaches be about recreation only for visitors and locals alike. We have allowed economic considerations to be key in all that we do these days.


  23. David

    Yes, we agree


  24. @Sargeant

    That property you asked about down Enterprise is almost finished.

    @barbados_underground
    #barbados


  25. History has proven this claim that ‘ de beach belongs to we’ false

    More precisely, the beach belongs to the government

    And the government is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the corporatists.

    A fascist state!

  26. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    We are back to the idea of creating hundreds more black owned businesses on the island that do not depend on tourism for survival…the better idea.

    While we are at that no business on the beach line of thought and since NCC controls the beaches, let them control how many rental chairs should be on the beaches, supply and control the revenue generated from those chairs, take the business aspect of rental chairs out of the hands of hoteliers and vendors, it is not an entilement they have, it is a courtesy given them by NCC….abd that courtesy can be reversed, the treasury could do with the money.

    That would be the end of hoteliers barracading beaches to the public and fighting with vendors, more space will be available for LOCALS to exercise and stay healthy and for visitors to enjoy the beach.

  27. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Occam’s razor always works.


  28. lawson March 31, 2018 at 5:41 AM #
    I thought mother nature sorted out the beach chair problem in phuket,

    ++++++++++++++++++++

    Tsunami!!!

    That’s another way the sea exercises its ownership of the beach!!

  29. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    When are those who soak up taxpayer’s dollars in salaries while squatting in government agencies going to learn probleming solving skills?

    we know government ministers are too dumb to solve problems, their skills sets lie in the areas of creating problems they can never solve.

    These problematic self created chaos have solutions that are easily solved once you are skilled in applying simple, commonsense logic.

  30. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    No one would care if Mother Nature takes the beaches, as is her right and she should to teach the greedy and nonfunctional governments and their departments a lifetime lesson, as long as the population no longer relies so heavily and remain dependent on those beaches and tourism for survival..

    ….get out of the being dependent business.


  31. All beaches are not created equal.

    It’s all to do with how the sea decides to hit it!!!

    The rip at the Crane is what makes the Crane Beach different from say Foul Bay or Long Bay.

    …. and the rip is created by the cliff.

    The cliff is like a groyne.

    If you wanted to move sand (cause beach erosion) off part of the beach at Foul Bay or Long Bay, all you would have to do is build a groyne out into the sea at either one.

    This will create a rip that will take the sand out into the sea and into its flow along the coast.

    This sand will be deposited further down the coast … or taken out to sea and either end up on the ocean floor or in St. Vincent.

    But since water (a liquid) is incompressible, the effects would be felt at the Crane and beyond!!

    The erosion would also occur at the Crane.

    When a groyne is built it causes a build up of sand one place and beach erosion somewhere else, depending on the current flow.

    … and the reason is simple, water is incompressible!!

    So when the GOB/IDB or a private individual decides to build a groyne out into the sea in the current flow, automatically they are intentionally causing beach erosion somewhere!!

    This is how simple it is!!


  32. The issue here Dear John is how do we regulate the Rh beaches to satisfy what is social justice. In the same way we practice in all other areas of civil society.


  33. Is the author of this post as formally qualified as s/he claims?

    Submitted by Tara A. Inniss. PhD (UWI) MSD (UNSW) BA (York). Department of History and Philosophy, Cave Hill Campus, The University of the West Indies, Barbados, innisst@yahoo.com,

    I am not surprised that logic is not at the centre of Barbadian philosophy.


  34. The issue here Dear John is how do we regulate the Rh beaches
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The sea regulates the beaches!!


  35. @Northern yours @3.35am

    Very perceptive and if you decide to occupy space in front of the chairs you are treated as though you are trespassing. The “vendors” operate in much the same way as the hoteliers, trying to get a lil space at most of the popular beaches can be very discouraging.

    BTW what’s with the early time? Are you going to bed late or getting up early? Is Kathleen or Doug having that effect?

    @David

    Thanks for the info someone mentioned the hotel in passing and I thought it was a coming attraction not a done deal.


  36. In a related bit of news we read today in the traditional media that NCC washroom facilities have been closed for the holidays.

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/143151/closure-washroom-facilities-easter


  37. @David
    NCC washroom facilities have been closed for the holidays.
    ++++++++++++
    Isn’t that the time that most Bajans venture to the beach? Sewage is becoming a way of life.


  38. Enough formality for you Hal or you need to see more.

    https://www.cavehill.uwi.edu/fhe/histphil/staff/dr-tara-a-inniss-gibbs.aspx


  39. To be fair to Neblett we want to give him a chance to explain but if the report is taken as true there is hardly any excuse that will suffice.


  40. @Hants

    Shouldn’t logic say that if qualifications will be criticized based on a position expressed that said critique should be mapped to areas of said position?

    #steuspe


  41. David March 31, 2018 at 9:09 AM #
    @Hants
    Shouldn’t logic say that if qualifications will be criticized based on a position expressed that said critique should be mapped to areas of said position?

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Her problem is she is venturing into an area she does not understand and won’t take the time to go and take a look see, just like most people here.

    Her qualifications are not applicable.

    David, your concept of “Social Justice” is a construct that cannot apply on some beaches!!

    Take Sargeant’s advice and go to the beach this weekend and look at how the beach works.

    Go and stand up on Brandon’s Beach, or Browne’s Beach or Miami Beach.

    Then go and stand up on the Crane Beach … if you can.

    The social rules that apply on the first three are inapplicable on the Crane Beach.

    The sea rules the beaches!!


  42. And until the sea washes away the Crane beach your point is that it should not be regulated?


  43. David March 31, 2018 at 9:27 AM #
    And until the sea washes away the Crane beach your point is that it should not be regulated?

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    The sea is doing that right now … washing away is regulation.

    As tides subside some will come back …. for a month … before the same issue arises!!

    This is just how the sea is!!

    We have to live with it.


  44. And you plan to answer the question asked? To repeat: until the sea washes away the Crane Beach it should not be regulated to ensure the rights of those vested in frequenting the beach are regarded?


  45. A “steady state” is achieved where the beach size ebbs and flows with tide.

    When a groyne is built out into the sea in the path of the current flow somewhere, the “steady state” changes.

    A new “steady state” is attained by the regulation of the sea.

    A Hurricane will change everything for a time …. until the “steady state” is reestablished.

    The entire beach may be swept away but as normality returns it will be established, grain by grain until the “steady state” is attained.

    No amount of legislation or human “control” will change these basic facts.

    The art is to understand the “steady state” the sea imposes and then work within those constraints.

    In human matters leadership is defined as figuring out where the crowd is going and then getting to the front!!!

    It is similar here.

    If you don’t understand the mechanisms that are going on, you cannot legislate any “social justice”!!


  46. @David March 31, 2018 at 9:01 AM #

    “In a related bit of news we read today in the traditional media that NCC washroom facilities have been closed for the holidays.”

    I’m only a dumb COYOTE but even I have trouble understanding the rational for NCC closing beach washroom facilities during a major holiday. Would some logical Barbarian please explain to Wily the rational.

  47. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    “As tides subside some will come back …. for a month … before the same issue arises!!”

    That just cements my point that NCC takes over the beach chairs business and regulate how many beach chairs can be on the beaches at any given time dependent on erosion, tides etc.

    Let the treasury benefit from chair rentals to tourists and get rid of the constant bickering with hoteliers.

    I dont need to visit the beach, no one does, to figure that simple logic out.

    ..how easy was that.


  48. @David March 31, 2018 at 9:01 AM #
    “In a related bit of news we read today in the traditional media that NCC washroom facilities have been closed for the holidays.”
    I’m only a dumb COYOTE but even I have trouble understanding the rational for NCC closing beach washroom facilities during a major holiday. Would some logical Barbarian please explain to Wily the rational.
    ++++++++++++++++++++

    These are the people who are going to regulate the beach according to concepts of “social justice”!!!

    The imagined regulators have given you your answer!!


  49. Someone just mentioned to Wily washrooms are closed because a bunch of lazy worthlees NCC employees don’t want to work on the holiday. Maybe this is an idea the hoteliers should adopt.

  50. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    A holiday would mean staff can either work double time pay or dont work…

    ..that is government not wanting to pay for double time….or the banos would be open.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading