Mi bredren Vanus has recently drawn to my attention that Castara is on the up and up where its tourism product is concerned, and I decided that I would do an exposé in this column of what the village is doing tourism wise. It features its own brand of tourism, the Castara Model, which is an integrated tourism product focused on community development with a strong link to its fish, ground provision, healthy living, cocoa, and bush tea value chains, among other value chains. The ideas come from Vanus but I strongly support them.
But first, a little sociogeographic information, especially for those who may not know where the village is located. It is a green, hilly paradise sitting with unperturbed majesty on Tobago’s Caribbean north coast at the foot of Mt Dillon. Its most famous and most decorated son is the late ANR Robinson: Minister, Chairman of the Democratic Action Congress, Chairman of the Tobago House of Assembly, Prime Minister, President, the Castara Kid.
Nestled on Tobago’s Caribbean coast, at the foot of Mt Dillon Hill, Castara first became famous for giving us the Castara Kid ANR Robinson, former prime minister, president and co-recreator of the THA.
The Castara Model of community development is very interesting–for two reasons. One is that it offers a compelling blueprint for tourism development and economic diversification that can be refined here at home and exported across the Caribbean, especially into the Eastern Caribbean economies. Out of necessity, Castara seems to have invented an amazing, holistic solution to the problem of development that has confronted Tobago for 140 years.
The other reason is that it provides important lessons about how Tobago, the country, and the Caribbean should understand the link between economic development, community development, and constitutional reform.
Castara is developing what can be branded as a ‘safe and healthy community’ model in which the community provides a cosy and protected healthy space for its guests and integrates tourism into the community’s output value chains.
Villagers variously escort guests wanting to walk the community, visit community attractions at the foot of the rainforest, jog, and generally practise the rudiments of a healthy lifestyle during their visits–all in a community protected space. Guests are provided with an experience that encompasses the Castara cultural experiences, its consumer products, and its musical entertainment, tinged with a beach-intensive flavour; one may even call it “music on the beach.”
They get access to the full range of Castara cuisine, whether cocoa or ground provisions (including yams, bananas, plantains and sweet potato), local bush seasoning, virgin coconut oil, a wide range of bush teas from ginger, cinnamon, pimento, noni, moringa, sorrel, soursop, guava bush, and the like. Guests also have ready access to seasonal avocado, mango, and local fruits. Bananas are available all year round.
Crucially, freshly harvested fish is sold directly to all interested, including tourists, right there on the beach. But entrepreneurs in cuisine and accommodation also add value by preparing local healthy dishes for their guests according to their tastes.
So, Castara is essentially operating as a one stop shop for a safe and healthy lifestyle–a different brand of tourism, you might say. This is just its own innovative version of what has become famous as the Loma Linda lifestyle, and it does not involve a high degree of reliance on imports.
It should be clear then, that in the Castara model, the community plays a vital role, alongside the private sector, local, diasporic, or foreign, and community members think that they are all benefiting from the results to date. It provides the kind of warmth and companionship that make visitors feel welcome and safe. This kind of tourism also cares for the mind, banishing loneliness and isolation, depression and anxiety, and creating a sense of belonging. That is why so many of the visitors spend long periods in Castara and return from year to year.
There is one important difference between what Castara is doing and what Loma Linda is doing. Loma Linda’s offerings are enjoyed mainly by local residents. Castara offers its healthy lifestyles to local residents and guests alike, but with special attention paid to its guests. In other words, Castara offers a special brand of industrialised tourism.
Where is all this heading? The Castara culture of eating local meets the standard medical recommendation of a diet consisting heavily of organic whole grains, legumes, fruits, and vegetables, combined with fish as the main source of meat protein. The Castara culture of friendliness provides its visitors with a strong sense of participation in a close-knit community and formation of deep and long-lasting relationships, and these attitudes and behaviours can be further refined under the guidance of skilled medical experts.
The entrepreneurs in Castara tell Vanus that they know what they are doing and can do a lot more if they have their own budget, suitable financing, and the power to invest collectively as a community.
With those characteristics and abilities, they can systematically add a comprehensive range of support systems to build an overall profitable ecosystem for management of many chronic lifestyle diseases that plague the modern world. Such an ecosystem encompasses spas, green spaces, and climate mitigating systems for physical activity, including walking, jogging, cycling, modest weightlifting, etc. If the community is guided by suitably skilled medics and allied professionals, they can include upgraded housing designs and community facilities for short or long-stay visitors who can access high-quality health care provisions in their totality right there in Castara–clinics, pharmacies, and imaging and other technologies that can better inform and guide updating of the modern healthy lifestyle offered.
The vision is of a Castara that is a one-stop shop for modern safe and healthy lifestyles that could attract foreign entrepreneurs and skilled remote workers alike, whether as residents or long-term visitors.
Given the historical neglect of community development in Tobago, Castara as a community has no constitutional identity and so it also has what might be treated as a weak balance sheet. However, that is exactly why, if it is properly empowered, its safe and healthy lifestyle integrated tourism project could benefit greatly from use of project finance to meet its funding needs rather than trying to raise capital on its own or simply relying on the public purse.
This is especially true since the community can only scale up its model with large-scale infrastructure investments via a limited liability community investment financing vehicle (LLCIV). An LLCIV can only be credible when the flow of information is full and transparent, but that is exactly the practice Castara wants to adopt if properly empowered.
This is the Castara take on constitution reform.