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chaudiere-trail-view-2 chaudiere-trail-view-3 chaudiere-trail-view-4 chaudiere-trail-view-5 chaudiere-trail-view-6 ruth-ranger-chaudiere us-chaudiere-trail flowers-1 flowers-2 I use this photo on my ProgresSmart Web site. our-land-view The following several slides are views of our land in Calibishie, when we purchased it on February 26, 2004.  We've build a ground-floor vacation lodge, and we'll build our house on the upper portion, and the view from our shady north veranda will be spectacular . our-land-from-road our-land-lower-corner our-land-overlook our-land-ruth-banana-tree our-land-ruth-grapefruit our-land-up-drive our-land-down-drive point-baptist-1 Point Baptist, on the Atlantic coast just east of the village of Calibishie, is another of the world's true beauty spots. The point is a rocky outcrop, with beaches on both sides. On one side is a beautiful white sand bathing beach that is also excellent for beachcombing. On the other is a black sand beach with a bay that is rich in coral. point-baptist-2 point-baptist-3 point-baptist-4 point-baptist-6 point-baptist-7 point-baptist-8 point-baptist-ruth point-baptist-storm point-baptist-cave-1 point-baptist-cave-2 point-baptist-cave-ruth-1 point-baptist-cave-ruth-2 point-baptist-cave-ruth-3 point-baptist-figs Actually, according to an expert, Dr. Stephen R. Hill, “The silvery-leaf trees are not figs, they are a plant locally called 'bois canon' or 'trumpet wood' with the scientific name Cecropia schreberiana.  This tree is related to the figs, and many put it in the same family as Ficus [the figs] - called the Moraceae.  I tend to keep them separated out into their own family, the Cecropiaceae.   On the mainland they are the primary food of tree sloths [not on Dominica, of course], and they are often called 'canoa' which I often translate as 'canoe tree'.  They are mostly hollow on the inside.”
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