Returning Residents Guide - A Complete Safety & Security Guide to Coming Home to Jamaica

(Alees Albert) #1

99



  • Inverter fridges and efficient appliances consume less over their lifetime.


An approach, not a number: rather than promising savings figures, build a habit—track kWh monthly,
change one thing per month, and review after three months.


Water—store, save, and soften the shocks



  • Install a tank + pump (common from 400–1,000 gallons). It’s resilience against NWC lock-offs
    and droughts.

  • Harvest rainwater for garden and outdoor cleaning (mind gutters and first-flush systems).

  • Fix leaks fast. A tiny drip becomes a hefty bill.

  • Low-flow fixtures tame usage without misery.


Food—eat like a Jamaican, save like a CFO



  • Cook big, freeze small. One curry goat becomes three meals.

  • Plant a “yard kitchen.” Callaloo, hot pepper, thyme, scallion, tomato—low effort, high reward.

  • Support farmers directly (farm-gate produce, community agriculture days).

  • Seasonal rhythm. Mango madness is not the month for imported apples.


Mobility—move with less pain at the pump



  • Choose fuel-efficient Japanese models if buying a car; maintain them well.

  • For inter-parish trips, Knutsford Express or JUTA charters reduce fatigue and cost.

  • Carpool on school and office routes; communities often build organic systems once someone
    says, “Let’s try.”


Housing—design thrift into the walls



  • Shade + breeze: trees, verandas, awnings, window orientation.

  • Insulation and sealing reduce AC dependency.

  • Ceiling fans in main rooms, solar water heaters, instant gas heaters as backup.

  • Greywater re-use for lawns; permeable paving reduces runoff.


Waste & the island we love


Jamaica has restrictions on single-use plastics; lean into the spirit as well as the law.



  • Reusable bags, bottles, and cups.

  • Sort plastics for community drives; some parishes have collection days.

  • Repair before replacing—tailors, cobblers, and welders still ply their craft.


The “save smart” system—weekly cadence



  • Sunday: plan meals from what you have first; build the shopping list second.

  • Wednesday: check meters (electricity/water) and record. Awareness drives behaviour.

Free download pdf