Saturday, 21 February 2026

POST 36 – AI CARABBINA LAST POST: Rankings and Best & Worst.

This is the very last post of this, the AI CARABBINA blog. Well done on braving the heat and humidity of 23 islands and 31,679 km to make it here.

In the tradition of Golfco Pictures, the last post ranks all the countries and territories visited and the reasons why, followed by the best and worst of each facet of this epic trip. The rankings and best & worst combines the cruise with the extra travel by me.

I take this opportunity to thank my fellow adventurer, interviewer and cameraman, Nicholas Carabbina Drinias (Bundy) for his patience, toughness and overall job well-done. Anyone that can travel with me and survive can travel with anyone anywhere (except Haiti) !!!

AI CARABBINA BEST & WORST

AI CARABBINA achieved the following in 63 days from 18 December 2025 to 19 February 2026 inclusive:

·          Visited 23 of 28 total islands that make up the Caribbean.

·          Visited and ran in 13 of 13 UN Countries.

·          Visited and swam in 10 of 10 Territories.

·          Hired and drove 22 different hire cars, a total of 4,535 km across 22 islands.

·          Made a total of 27 visits to the 23 different countries and territories, including 24 from the cruise ship.

·          Travelled a total of 31,679 km by land, sea and air over the 63 days from start point in Sydney AUSTRALIA to end point in Georgetown GUYANA.

Congratulations to Saint Lucia for winning the Gold Medal, which came down to an amazing landscape with stunning wild private beaches and the most entertaining twisty driving. Please find below our Silver Medallist, Bronze Medallist and the rankings and reasons why for all remaining Caribbean islands:


We are now proud to present the BEST and WORST of each facet of this epic AI CARABBINA journey which includes my extra travels post Bundy.


This is John “Carabbina” Golfin (Yiannis) and Nicholas “Carabbina” Drinias (Bundy) signing off Houston…


END OF POST

 

END OF AI CARABBINA 

Friday, 20 February 2026

POST 35 – LUCKY LAST: DAYS 62-63 (17-18 February 2026): SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES (Saint Vincent Island), Kingstown, Georgetown.

 Welcome to the one and only post of St Vincent & The Grenadines, my 149th Visit and 144th Run UN Country out of a UN total of 193. After my blog photos below are the key statistics, brief history and interesting facts about this destination.

Visiting this last of the 13 full-member UN Countries that officially make up “The Caribbean” region means I fully complete “The Caribbean” and the continent of North America !!! What a post !!!

Waking up, I could not wait to fly up – the longest single flight of my 9 Caribbean flights of 2hrs and 40min over 1,662km between Turks and Barbados. That is as long as I got to the airport on time. Providenciales has a big traffic problem between 7am and 9am in that it has only two roundabouts in the middle of the city that every road on the island passes through. Took me 45min to drive the 5.2km from my Airbnb to Avis. Flight departed an hour late but we made up time in the air having passed over 10 islands, 8 of which, Bundy and I visited on the cruise. Sadly, most were covered in cloud so no footage. I landed at 230pm in Barbados and the flight to St Vincents and The Grenadines was delayed 45min forcing me to enjoy a long-forgotten hamburger and two mini-wines at the airport for a bargain $70AUD !!! The most expensive fast food I have ever had in my life !!! My hire car guy Kaylique was at the airport to pick me up and take me to the local police station in downtown Kingstown to get an International Drivers Licence. Once again my $AUD25 International Drivers License was valid and I saved another $USD50 taking my total savings to $USD180 – who says the International Drivers License is a waste of time and money – no way Ho-Zay !!! By the time I settled down in my huge apartment it was 930pm so I watched one episode of Curb without wine to save myself for my last run on my last Caribbean Island the following morning.

Up at 630am and on the road at 7am to drive 22km to Black Point near Georgetown where I would make my run. Why so far ? Because SVG (Saint Vincent and The Grenadines) is all volcanic mountains covered in lush, green semi-rainforest. Similar to Saint Lucia, which is much wilder and thicker – full rainforest. There is very little flat land along the coastline and this was the closest I could find without having to run up and down steep roads. Speaking of roads, there are only two here, one on the east and one on the west connected at the south but no roads across the north because it is the sole domain of La Soufrière volcano, which last erupted in 2021. Even with only two roads they are patched to buggery and bad. My inland drive was very challenging even after driving 21 islands. I was relieved to be running my last Caribbean island at 8am along a great stretch of coastal road with a nice easterly in my face – you would not want to run any later than this – the heat and humidity starts rolling in fast after 9am. It took me some time to cool down as I drove to Georgetown. What a surprise. Not only was it a clean, colourful, colonial town but the real surprise was a woman yelling you to me as a I walked down the street. Margaret-Anne was born here but had spent 20yrs in Cairns, Australia !!! She spotted my singlet with “Australia” emblazoned across the bottom. That’s why I wear it !!! She told me her story. Two children born and raised in Cairns and now living and working there. She was visiting her parents and extended family and sending them money from Australia.

From Georgetown, I took the eastern coastal road back to the capital Kingstown because that’s the only way to access the western coastal road. Along the way are the following amazing lookouts: Black Point Viewpoint, Belmont Viewpoint and Airport Viewpoint. I visited the St Georges Cathedral and Fort Charlotte in crowded but bustling Kingstown. There are many terrific viewpoints of the capital from the coastal roads coming in. I then set out on the western coastal road and visited the following: Buccament Beach, Barrouallie Town, Wallilabou Bay and Waterfall. The highlight was Wallilabou Bay because the Pirates of the Caribbean collection of movies were filmed here. Also, the water is the calmest and cleanest and was perfect for my last Caribbean swim !!! I headed straight to the supermarket, 22km away in Kingstown but they had run out of BBQ chickens so resorted to schnitzels and beef empanadas with veggies. A nice cheese and Rose evening finished off my last night in the Caribbean and completion of AI CARABBINA !!!

Please enjoy the images below of my “lucky last” island and expect one more post to list the BEST AND WORST of AI CARABBINA as is the traditional last post of any Golfco Pictures blog…









































ST VINCENT & THE GRENADINES IN A NUTSHELL:

 

           Population (2025): 99,924.

           Population Growth Rate (2025): -0.69%.

           Median Age: 34.4 years.

           Urbanization: 61.6%.

           Population Density: 256 people per km².

           GDP (2025): $USD1.24 billion.

           GDP Growth Rate (2025): 4.4%.

           GDP per Capita (2025): $USD11,365.

           Inflation Rate (2025): 2.8%.

           Unemployment Rate (2025): 18.6%.

           Life Expectancy: 71.4 years.

           Literacy Rate: 96.9%.

           Fertility Rate: 1.75 to 1.8 children per woman.

           Total Land Area: 390 km² (151 sq. miles).

           Capital: Kingstown.

           Main export markets: Barbados (16.6%) and Saint Lucia (16.2%); major imports come from the United States (46.5%).

           Currency: Eastern Caribbean Dollar (XCD), pegged to the US Dollar at $1 USD = $2.70 XCD.

 

BRIEF HISTORY OF ST VINCENT & THE GRENADINES:

 

The history of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is marked by fierce resistance from its indigenous people and a late transition to European colonial rule compared to its neighbours. 

 

           First inhabited by the Ciboney people from South America, followed by the Arawaks around the 3rd century AD.

           Around 1300, the Carib (Kalinago) people conquered the Arawaks.

           In the 17th century, African survivors of slave shipwrecks and escapees from nearby islands integrated with the Caribs, forming a unique Afro-Indigenous culture known as the Garifuna.

           Christopher Columbus sighted the island in 1498, naming it after St. Vincent of Saragossa.

           Due to fierce Carib resistance, the island remained largely unsettled by Europeans for over 200 years.

           France established the first permanent European settlement at Barrouallie in 1719, introducing plantations worked by enslaved Africans.

           Britain gained control via the Treaty of Paris in 1763. Possession fluctuated between Britain and France until British dominance was finalized by the Treaty of Versailles in 1783.

           The Garifuna fought two major wars against British rule (1772–1773 and 1795–1797). Following their 1797 defeat, over 5,000 Garifuna were exiled to Roatán, an island off Honduras.

           Slavery was abolished in 1834. Labor shortages led to the arrival of indentured workers from Portugal (Madeira) and East India starting in the 1840s.

           Initially a sugar-based economy, production shifted to arrowroot and cotton, and finally to bananas in the 1950s.

           The La Soufrière volcano has erupted multiple times, with devastating events in 1812, 1902 (killing ~2,000 people), 1979, and most recently in 2021.

           Universal adult suffrage was granted in 1951. The country was a member of the West Indies Federation from 1958 to 1962.

           Full independent from Britain on 27 October 1979. It remains a Commonwealth realm with King Charles III as the head of state.

 

INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT ST VINCENT & THE GRENADINES:

 

St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) is a diverse Caribbean archipelago of 32 islands and cays, renowned for its volcanic landscapes and unique cultural heritage.

 

1.       Founded in 1765, the St. Vincent Botanical Gardens are the oldest in the Western Hemisphere.

2.       The capital, Kingstown, is famous for its 400 stone arches.

3.       La Soufriere, the nation's highest peak at 1,234 meters, is an active volcano that most recently erupted in April 2021.

4.       he islands served as the primary filming location for the first three Pirates of the Caribbean movies.

5.       The first breadfruit tree in the Caribbean was brought to St. Vincent from Tahiti by Captain William Bligh in 1793.

6.       95% of the mainland's beaches have black volcanic sand.

7.       Home to the Amazona Auildingii, a rare and endemic parrot found nowhere else in the wild.

8.       SVG is the only country in the world to celebrate the Nine Mornings Festival, where locals gather for pre-dawn street concerts and festivities for nine days before Christmas.

9.       The King’s Hill Reserve, established in 1791, is one of the oldest protected forest reserves in the Western Hemisphere.

10.  The islands are the ancestral home of the Garifuna people, a unique ethnic group descended from a mix of indigenous Kalinago and shipwrecked enslaved Africans.

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