
WEIGHT: 56 kg
Bust: Small
One HOUR:250$
NIGHT: +100$
Services: Soft domination, Massage anti-stress, Toys / Dildos, BDSM, Watersports (Giving)
I spent one week in Haiti, specifically Jacmel, and decided to stay at the Hotel Florita in town The Beaches are ok, Raymond les Bain is the better one, they have a lot of gravels which I am not a I can't remember the name, but I liked the area with the Kiosks. The water was tranquil, warm, and Lovely. I don't like to be mean; but, for me, I never engaged with the people selling things.
And, I kept reading my Book. Worked for ME. There's a lovely promenade along this former coffee port at the edge of Jacmel, but calling it a beach does everyone an injustice.
The city, Haiti's tourism experiment, lacks the numbers to support the American-styled waterfront use it envisions. Trinket vendors in high karnaval season hawked listlessly here while shops in the historic core did brisk business. Shallow and too littered for visitor tastes, the shore seemed better suited to the commercial and industrial uses of the city's past. I wanted to love this grand tourism experiment, but found myself wondering why the city fathers didn't look more to those uses for an economic lift.
With the redeveloped waterfront has also come real estate projects gradually pricing workers out of the market. Haiti's culture, long preserved by its isolation and poverty, is its richest asset. Is there a better way to boost the economy without mimicking American templates that don't work here? The area was very beautiful and had a historic look to it.
It was very colorful and laid back. Good food in the area as well. This beach is so pretty. Not really one to swim at because of the trash issues. There are a lot of people trying to get you to buy things!!! I love to walk or run or sit along the mosaic walk way. So much time and talent went into creating such a beautiful space. There is so much life in this space! Scores of students studying for exams, the artists from Sant d'A Jakmel - Jacmel Arts Center taking a break on the steps, the people making patas, the chickens bustling around, the yoga classes, the runners, the Deaf jewelry makers collecting sea glass along the shore to make their necklaces,the children playing.