Friday, March 27, 2026
Native Touch - Bahamas Art & Craft
©A. Derek Catalano
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©A. Derek Catalano
Thursday, March 26, 2026
The Bahamas Creator Economy Initiative
The Bahamas Creator Economy Initiative
242 Influencers & Creative Conference
Bahamian creators are building audiences of millions. Now it's time to turn that influence into income, backed by the full support of the government. This is opportunity. This is a movement.
An exclusive gathering of creators, government leaders, and platform partners charting the future of the digital economy.
Sunday, March 29, 2026 - 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM. Nassau, The Bahamas
Don't Worry Your Life Away
Don't Worry Your Life Away
The sun climbs up the eastern stair to greet the morning dew,
A million possibilities are waiting there for you.
But in the quiet corners of a mind that’s wound too tight,
The shadows of a tomorrow cast a gloom upon the light.
We build ourselves a prison out of "maybe" and "perhaps,"
Constructing heavy burdens out of future-bound mishaps.
But listen to the river as it winds along its play:
Oh, darling, please, I beg of you—don’t worry your life away.
We fret about the silver coins we’ve yet to even earn,
We stress about the lessons that we haven't had to learn.
We weave a web of "what-ifs" till we’re tangled in the mesh,
Neglecting all the beauty that is vibrant, green, and fresh.
The flower doesn’t wonder if the rain will fail to fall,
It simply drinks the sunlight and it stands up straight and tall.
It blooms within the sequence of the season’s grand array;
It doesn't spend its petals trying to worry life away.
Consider how the mountain wears its crown of winter white,
It doesn't fear the summer heat or mourning for the night.
It sits in silent majesty, anchored to the floor,
While humans pace their tiny rooms and look for every door.
We’re haunted by the ghosts of things that haven't happened yet,
We’re drowning in a dry-land sea of fevered, cold regret.
But time is like a grain of sand that will not, cannot stay;
So why waste all your golden hours worrying life away?
Flamingo Morning - AI Redo
Honourable Member is Finally Here!
“Clinging to the Wreckage": Bahamas Clinging Crabs
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Haitian to Bahamian Demographic Trends
Haitian to Bahamian Demographic Trends
This report provides a data-driven analysis of the demographic trends between the Haitian population and natural-born Bahamians. It examines current statistics, growth projections, and the potential socio-economic impacts of these shifts.
Agri Expo 2026 is on the Horizon
Agri Expo 2026
Join
us April 10th–12th, 2026 for The Bahamas’ Premier Agricultural Event,
where agriculture, marine resources, culture, and innovation come
together in one dynamic experience.
Visitors
can look forward to hands-on backyard farming experiences, hydroponics
and livestock masterclasses, marine discovery exhibits, agricultural
talks and demonstrations, a marketplace featuring 100+ Bahamian
artisans, live culinary showcases by local chefs, Junkanoo rushouts,
school bands, and a fun-filled kiddie adventure zone for the entire
family.
This is more than an expo; it’s a celebration of food security, innovation, and Bahamian talent.
Stay tuned for more updates via @moamrbahamas.
Ph: 242-427-3520 | 242-397-7400
Food • Farming • Fun
#AgriExpo2026 #HereWeGrow #MOAMRBahamas
Visit The Bahamas' Ministry of Agriculture and Marine Resources
Creative Edge Masterclass 2026 Set to Inspire the Next Generation of Creatives
Creative Edge Masterclass 2026
Scheduled for Thursday, April 2, 2026, at the University of The Bahamas, the masterclass will bring together talent and expertise from a wide range of fields,including dance, music, theatre, fashion, mixology, visual arts, and interior design.The event begins at 6:30 PM, with attendees encouraged to arrive at 6:00 PM for registration.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
The CAPAS Bill is now law
CAPAS: Creative And Performing Arts School
The CAPAS Bill is now law. For years, talented young Bahamians lacked the support to take their craft further. Now, they have a place to train, grow, and build careers in the creative arts - right here at home.
In the vibrant tapestry of The Bahamas where every thread is woven with the profound love for the performing arts, CAPAS stands proudly as architects of dreams, sculpting aspirations into breathtaking masterpieces.Learn more at http://capas.gov.bs
Sir Durward Knowles: A Life That Helped Define Bahamian Sport
Sir Durward Knowles: A Life That Helped Define Bahamian Sport
Sir Durward Randolph Knowles stands as one of the most important figures in the history of The Bahamas. More than just an Olympic champion, he became a national symbol of excellence, perseverance, and pride. His life stretched across a century, and in that time, he helped shape not only Bahamian sailing but the country’s identity on the world stage.
Monday, March 23, 2026
The Architecture of Anxiety: An In-Depth Analysis of the Chemtrail Conspiracy Theory
The Architecture of Anxiety: An In-Depth Analysis of the Chemtrail Conspiracy Theory
Introduction
Across the global sky, thin white ribbons of condensation trailing behind high-altitude aircraft are a common sight. To the scientific community, these are "contrails"—short for condensation trails—a well-understood byproduct of jet engine combustion. However, for a significant and vocal segment of the population, these lines represent something far more sinister: "chemtrails." Proponents of the chemtrail conspiracy theory allege that these trails are not mere ice crystals, but a deliberate, clandestine spraying of chemical or biological agents. This essay explores the origins of this theory, the scientific mechanics that debunk it, the psychological drivers behind its persistence, and its intersection with modern discussions on geoengineering and climate change.
First Woman to Join the PLP Died Before Seeing Independence: Ethel Alice Kemp (1933-1973)
By The Bahamianologist
Women’s suffrage had arrived across the Caribbean at different moments — Jamaica in 1944, Barbados in 1950, Trinidad and Tobago in 1946. In the Bahamas, it had not yet come. Bahamian women ran households, raised children, managed small businesses, sustained churches and civic associations. Their political participation, where it existed, was generally channelled through their husbands and fathers.
Some women, however, were drawn into the new political movement taking shape around them.
The Progressive Liberal Party, founded in 1953, was building its membership and needed people willing to organise, canvass, and carry its message into communities across Nassau. Among those who answered that call were women — wives, in most cases, of men already active in the party, participating as the times expected them to: alongside their husbands, in support of a shared cause.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
The Roots of Resilience: The Origins and Evolution of Bahamian Surnames
The Roots of Resilience: The Origins and Evolution of Bahamian Surnames
The surnames of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas—names like Rolle, Bain, Ferguson, Johnson, and Bethel—carry the weight of centuries of history. To the casual observer, they appear to be standard Anglo-Saxon or Scottish family names. However, for the majority of Bahamians of African descent, these names are not merely identifiers; they are historical markers of the colonial era, the plantation system, and the eventual transition from enslavement to freedom. Understanding where these names come from requires looking back at the arrival of the British Loyalists and the profound impact of the 1834 Emancipation Act.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
It’s Regatta Time
It’s Regatta Time
The sails are trimmed, the breeze is fine,
The drums of joy begin to chime,
From Nassau docks to Exuma’s line —
The islands sing: It’s Regatta time!
The sloops stand proud in the morning sun,
Wooden masts gleam, the paint’s just done,
Their crews prepare — the race begun,
For skill and bragging rights hard-won.
Each island’s team, with colors bold,
Tell stories sailors love to hold:
Of brave men racing seas of gold,
Where wind and pride are never sold.
The captains grin, their eyes like flame,
Each knows by heart the ocean’s name,
Their island chants ignite the game —
Who’ll take the crown, who’ll claim the fame?
Friday, March 20, 2026
The Bahamas National Youth Choir Annual Concert
The Bahamas National Youth Choir Annual Concert
We listened. You loved the energy and the pride, but you were tired of the same old songs. So during the closure, we went back to the lab.
Art in Bloom Returns to The Bahamas This Saturday
Art in Bloom Returns to The Bahamas This Saturday
The “Art in Bloom” festival is set to transform the lush grounds of the Leon Levy Native Plant Preserve in Eleuthera, Bahamas, into a vibrant gallery of culture and color this Saturday, March 21. Originally known as “Art in the Park,” this annual spring fundraiser is hosted by The Bahamas National Trust and serves as a premier showcase for the island’s unique intersection of natural beauty and human creativity. Visitors can expect to wander through 25 acres of indigenous flora while discovering a diverse array of works from local painters, sculptors, and craftspeople.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
The Shadow of the Silk Cotton Tree
The Shadow of the Silk Cotton Tree
Part I: The Arrival of the Red Dust
The island of Andros does not welcome visitors; it merely tolerates them. It is a land of "blue holes"—bottomless limestone pits that breathe with the tides—and "coppice" forests so thick that a man can vanish ten feet from the road. To the locals, it is a place where the veil between the living and the spirit world is worn thin by the salt spray and the constant whispering of the casuarina trees.
Father Elias Cox arrived on the mail boat from Nassau during the hottest July in fifty years. He was a man of the cloth, but also a man of the soil, born in the Family Islands and educated in the cold cathedrals of England. He had returned to find his childhood home gripped by a sickness that the doctors in the capital couldn't name.
"It isn't a fever, Father," whispered Old Ma’ Tilda, the village midwife, as Elias sat in her small wooden shack in Staniard Creek. "It’s a draining. They wake up pale as the sand on the sandbanks, with a thirst that water can't quench, and eyes that see things in the corners of the room."
Elias looked at the girl lying on the cot—Tilda’s granddaughter, Seraphina. Her skin was a translucent grey. On her neck, hidden just beneath the jawline, were two small, puckered marks. They weren't clean punctures. They looked like they had been made by something with teeth designed for tearing, yet they were sealed with a strange, dark resin.
"Obeah," Elias muttered, the word tasting like copper in his mouth.
"Worse," Tilda replied, clutching her wooden cross. "They call them the Bolom. But these aren't just spirits. They walk. They have shadows. And they serve the man in the Silk Cotton Grove."
Calling All Artisans in Grand Bahama!
Calling All Artisans in Grand Bahama!
The Ministry for Grand Bahama is inviting artisans to express interest in participating in a curated showcase designed to highlight local talent and support creative entrepreneurs. Whether you specialize in painting, crafts, sculpture, or other handmade creations, your work deserves to be seen.
Applications are available at the Ministry for Grand Bahama or BAIC
Deadline: March 26, 2026
For more information: (242) 350-8571 or (242) 352-8525
Don’t miss this chance to be part of a growing creative community and turn your passion into opportunity!
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
BHRA - SPRING NATIONALS 2026
SPRING NATIONALS
Sports Centre Road
Gates open @ 2PM
Testing & Qualifying @ 3PM – 4PM
Event starts @ 4:30PM
Admission: $10 (Kids 12 & under FREE)
Food - Drinks - Vibes
Everything you need for a full day of SPEED & ACTION
Living on the Edge
Living on the Edge
The precipice is narrow, and the drop is vastly deep,
Yet millions walk the jagged line before they go to sleep.
We dance upon the border where the safety starts to fade,
Ignoring every warning that the cautious mind has made.
From the pulse of reckless engines to the lure of easy gold,
Here is the tale of modern risks, a story often told.
The Rush of the Machine
The needle hits the hundred mark, the asphalt is a blur,
A symphony of pistons and a high-octane purr.
We weave between the lanes of steel, a needle through a cloth,
Attracted to the headlights like a frantic, frenzied moth.
No belt can hold the ego when the spirit wants to fly,
But gravity is patient underneath the midnight sky.
One patch of oil, one lapse of sight, one phone screen’s glowing light,
Can turn a morning commute into an everlasting night.
The Gamble of the Gut
We feast on salt and sugar, on the fats that slow the beat,
And treat the temple of the soul like trash upon the street.
The heart, a steady drummer, starts to skip a heavy pace,
While we ignore the lines of grey appearing on the face.
"I’ll start the change tomorrow," is the anthem of the weak,
As we climb the greasy mountain toward a hollow, plastic peak.
To live upon the edge of health is a slow and silent fall,
Until the body breaks beneath the weight of it all.
March 21 2026: Short Tales 2023 Book Launch
Books will be on sale for $20. Some of the authors will be on hand to sign!
Then join us in the Winston V. Saunders Theatre at 8 PM for the second and final public performance of Ian Strachan’s Gun Boys Rhapsody, revived for a new generation, and part of the UNESCO International Fund for Cultural Diversity project, Professionalizing the Theatre Industry in The Bahamas!
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
IB Visual Arts Exhibition – St. Andrews International School
This year’s exhibition explores the theme “The Beauty of the Collective Unconscious,” showcasing powerful and thought-provoking works that reflect identity, culture, nature, dreams, and the shared human experience.
The Path to Prosperity: A Global Analysis of Development and the Bahamian Context
The Path to Prosperity: A Global Analysis of Development and the Bahamian Context
Introduction
The terminology used to categorize nations—"First World" and "Third World"—is among the most recognized yet misunderstood concepts in modern geopolitics. While these labels are often used today as shorthand for "wealthy" and "poor," their origins were rooted not in economics, but in the tense political landscape of the Cold War. In the twenty-first century, as the global economy becomes increasingly interconnected and technological, these rigid classifications are often challenged by the reality of "middle-income" and "emerging" economies. The Commonwealth of The Bahamas stands as a primary example of this complexity: a nation with high per capita income and a stable democracy, yet one that still grapples with the structural vulnerabilities typical of developing states. This essay explores the definitions of these tiers of development, assesses the current standing of The Bahamas, and outlines the strategic imperatives necessary for the nation to solidify its status as a fully developed, "First World" power.
















































