Saturday, February 28, 2026
Friday, February 27, 2026
To Sir, with Love II
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Don't Waste Time
Don't Waste Time
The sun ascends with golden light,
To chase away the shroud of night,
But as it climbs the morning sky,
The hours begin to flicker by.
A silent thief with velvet tread,
The day departs, the light is shed,
And what we planned to do at dawn,
Is lost within a tired yawn.
The clock upon the ancient wall,
Is measuring the rise and fall,
Of every breath and every beat,
Of winter’s frost and summer’s heat.
It does not pause for king or slave,
From cradle-side until the grave,
Its steady pulse is cold and clear:
The end of everything is near.
We say, "Tomorrow I shall start,
To follow what is in my heart,"
But "tomorrow" is a phantom land,
A castle built on shifting sand.
It promises a fairer day,
While keeping all your dreams at bay,
Until the weeks become the years,
And hope is drowned in quiet tears.
The Runner Stumbles has one more weekend!
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Bahamas Reflected in Machiavelli’s “Great Man” Theory
By The Bahamianologist
There is a book, slim enough to hold in one hand, that has never gone out of print since it was first circulated in Renaissance Florence more than five centuries ago. Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince, written in 1513, remains the most unsentimental manual of political power ever committed to paper. It does not concern itself with virtue in the conventional sense. It concerns itself with results — with the cold, calculating art of seizing, holding, and exercising power in a world that does not reward the meek.Machiavelli’s “Great Man” was not necessarily a good man. He was a necessary man — visionary enough to see what others could not, ruthless enough to do what others would not, and shrewd enough to make his dominance look inevitable in hindsight. He bent fortune to his will through a combination of virtù — that untranslatable Italian word encompassing strength, skill, cunning, and audacity — and an almost clinical reading of the moment he inhabited.
When we survey the long arc of Bahamian history, from the swaggering chaos of the pirate republic to the quiet consolidation of the post-independence era, we find, at every decisive turning point, a man who fits Machiavelli’s template with uncomfortable precision. None of them were saints. All of them were transformative. And understanding them through Machiavelli’s lens may be the most honest way to reckon with what they actually accomplished — and what they cost. Read more>>
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
The Great Bahamas Hurricane of 1929: The "Three-Day Storm"
The Great Bahamas Hurricane of 1929: The "Three-Day Storm"
The Great Bahamas Hurricane of 1929, also known as the "Great Andros Island Hurricane," remains one of the most significant and devastating meteorological events in the history of the Lucayan Archipelago. Striking during a period when the colony was already grappling with economic shifts and the early tremors of the Great Depression, the storm was a catastrophic event that claimed over 140 lives and fundamentally altered the Bahamian landscape.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
242Day Celebration Meal
Bahamian Poetry by James Catalyn
Being Bahamian
by james j. Catalyn ©11th june 2009I am proud of my heritage
My colour
My people
I am proud of my language, “Bahamianese”
My music
My foods
I am proud of those who have achieved
And those who may not have had
The opportunity
They are my fellowmen
I am proud of my National Symbols
And my faith in things spiritual
I am proud that I am me
And being Bahamian
I am Bahamian and Proud!
Celebrate 242Day
Celebrate 242Day
On the twenty-fourth of February, hear the islands say,
Rise up, hearts of turquoise seas, it’s bright 242Day.
From coral keys to bustling towns where trade winds gently sway,
We gather as one people proud to honor who we are today.
The sun spills gold on ocean blues, on sands so warm and wide,
And every wave that kisses shore brings Bahamian pride.
It whispers through the coconut trees, it hums in Junkanoo drums,
It lives in every smiling face wherever our spirit comes.
So dress yourself in colors bold that mirror sea and sky,
Aquamarine and gold and black, let every banner fly.
Wrap up in Bahamian print, bright patterns stitched with care,
Let fabric tell our story loud in marketplaces fair.
Wear the flag upon your chest, let strangers see it shine,
A living sign of who we are, this heritage divine.
For black speaks strong of people’s might, our unity and name,
Gold beams warm as sunlight’s hope, aquamarine seas our claim.
Sailboat Moon - PC Wallpaper
©A. Derek Catalano
Happy 242Day Bahamas
Monday, February 23, 2026
The Architect of the Mind: The Importance of Reading and the Gift of Literacy
The Architect of the Mind: The Importance of Reading and the Gift of Literacy
Introduction
To read is to engage in a silent conversation with the greatest minds of history. It is a cognitive feat that the human brain was never biologically "wired" to perform, yet it has become the bedrock of modern civilization. Reading is not merely a mechanical skill; it is an architectural process that reshapes the brain, builds the foundations of empathy, and serves as the primary engine for social and economic mobility. Understanding the importance of reading, and the vital necessity of teaching it effectively, is essential for the flourishing of both the individual and society.
Rock the City: What's Happening
A Love Letter Written in Law: The Last Will and Testament of Kelson Samuel Cox (1928 – 2023)
By The Bahamianologist
There are love stories, and then there are Bahamian love stories. Not the kind written in novels or sung in ballads — but the kind forged in the predawn darkness of five o’clock prayer meetings, in the flour-dusted kitchens of a family bakery, in the quiet determination of a man cooking meals from his wheelchair for the woman he had promised to cherish more than fifty years before.
The kind of love that does not announce itself but simply endures — through heart attacks and business failures, through family triumphs and heartbreaking loss, through the slow erosion of the body that cannot diminish the iron of the spirit. Read more>>
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Celebrate 242Day Bahamas
Celebrate 242Day Bahamas
• Wear National Flag Colours
or Bahamian Print
• Enjoy a delicious Bahamian Dish
• Enjoy Bahamian Music, Art or Entertainment
all day long
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Offshore Tall Ship - AI Redo
Download full size: 5312x2988
Friday, February 20, 2026
Commissioner's Martial Arts Expo
Commissioner's Martial Arts Expo
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Don’t Be A Copycat
Don’t Be A Copycat
Don’t be a copycat, carbon and thin,
Tracing the outline of somebody’s skin.
Don’t wear a voice that was never your own,
Or live in a shadow where nothing has grown.
It’s easy to echo what others have said,
To borrow their dreams and sleep in their bed.
To mimic their laughter, their swagger, their stride,
And tuck your own spark safely inside.
But what is a mirror that never looks back?
A face with no features, a sky that is black.
A song with no tremor, no crack in the tone,
A house full of people that feels like a loan.
You weren’t born blank like a page to be filled
With copies of others’ ambitions and wills.
You came with a rhythm, a pulse in your chest,
A pattern of thought that won’t match the rest.
Maybe your laugh is too loud for the room.
Maybe your plans don’t fit in with the gloom.
Maybe your questions make some people squirm.
Good. That’s your fire. Let it burn.
Offshore Storm - AI Redo
©A. Derek Catalano
BHRA Breakout Event!
BHRA Breakout Event!
Support our Student Matinees of Gun Boys Rhapsody!
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The Runner Stumbles Opens TONIGHT!
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Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Culture & Couture Fashion Show
Culture & Couture Fashion Show
Take It As It Comes
Take It As It Comes
The sky does not announce its every turn,
It shifts from blue to gray without concern.
No whispered memo, no engraved decree,
Just drifting clouds that move because they’re free.
The tide rolls in, then slowly rolls away,
It doesn’t beg the shoreline let it stay.
It meets the rocks, it foams, it breaks, it runs,
And trusts the moon to guide what’s to be done.
So why do we, with furrowed brow and fist,
Attempt to map each fog that might exist?
Why strain to choreograph the unseen dance
Of futures balanced on a thread of chance?
Hibiscus in Yellow Vase - AI Redo
©A. Derek Catalano
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
The Cascarilla Tree and Its Bark: Nature, Uses, and Value
The cascarilla tree — its biology, geography, harvesting, uses (traditional, commercial, scientific, and industry), and what it would take to establish a lucrative cascarilla processing/export business in The Bahamas.
The Cascarilla Tree and Its Bark: Nature, Uses, and Value
1. Botanical Description
Cascarilla refers to the dried bark of Croton eluteria, a small aromatic tree in the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae). The plant is native to the Caribbean region, including The Bahamas, and also grows in parts of Central America and other tropical areas. It typically grows as a shrub or small tree up to about 12–20 feet tall with pale yellowish-brown fissured bark, scanty lance-shaped leaves, and clusters of small white fragrant flowers (often in spring).
The name Croton eluteria reflects its botanical lineage: Croton from the Greek for “a tick” (referring to seed shape) and eluteria said to reference the island of Eleuthera in The Bahamas.
In the field, the bark is easily stripped from twigs and branches, then dried before further processing.

















































