Ile de la Gonave
Gonâve Island
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gonâve Island (French: Île de la Gonâve) is an island of Haiti located to the west-northwest of Port-au-Prince in the Gulf of Gonâve. It is the largest of the islands in terms of size located off the Hispaniolan mainland. The island is an arrondissement in the Ouest Department and includes the communes of Anse-à-Galets and Pointe-à-Raquette. Made up of mostly limestone, the reef-fringed island of Gonâve is 60 km (37 miles) long and 15 km (9 miles) wide and covers an area of 743 km² (287 sq. miles). The island is mostly barren and hilly with the highest point reaching 778 meters (2,552 ft). The island gets anywhere from 800 mm to 1600 mm of rain a year, higher areas representing the latter figure. Issues of overgrazing and water resource overexploitation affect the island’s approximately 100,000 residents. The island was once used as a base for pirates.
Water Scarcity
La Gonâve is referred to as one of the most water scarce locations in the world. Residents on the western side of the island are known to walk 12-15 kilometers roundtrip to collect their water that is often brackish.
In 2005 following a particularly drastic drought, the Mayor of Anse Gallets formed the Water Platform, composed of service groups working on the island. Current participants include the Mayors of Anse Gallets and Pointes a Racquette, the Deputy, Justice of the Peace, World Vision, Concern WorldWide, Sevis Kretyen, the Matenwa Learning Center, the Alleghany Weslyen Church, the Methodist Church, Haiti Outreach and many others. The Water Platform acts as a focal point for activities on the island, providing a coordination point for the multitude of groups working on La Gonâve.
The members of the Water Platform have been working to address the water needs of the island by capping springs, building rainwater catchment cisterns,building water systems and drilling wells. Dozens of rainwater catchment cisterns and wells have been drilled on the island as an effort to bring water relief to the poor residents of the island.
On the way to Ile de la Gonave.
On the countryside
Many people have to walk a lot of kilometers to get water each day.
Dance lessons
On the market.
Replanting trees. Haiti has only 2% of trees and vegetation in the country.
A RARA, a Voodoo dance
Des Ètoits, a fishing village. People are leaving to Port-au-Prince in boats.
Repairing a broken boat.
Transporting charcoal to Port-au-Prince.
A boat passing by selling roots and coconuts.
In the north-west of the island. People continue to cut trees to make charcoal.
A village called La Source has beautiful beaches but no tourism at all. There is no real Hotel on the island.
A poor family in La Source.
Anse à Galets


































Hein said,
April 14th, 2009 at 16:59
Liebe Alice,
danke für Deine wunderbaren, starken Fotos. Zusammen mit Deinen Ratschlägen bedeuten sie mir sehr viel und ich sehe ja auch, wie intensiv und ernsthaft Du arbeitest. Für Dich als Fotografin ist meine Bewunderung grenzenlos!
Liebe Grüße
Hein
Raphael said,
April 22nd, 2009 at 01:02
Nice pictures of La Gonave. I especially like the fact that the people are so natural in them.
Graham Huff said,
June 26th, 2009 at 18:18
This is a fantastic collection of photographs and tells the story of La Gonave very well. I have been 3 times in 2009 and am working on water/sanitation issues. Do you have any contact info for others doing the same? Best wishes, Graham
Peter Hughes said,
July 8th, 2009 at 14:50
I am trying to get information regarding well drilling on La Gonave. Particularly regarding Gro Manje. Any help would be appreciated.
Peace,
Peter Hughes
payday loans mississauga said,
August 14th, 2009 at 06:11
blog.alicesmeets.com is very informative. The article is very professionally written. I enjoy reading blog.alicesmeets.com every day.
Pat Burdette said,
September 17th, 2009 at 00:51
Thank you for the beautiful pictures. I lived in Anse-a-Galets, I was a missionary nurse on La Gonave in the Wesleyan Hospital in Anse-a-Galets for 3 years. I miss it, and the people. It was wonderful to visit again through your photos!
Sincerely,
Pat
Ornis J.Armand said,
December 17th, 2009 at 01:28
Excellent job. I am a native of LaGonave living in New York for 31 years. You make me feel like I am home again. I just came back from my beautiful Island of Lagonave three days ago. I am doing a project about Lagonave if you want, I think we can share some information. until then BRAVO Alice
Billie Bates said,
March 15th, 2010 at 08:09
There is an urgent problem after the earthquake. Do you have contacts there at this time? Urgent need!! Please respond! Trou Jaques in bad shape! Need for water…