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#1
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Two items about St Maarten from The Daily Herald.
1) Quite a few merchants on the Dutch side now accept euros, but not at a very attractive rate "since they have to go to a bank on the French side to convert them to dollars". More confirmation that the de facto currency of the Dutch side is the US dollar. 2) Winair, which connects St Maarten with Saba, Statia, St Barths, etc., is having its usual financial problems. One of their Twin Otters is nearing end-of-life and will not be replaced. That will leave them with two Twin Otters and two small Islanders as their total fleet. |
#2
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As of last October, I found that dollars were welcome everywhere, both on
the French and Dutch side. Prices on the Dutch side were usually given in both dollars and euros, while on the French side they usually gave prices in euros, only but readily made reasonable conversion. I never ran into any problem. One thing that struck me was the following: I am of Scandinavian extraction and have a lot of relatives back in the old country. Everyone there younger than about 50 speaks English fluently, because Norway made a decision that teaching their students English was a good educational investment, and it has really paid off for them economically. So there I was in St. Maarten. I never passed up giving hitchhikers a ride. It was amazing to me that every young person I picked up on the French side was genuinely helpless regarding speaking what is the international language of business and politics, i.e.: English. Fortunately I speak French, and so it was not a problem. But the situation was very, very French..... "R J Carpenter" wrote in message ... Two items about St Maarten from The Daily Herald. 1) Quite a few merchants on the Dutch side now accept euros, but not at a very attractive rate "since they have to go to a bank on the French side to convert them to dollars". More confirmation that the de facto currency of the Dutch side is the US dollar. 2) Winair, which connects St Maarten with Saba, Statia, St Barths, etc., is having its usual financial problems. One of their Twin Otters is nearing end-of-life and will not be replaced. That will leave them with two Twin Otters and two small Islanders as their total fleet. |
#3
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![]() "Jim Brewer" wrote in message news:TEZ%b.422198$xy6.2444056@attbi_s02... It was amazing to me that every young person I picked up on the French side was genuinely helpless regarding speaking what is the international language of business and politics, i.e.: English. Did you pick up any black people? If not, you may have been dealing with tourists. My guess is that many black families on the French side speak English at home. Did you pick up any people from the area of Orleans? It looks to me as though the native language there is English, not French. The church names in Orleans are all in English, only English. I once spent a few hours in the waiting room at the hospital at Marigot. A number of the others waiting seemed bilingual. People they knew would come by - they'd speak to some in French, some in English. Every one of the hospital's staff I dealt with spoke adequate English. |
#4
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Did you pick up any black people? If not,
you may have been dealing with tourists. This was kinda my point - that virtually any tourist you run into in the Caribbean - German, Swedish, Dutch, Italian, etc. - will speak comprehensible English, because English is now the lingua franca (pardon the irony) of international business & politics - every tourist, that is, except the French, because they do it to spite themselves. My guess is that many black families on the French side speak English at home. I've never run into this except in actual British territories and colonies like Montserrat. Elsewhere, my experience is that the blacks often speak a patois which has a strong French influence. |
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