Farmers Back in the Field at Parnassus Agro-Park

By: , December 30, 2025
Farmers Back in the Field at Parnassus Agro-Park
Photo: Donald De La Haye
Kenneth Robinson, on Tuesday (December 9), takes a moment from working on his farm that was flooded by a nearby river during the passage of Hurricane Melissa. The farmer, who has a 4.7-acre lot on a section of the Parnassus Agro-Park in Clarendon, lost crops that were close to maturing, along with drip hoses and lines. He has reinvested more than $300,000 in labour and infrastructure.

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The love for farming and irrigation access have been cited by farmers on the Parnassus Agro-Park in Clarendon as reasons they returned to their fields after the devastation caused by Hurricane Melissa on October 28.

The Parnassus Agro-Park falls under the Southern Plains Agricultural Development (SPAD) Project, which utilises former sugar lands for agricultural production in Clarendon and St. Catherine.

Kenneth Robinson, who has been a farmer for 25 years, three of which have been spent on a 4.7-acre lot on the agro-park, said his loss was significant, as he had crops almost ready to reap when his farm was flooded.

“Where my farm is located there’s a bend [in the river], so that the water could go around, but because of the amount of water that came in the river from the flood, it cuts straight across and all those farmers in that area, with about 20 to 30 acres of land, their fields, including my own, were covered up for about two days underneath water,” Mr. Robinson recalls.

He tells JIS News during an interview that he had an acre of pumpkin that was close to maturing, melons that were blossoming, half an acre of callaloo, some pok choi and okras that were destroyed.

Additionally, the farmer says he had land prepared with drip hoses for irrigation that were damaged or washed away.

“Of course, those had been washed away and torn up and all of that. So, it was devastating. [I] couldn’t do anything for weeks after the storm. Mi traumatised because all of those implements, it takes years to buy and put them together. It is not one week or two weeks because it costs thousands, probably millions of dollars,” Mr. Robinson shares with JIS News during a recent visit to the agro-park.

He explains that he only returned to his farm after the catastrophic Category Five storm passed because farming is all he knows. His parents farmed, which funded his schooling, and other achievements the family gained. Farming is also what Mr. Robinson loves to do.

“And I have the love for farming. So, no matter how much time we get damaged, lose crops in terms of no market sometimes, in terms of disaster, in terms of larceny, drought, whatever circumstances, we always go and start over again,” he says.

The farmer discloses that since the hurricane he has reinvested more than $300,000 in labour and material to restart planting.

Mr. Robinson emphasises that insurance is critical in instances such as these, as he believes he would be in a better position to get back to doing what he loves, adding that he will seek more information about the insurance.

Another farmer, 42-year-old Noel Reid, shares that he lost more than $4.6 million in crops and farming equipment when his farm was also flooded by the river during the passage of Hurricane Melissa.

“Before the hurricane, me did have 30,000 callaloo,; 14,000 sweet corn, 20,000 sweet peppers, 3,000 cabbages, 3,000 tomatoes, three acres of melon and four acres of pumpkin, but everything gone,” Mr. Reid says, adding that he also lost drip hoses and pipes used to irrigate his farm.

Farmer Noel Reid on Tuesday (December 9) sprays the weeds that sprung up on his farm after it was flooded by a nearby river during the passage of Hurricane Melissa, in preparation for replanting. The farmer, whose lot is on a section of the Parnassus Agro-Park in Clarendon, says he lost more than $4 million in infrastructure and crops during the hurricane and has since invested more than $800,000 to replant.

He has since returned to his lot at the agro-park, clearing land and replanting crops that typically take a short time to mature, such as callaloo, with others, including pumpkin, melon, cabbage and sweet peppers, set to be reaped early 2026.

Mr. Reid discloses that he has reinvested more than $800,000 to get his farm up and running since the major storm.

He attributes his willingness to return to his farm to the access provided by the Parnassus Agro-Park.

Mr. Reid says that prior to the establishment of the agro-park, he could potentially lose 50 per cent of his profits, due to a lack of water access. Now, he can almost guarantee a 100 per cent return on his investment, as water is easily accessible on his farm.

Farmer Noel Reid smiles for the camera on Tuesday (December 9), despite reflecting on the over $4 million damage his crops and other farming equipment sustained during Hurricane Melissa. The farmer, whose lot is on a section of the Parnassus Agro-Park in Clarendon, has since reinvested more than $800,000 into his farm.

He is encouraging other farmers to try and get back to farming on their own and not rely on help before replanting, especially those who may have some surplus that can be invested.

“You can’t give up and a lot of times they say help is going to come but you can’t wait on help. You can’t have a million dollars and just sit on it, you have to invest the money because if you sit on it, it is going to finish. You just have to dust off and try again,” he urges.

Not everyone in the agro-park was brought to their knees by Hurricane Melissa. George Black, who manages a 70-acre operation, counts himself lucky as only his water storage tank was removed from its stand and thrown a mile away during the storm.

Manager of a 70-acre farm on the Parnassus Agro-Park in Clarendon, George Black, on Tuesday (December 9), points to a section of the lot where he is growing scallion, as he describes how fortunate his farm was during the hurricane.

He shares that he had planted a plot of scallion seedlings a week before the hurricane made landfall in Jamaica, and the crops suffered no damage.

His only issue was access to water, as the agro-park lost power for two days and water could not be pumped to the farms.

“I just came in the week after the rain and with my staff we used backpack spray because there was no electricity, so there was no water. And me take that van, load it up with four drums go to York Town, make [up to] eight trips a day, put the backpack on our backs and watered [the scallion],” Mr. Black explains, giving thanks to God.

He goes on to empathise with farmers who lost millions of dollars due to the hurricane but points to the resilience of the Jamaican farmer as the reason he believes the sector will bounce back quickly.

“We’re Jamaican, we’re resilient, we’re hard-working, we’re determined, and we don’t give up. If you have the passion and the love [for farming] just don’t give up; just keep doing it. We’ll make it one day,” he says.

Rosalee Haye (foreground), joins other women who work on a 70-acre property managed by farmer George Black at the Parnassus Agro-Park in Clarendon to pull weeds from a plot of scallions, on December 9. The scallions were planted a week prior to Hurricane Melissa’s landfall in Jamaica and were not destroyed by the hurricane.