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Mocho
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Title: Mocho 

City:  Mocho  

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History:  

Very few visitors (or Jamaicans for that matter) have actually been to the village of Mocho, nestled deep in the Mocho Mountains of the Clarendon interior. Ask any Jamaican about Mocho, however, and everyone has some comment to make. In Jamaica, the name is used disparagingly to refer to the most provincial behaviour, place or item – not in reference to the pleasant and industrious rural community, but rather as a comment on the location that was once one of the most remote and inaccessible in Jamaica. Pronounced “muk-coh”, the village is a typical rural farming community where small farmers and landowners have cultivated their grounds for generations. The majority of people who live in Mocho work in agriculture; either on the vast sugar estates of the Rio Minho Valley, or on their own farms, producing garden vegetables and ground provisions.

 

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Did you know?

Spelling Jamaica: The spelling of “Jamaica” was not standardized until well after the English conquest. Englishmen wrote the word as it sounded: thus we have Gemecoe, Gemegoe, Jamico, Jammaca and Mamecah. It was often spelled Xaymaca. The first map on which Jamaica appears was made by Bartolome Colombo, Christopher's younger brother, to illustrate the Admiral's fourth voyage. He spelled it Jamaicha.
 
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