- Ian Fleming developed James Bond in Jamaica
- Rastafarians make up less than two% of the population
- Marijuana is illegal, but the government is moving toward decriminalizing it
Planet-renowned chef, very best-promoting author and Emmy-winning television personality Anthony Bourdain explores Jamaica at 9 p.m. ET/PT Sunday on CNN or watch it live on CNNgo. Stick to the show on Twitter and Facebook.
(CNN) — Unless you’ve been stuck in a mine shaft or going to a distant planet for the previous few decades, probabilities are you’ve heard of Bob Marley and Usain Bolt and can determine both as the most renowned sons of Jamaican soil.
Beyond reggae and track icons, even so, there are many fascinating things much less widely known about “Jamrock” that make this island of just 3 million men and women stand out.
Right here are eight items to know for starters:
James Bond’s birthplace

Bourdain visits Ian Fleming’s cottage

Bourdain: Must. Have. Jerk. Chicken.

‘I really like the meals in this country’
Ian Fleming conjured up and penned the thrilling international spy novels identified the planet over by their larger-than-life, women- and evildoer-conquering protagonist, James Bond, in Oracabessa, a sleepy village in the parish of St. Mary on Jamaica’s north coast.
Fleming named his rustic house Goldeneye right after a World War II operation in which he’d taken element as an intelligence officer. An avid birder, Fleming took 007’s name from the American author of “Birds of the West Indies.”
Travel photos we want we’d taken
The 1st James Bond film, “Dr. No,” was filmed in Jamaica, exactly where the villain’s lair, truly a bauxite storage facility owned by Noranda, is challenging to miss in Discovery Bay.
And later in the film, Ursula Andress walked out of the surf and into film history at a single of Jamaica’s most spectacular beaches, Laughing Waters, situated just west of Ocho Rios, exactly where cool river water cascades straight into the warm Caribbean sea.
Right after Fleming’s death, his Goldeneye home was sold to Island Records founder Chris Blackwell, who has transformed it into Jamaica’s most exclusive boutique hotel and villa resort.
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