A writer reconnects with her Jamaican roots by returning to the island with her children to honor her late father's memory. Decades after leaving Jamaica in the 1970s, she retraces a road trip her father once planned, driving the north coast in his vintage Beetle to visit family and experience the landscape her father cherished. The journey takes her through waterfalls, pristine coastlines, and the Blue Mountains that shaped her father's love of the island. By sharing this experience with her children, she passes down a tangible connection to their grandfather and their heritage. The trip becomes more than tourism. It transforms into a pilgrimage through family history and personal identity. Jamaica's interior reveals itself not as a checklist of attractions but as a living tapestry of extended family, hidden corners, and stories rooted in generations. For her children, the journey offers something no guidebook provides. they walk the same paths their grandfather walked, see what he saw, and understand why he insisted they know their "beautiful home." This is travel as remembrance, exploration as family legacy.