Jamaica’s Global Wellness Day Edit: Ital Rituals, Ancient Springs, Cloud Forests, and Jungle Spas
Long before wellness became an industry, Jamaica was already living it. This Global Wellness Day, we invite you to let the island speak for itself.
From the hillside springs to the jungle spa, here is where to find the wellness experiences that set Jamaica apart.
Eating Well, the Jamaican Way

Stush in the Bush, St. Ann: Jamaica’s best-known soulful farm-to-table experience, Stush in the Bush takes patrons through a regenerative farm tour, followed by al fresco dining in the cool Jamaican mountains. The restaurant’s rotating seasonal menu features ingredients from the Zionites 15-acre organic farm, featuring standout dishes including the Jamaican Mezze Board – with crispy plantain chips, coconut-crusted yam, smoky corn beignets and jackfruit seed hummus, washed down with seasonal livity juices. Guests can also take home small-batch produced fruit-forward vinaigrettes, preserves, nut-based cheeses and butters made from the bounty of the garden.

Zimbali Retreat, Negril: Just 20 minutes outside of Negril, this retreat venue features a 7-acre organic farm, rivers, and springs, and offers three, four, five, or seven-night all-inclusive packages for those wanting to truly immerse. Their iconic Farm to Table Cooking Show takes guests through a farm tour before heading into the cooking studio for a six-course culinary journey. Beyond the table, visitors can hike with Rasta elder Fiyah up to his farm, Camp Survival, stopping at Gracie’s Spring to fill up with natural spring water before gathering fresh foods and learning the art of Ital cooking over an open fire. For those drawn to the island’s healing traditions, certified herbalist and Rasta Elder Bongo Roache is available for personal consultations on hand-crafted organic remedies focused on detoxification and rebuilding.
Ancient Waters that Heal

Bath Fountain, St. Thomas: Steeped in national history, the mineral spring was originally discovered in the 1690s by a runaway slave whose wounds and injuries healed after bathing in its waters. Rich in lime, magnesium, and sulfur, visitors today can enjoy a 20-minute soak in the spa’s Roman-style baths or Jacuzzis to rejuvenate body and spirit.

Rockfort Mineral Bath, Kingston: One of Jamaica’s most storied mineral spa experiences, Rockfort is also one of its most accessible, sitting just outside Kingston while holding the distinction of being a national monument. The slightly saline, warm water is mildly radioactive and widely believed to hold therapeutic properties, while an on-site stress management centre offers massage and reflexology sessions, making it as much a wellbeing destination as a historic one.
Altitude, Forest & the Art of Slowing Down

The Blue Mountains & the Holywell Recreation Area: Rising to 7,402 feet above the Caribbean Sea, Jamaica’s Blue Mountains are a destination in their own right. A hike to the peak is a transcendent experience: the path leads through an elfin forest where the low canopy feels like walking through a green tunnel, past clusters of tree ferns, bamboo, and eucalyptus, with colourful wildflowers lining the mossy trail and birdcalls filling the air as a natural soundtrack. Visitors can discover a UNESCO World Heritage Site, marvel at 120 bird species, while taking in the mystical cloud forest shrouded in mist, before descending from the hike with a cup of Jamaican Blue Mountain Coffee.
Surrender to the Senses at Jamaica’s World Class Spas
The Spa at GoldenEye, Oracabessa: Located in a cottage on the edge of the lagoon, with private open-air treatment huts nestled in the bush, botanical elixirs and essential oils at The Spa are made on site, drawing on traditional Jamaican recipes and ingredients grown at the resort’s organic farm, Pantrepant. Guests can try their Signature Bush Baths, drawn outside under open sky, come in warming, purifying, and cooling variants, or explore more experimental treatments with distinctly Jamaican character: the Blackwell Rum Brown Sugar Scrub, which combines golden brown sugar and the buttery notes of the island’s iconic Blackwell Rum with heated coconut oil; and the Blue Mountain Coffee Wrap, using Jamaica’s world-renowned coffee to target fluid retention, preceded by a brisk dry skin brush to prepare the body.

Fern Tree at Half Moon, Montego Bay: One of the Caribbean’s largest spa oasis and a Forbes Travel Guide 4-Star rated resort, Fern Tree spans 68,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor sanctuary, with 12 treatment rooms, an aromatherapy steam and sauna rooms, and a lagooon pool fed by Fern Free Falls. The signature Fern Tree Massage opens with a cerasee foot bath before a full body treatment using a house blend of allspice, ginger, and orange, finished with infused body compresses and a rum body splash, a distinctly Jamaican close to one of the spa’s most celebrated treatments.