The village can only be reached by boat or plane. The population is mainly active in subsistence agriculture and logging.[4]
Orealla has a contract with the Barama Company, a logging company.[5]
Small ocean-going vessels are able to navigate the Courantyne River for about 70 km, to the first rapids at Orealla.[6]
Cultural references
Guyanese novelist Roy Heath wrote a 1984 novel entitled Orealla, featuring a Macusi Indian from the village.[7]Clark Accord wrote the novel Between Apoera and Oreala, which was published in 2005.[8]
^Arnold, Josephine V. (1992). "Guyanese identities". In Arnold, A. James (ed.). A History of Literature in the Caribbean: Volume 2. p. 103. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
^"Biografie". Clark Accord Foundation (in Dutch). Retrieved 16 August 2020.