The previous Cuba posts now have the relevent photos added
O
Saturday, 27 December 2008
Wednesday, 17 December 2008
La Habana, 11th-17th of December
So I´ve been spending the last few days of my trip here in Havana. A bit different from the rest of my trip really,
as I haven't visited many cities, preferring to stay out in the countryside and do more outdoorsy things.On Friday I went for an explore of what is known as Habana vieja, or th
e oldest part of Havana. Really interesting just to walk around for a few hours and drop into a few museums. The buildings are truly amazing here. The grand colonial architecture is in some building beautifully restored and maintained, and crumbling to the point of falling down on others. Also, refreshingly for a big latin American city Havana is relatively 
safe. So even at night time you can wander the streets without bei
ng quite as on edge as you would in other big cities.On Saturday I went with a couple of girls (staying in the same casa as me) on a bit of a trip by bus out of the city. First we travelled out west to Marina Hemingway, were there are views of the coast and several foreign boats moored. We then travelled back into the city visited the necropolis Crist
obal Colon. This is a huge graveyard, with over a million people interred there
. Its a lot less imposing than Recoleta in Buenos Aires, but the shear scale of the place is quite amazing.Later in the afternoon I visited the Malecon, Havana´s famous promenade. A very pleasant place to wander, watching the waves and the numerous Cubans who go there to fish from the sea wall. To get back to my casa I took an o
pen top bus back along the Malecon. Great sit
ting up on the top deck in the cool evening sea breeze.Sunday was another day for exploring the city, but this time Centro Havana. I started at the revolution museum, housed in the old presidential palace and detailing the whole history of the revolution from Independence to the present day. Obviously it all the information has to be taken with a pinch
of salt (all revolutionaries killed in b
attle as referred to as being ´murdered´and those on the other side are referred to as criminals), but is still very interesting.On Monday I got out of Havana completely, taking the bus out to Playa del Este. This is a beach about 20km east of the city. Your stereotypical Caribbean beach really, with white sand and turquoise water. I found a nice spot of beach and spend the day lounging with my book, and the occasional mojito. I spent the evening wandering along the Malecon at sunsetYesterday was my last full day in the city. I first visited the biggest (and best) art gallery in Cuba the Museo National Bellas Artes. Several hours worth of mainly contemporary painting and sculpture, including a whole
room of Wilfredo Lam.In the afternoon i visited the Museo del Ron. Housed in an old Havana Club (Cuba´s finest rum) factory. It makes for a very interesting tour of the rum making process, and of course there is the tasting at the end of the tour!That afternoon I managed to meet up with Emm and Elise, who I met in Tulum(Mexico). In the evening we decided to go with two other guys from my casa and watch the Cuban national sport of baseball. The whole country loves it and of the 3 tv channels they have here, one shows a game every night! We found are way to the Estadio Latinamerico, and paid our 3 pesos to get in (sport is very heavily subsidised here to make it accessible to all). A very nice, and very Cuban way to spend my last evening sat up in the stands. The very lax security (we could have got in for free as the old man who collected the tickets ha
d gone to the toilet when we got to the gate.:!) meant we could bring in a bottle of Havana Club and cola to enjoy some Cuba Libres while watching the game. Afterwards we got a cab out to the Malecon and sat watching the waves for a while. Funny to think looking out that Florida was less than a hundred miles away to the north.My flight is not until this evening and I think i´m just going to have a fairly lazy day, maybe wander around my favourite parts of the city again.so yep, that's the end of my trip. I´m in a way looking forward to going home, but then again it means having to take things seriously again. I´m sure come January when i´m sat behind my desk i´ll be longing to be away again!I will try and upload photos of Cuba in the next day or two when I get back, so keep a look out for them.Hope you have enjoyed/found interesting reading this blog, and i hope to see you all soon.
O
O
Thursday, 11 December 2008
Cuba, 5th-11th December
So, i have actually manag
ed to find some reasonable priced Internet in Cuba so I will give you a brief update.
I arrived in to Havana last Friday (5th) and managed to find my way to my Casa Particular. In Cuba there are no cheap hostels to stay in, or even cheap hotels for that matter. Therefore the best places to stay are in rooms rented out in private homes, casas particulares. This is nice, because its good to stay with a local Cuban family. Although as I've found some are more friendly than others. The downside of this is of course not really being able to meet other travels, something which is especially important to
me travelling on my own.
On Saturday morning I took a wander round the nearby plaza de la revolution. A huge open square, quite sovietesq really with big loud speakers positioned around the place. This is were Fidel used to hold rallies and make public addresses before he became to ill to d
o so. The plaza is dominated by the huge monument and statue of Jose Marti, Cuba's liberator. Unfortunately I couldn't go to the top of the monument as it was closed for refurbishment. I the afternoon I took the bus west to the small town of Vinales a few hours away. the next day I went on a guided walk around the surrounding countryside. It is a very pretty area with big limestone cliffs and lots of Tobacco fields. However due to the recent hurricanes here in Cuba a lot of the Tobacco crop was destroyed and also the houses they use for drying it. The
re is also a network of caves within the limestone hills, fun to explore but not quite as good as diving the Canecotes in Mexico.
Monday was spent travelling to the east of Havana and the town of Trinidad. This is a very pretty town (in fact a UNESCO world heritage site) with what are actually pretty lethal cobbled streets. Trinidad is famed for its music, and in the evening I went to a local bar with live music. It was your standard Cuban stuff really, but they also had a show of dance. This was really interesting as it came for the African slaves brought here by the Spanish, and therefore had an incredibly Afr
ican feel to it. 
I spent Wednesday wandering the streets of Trinidad and climbing the hill behind it for great views across the city to the Caribbean. There were a few museums there, but nothing to really hold your attention for t
hat long. In the evening I took a bus to the city of Santa Clara.
Santa Clara is mainly famous for being the adopted home of Che Guevara after the revolution. Just outside the center of the city there is a large monument to him, again with a huge empty square in front of it. There is also a museum detailing his life as well as a mausoleum dedicated to him and his fellow Cubans who died in Bolivia. Its amazing how much he is revered here actually, you see far more images of Che in the towns and cities than you do of Fidel. I guess this (and the way he is an icon world wide) is mainly due to the way he was martyred by the CIA.
I also visited a small cigar factory in Santa Clara. Quite amazing to see about 1
50 people all lined up on benches rolling hundreds of cigars a day. Not a particularly fun job really, the whole set up looking incredibly old fashioned even with guards patrolling the benches to make sure employees don't steal any of the valuable cigars. Interestingly there was also a man at the front who's job it was to read the daily newspaper and notices to the workers over a loudspeaker.
I have now travelled back to Havana, and will be spending the last few days of my trip here before heading back home next week!
O
I arrived in to Havana last Friday (5th) and managed to find my way to my Casa Particular. In Cuba there are no cheap hostels to stay in, or even cheap hotels for that matter. Therefore the best places to stay are in rooms rented out in private homes, casas particulares. This is nice, because its good to stay with a local Cuban family. Although as I've found some are more friendly than others. The downside of this is of course not really being able to meet other travels, something which is especially important to
On Saturday morning I took a wander round the nearby plaza de la revolution. A huge open square, quite sovietesq really with big loud speakers positioned around the place. This is were Fidel used to hold rallies and make public addresses before he became to ill to d
Monday was spent travelling to the east of Havana and the town of Trinidad. This is a very pretty town (in fact a UNESCO world heritage site) with what are actually pretty lethal cobbled streets. Trinidad is famed for its music, and in the evening I went to a local bar with live music. It was your standard Cuban stuff really, but they also had a show of dance. This was really interesting as it came for the African slaves brought here by the Spanish, and therefore had an incredibly Afr
I spent Wednesday wandering the streets of Trinidad and climbing the hill behind it for great views across the city to the Caribbean. There were a few museums there, but nothing to really hold your attention for t
Santa Clara is mainly famous for being the adopted home of Che Guevara after the revolution. Just outside the center of the city there is a large monument to him, again with a huge empty square in front of it. There is also a museum detailing his life as well as a mausoleum dedicated to him and his fellow Cubans who died in Bolivia. Its amazing how much he is revered here actually, you see far more images of Che in the towns and cities than you do of Fidel. I guess this (and the way he is an icon world wide) is mainly due to the way he was martyred by the CIA.
I also visited a small cigar factory in Santa Clara. Quite amazing to see about 1
I have now travelled back to Havana, and will be spending the last few days of my trip here before heading back home next week!
O
Monday, 8 December 2008
Cuba
hey guys, just to let you know there will be no Cuba updates while I am here. This is due to the internet costing almost 6 euros an hour. I will update it when I return home on the 18th though.
sorry, i´m not that rich......
O
sorry, i´m not that rich......
O
Thursday, 4 December 2008
Tikal and Cave Diving in Mexico, 2-4th December
On Tuesday morning I had another early start catching the 5am bus to Tikal. This is a huge park containing the ruins of one of the most important Mayan cities. Hidden in the jungle are numerous temples and pyramids, several sticking up high above the forest canopy. I spend the first 4 hours or so there with a guide who took us round the main sites a
Yesterday was another travel day (my last long bus of the trip hopefully!), passing through Belize and arriving in a town called Tulum in Mexico. A small town only a few hours south of Cancun.
This morning I went on a cave diving trip to the Cenotes. The entire Yucatan peninsular is riddles with limestone caves, and around Tulum there are several networks which can b
In the afternoon I just read my book on the pristine white sands of the local beach, very Caribbean.
Tomorrow i´l head up to Cancun from where I will take a flight to Havana.
O
Tuesday, 2 December 2008
Hiking in Guatemala, 26th-30th November
O
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