Cuba Santa Clara

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  • Day 14

    Neues System der ökonomischen Planung

    May 6 in Cuba ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

    Auf dem Gelände unseres Hotels findet direkt landwirtschaftliche Produktion für das Hotel und die Gemeinde statt.

    Auf den Feldern arbeiten 4 Landarbeiter, die ebenfalls ihre eigenen Felder bewirtschaften. Die Fläche produziert knapp 6 kg Gemüse am Tag; das Hotel benötigt täglich 23 kg und kauft daher auch von anderen Bauern. Verkauft werden die Produkte vor allem an das Hotel, aber auch an die Bevölkerung bzw. die Gemeinde.

    Der Lieferweg der Produkte vom Feld in die Küche beträgt keine 200 Meter.

    Angebaut werden Tomaten, Paprika, Zucchini, Süßkartoffeln, Maniok, Blattsalat und Mango. In Zukunft sollen auch Zitronen gepflanzt und Vieh gehalten werden.

    Hotel und Landarbeiter arbeiten außerdem zusammen mit Kindern, Studenten und Wissenschaftlern und der UN.
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  • Day 14

    In Search of Che Guevara

    March 15, 2020 in Cuba ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    After three days in Trinidad, we were really starting to feel at home in the place. The streets that had looked so confusing when we arrived, now felt familiar. My home for the three nights had been the magnificent casa particulaire owned by Carlos and Jenny Amenidides. They really had welcomed us and proven to be exceptional hosts.

    We bade our final farewell after breakfast and walked our luggage back to the waiting bus. Our destination for the day was the famous city of Santa Clara - the place where the image of Che Guevera is everywhere. But before we could begin the day;'s ride we had a tortuous bus transfer up high into the mountains.

    Anyone who thinks that Cuba is all flat, has no idea what they are talking about. The driver had to use all his skill to negotiate the narrow roads and the tight switchbacks. At times the gradients were so steep that I was worried that the bus would not be able to struggle to the top of the next climb. The roof of the bus regularly bashed on the low overhanging branches.

    At one spectacular vantage point we stopped to climb to the top of a viewing platform where we could see all the way back to Trinidad and the Caribbean Sea beyond. It was an ideal spot for another group photo.

    Then it was back in the bus for another 30 minutes of serious climbing. I was certainly glad we didn't have to ride THAT section ! Eventually the bus stopped and we were told to get ready to ride. I looked ahead at the next section of road and noted that it went straight uphill. Lee had told us that the day's ride would be a DOWNHILL ride, but once again he had lied.

    For the next two hours we alternated between long fast descents and steep climbs. Although the climbs were not long, some of them were very steep. I am happy to admit that one two occasions I got off and walked to the top.

    The scenery that we were riding through was probably the prettiest of the ride so far. Not only did we have regular views down to the lowlands, but we passed through a succession of small villages where the locals greeted us cheerfully as we passed by. Numerous horse drawn carts carried all sorts of goods back and forth.

    The road itself was sometimes unsealed and sometimes bitumen. The poor condition of the road reminded me of some of the mountain roads we had ridden in Bhutan.

    At one point I could hear happy singing coming from a small house and I stopped to listen. It did not take long to realise that it was a church gathering. The people sang and clapped with obvious joy and the harmonies were beautiful. Several young children wandered in and out, waving and smiling at me. It really was a wonderful glimpse of local life.

    I stopped outside the church for 20 minutes or so until the rest of the riders joined me and we continued together. As we descended, the heat that we had experienced each afternoon steadily built up. Apparently there has been very little rain and this shows in the dry and dusty conditions we have seen everywhere.

    Eventually we reached the sizeable city of Manicuragua, where I met a T intersection. I thought it would be good to film some of the street life. In the process I did not notice that our riders had stopped by the side of the road. I kept going through the town, before finally realising that I was alone. It was a slightly scary feeling and I had to turn around and retrace my route until I found the rest of the group.

    A short distance later we finished the ride and loaded the bikes into the bus. We then had a short drive to Santa Clara, the famous location where Che Guevara successfully waged a guerrilla war against the Battista regime. The image of Che is now everywhere and a huge mausoleum has been built in the revolution square to house his remains. This has become a place of pilgrimage for those who think that Che was some sort of superhuman.

    We visited the memorial where we had to walk in silence past his remains, before finally checking into our lovely hotel. It has been another long day.

    I should also add that word of the outside world is slowly reaching us. I can assure you that we are all well and healthy and have plenty of food and toilet paper. The biggest worry is that our flights and travel plans over the next couple of weeks may be impacted. Interesting times indeed.

    Pictures to follow .
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  • Day 9

    Viva la Revolution

    March 12 in Cuba ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    Nach dem heutigen Frühstück unternahmen wir einen spannenden Stadtrundgang durch Santa Clara und besuchten die gepanzerten Eisenbahnwaggons des Tren Blindado, dem nationalen Denkmal der kubanischen Revolution, die heute noch fest in der kubanischen Kultur und Mentalität verankert ist. Weiter ging es in die Kolonialstadt Remedios zu einem ganz besonderen Erlebnis: Das Zuckerrohrmuseum Marcelo Salado besitzt erstaunliche Exponate, die wir bei unserer Führung kennenlernten - das Prachtstück ist eine ehrwürdige Dampflok, die seit vielen Jahren mit Zuverlässigkeit ihren Dienst verrichten sollte. Leider war sie ausgerechnet heute defekt. Im Anschluss ging es auf die kubanische Insel Cayo Las Brujas zu unserem 5-Sterne-Strandhotel, unser All-Inclusive-Badeurlaub hat begonnen...Read more

  • Day 105

    Santa Clara (Kuba)

    January 4, 2019 in Cuba ⋅ ⛅ 29 °C

    Santa Clara ist vor allem bekannt für das Grab und die Geschichte von Che Guevara, wobei sich hier natürlich alles um die Revolution und die Herren Che Guevara und Fidel Castro dreht.

    Wir hatten eine wundervolle Unterkunft hier und eine alkoholreiche Nacht, gutes Essen und viel Musik. Die Größe der Stadt ist vergleichbar mit Havana, hat aber wesentlich mehr Geschichte.

    Nun geht es aver wirklich an den Strand nach Varadero, um die Seele baumeln zu lassen. Allerdings genieße ich schon die letzten 8 Tage die Ruhe ohne Internet und Informationen, das wird sich auf Kuba wohl nicht so schnell ändern.
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  • Day 97

    Santa Clara, Cuba

    January 22, 2017 in Cuba ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    A blast from the past.

    Hablo espanõl? No. We knew we were in trouble the moment we landed in Santa Clara. We were drastically underprepared for Cuba. In particular, collectively we had almost no spanish, our only booking was the first night's accommodation and Cuba has no internet.

    Alright, no internet is an exaggeration. But not far off. The only way to get online is in a "wifi hotspot" (read: plaza) with a prebought internet card. We're yet to find a casa, bar or restaurant with wifi and you can't get a mobile plan that includes it. I kid you not, the only way to get online is in a park. Outdoors!

    I'm sure all you GenY's can feel my pain. We've been travelling for three months now and all our research and bookings are done online, on the fly.

    So we're going old school. We've stepped back in time, why not embrace it? In our armoury we carry a spanish pocket phrasebook and 16,000 mexican pesos. No, if you were wondering, that's not the right currency and cubans don't take card. Period. Underprepared, entiendo?

    Drama aside, Cuba is fascinating! Colourful pastel facades of breezy single storey dwellings line streets buzzing with activity. Horse drawn carts, 1960s dodges, motorbikes with side cars and old men playing dominos are par for the course on the road. Bicycles of all shapes, ages and passengers weave down narrow streets in ordered chaos. Kids, dogs, goats and horses mingle with traffic making even just spectating quite stressful.

    We're staying in casa particulares. They're everywhere and typically are just a spare bedroom in a family home. As Cat said, it's really just Air BnB but the Cubans beat them to it. The families to date have been genial and oh so hospitable, despite our ignorance to their culture and language (oops we're sorry). Most of them don't speak english but you'll be surprised how many ways there are to communicate. Cat speaks the first most spanish, so Scott and I usually thrust her forward to recieve the barrage of incomprehensible dialogue, which is quite often followed by 'no entiendo'.

    Santa Clara is less touristy than the other areas we planned to visit, and it was nice to spend our first evening immersed in Cuban culture without the entourage of the 'you buy somethiiiiinnnggg's!!!!'. Oddly enough that slightly contradicts where the night went from there.

    Taking in the activities of the plaza from an adjacent bar, we were approached by some locals whom we chatted to between drinks. One of them, Reina de gainer - number one in Cuba, offered to show us to a nearby restaurant. We followed causiously, helping him with his litre of port along the way. He ended up dining with us and, as we grew to expect, didn't have a dime to contibute to the bill. It didn't phase us, he was great insight and even better entertainment and the total bill was less than 25USD. We even had some rums with his brother at a cafe afterwards, at 4USD per litre (yes, you buy by the bottle!?). Finally an affordable country!

    Still in recovery from the previous nights dinner, our stomachs were pleasantly assualted by breakfast. So much breakfast! Our casa mama had made (just for us) fresh fruit, crepes, omelettes, bread rolls, two types of cake, biscotti, guava smooties and espressos, all neatly set in a sunny outdoor courtyard adjacent our room. At 4USD each (we later found out we could have paid 3) I didn't want to leave.

    We spent the morning investigating transport options to our next destination, Trinidad. With buses booked out, and no trains due to a hurricane in 1993 (still not repaired), we defaulted to a taxi and spent the next few hours in the comfort of a car cruising through the Cuban countryside. Happy as Larry.
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  • Day 98

    santa clara

    December 11, 2016 in Cuba ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    Samen met mijn compagnon beslissen we om naar Santa Clara te gaan. Een stad dat ik wou bezoeken omdat je het mausuleum van Che Guevara kon bekijken. Zijn gebeente werd overgebracht vanuit Bolivia, waar Che in 1967 werd gedood door Boliviaanse militairen.

    In de laatste decemberdagen van 1958 vochten de revolutionaire troepen van Che hier een beslissende slag uit.
    Dictator Fulgencio Batista, die een gepantserde trein [Tren Blindado] naar Santa Clara had gestuurd om zijn troepen te ondersteunen werd nabij het station van santa clara tot stilstand gebracht met een buldozer waarbij de lading wapens in handen van El Che en zijn mannen terecht kwam.
    De overwinning van de revolutie was een feit en Batista ontvluchtte hierdoor Havana.

    Als ik mijn fantasie gebruikte voelde ik de overwinning die ik samen vierde met che in mijn armen. haha
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  • Day 6

    Santa Clara, Cuba

    August 30, 2016 in Cuba ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    Lebendige Studentenstadt mit Che-Guevara-Kult

    Der Mythos lebt: Nirgendwo sonst strahlt die revolutionäre Energie noch so stark wie in der geschichtsträchtigen Che-Guevara-Stadt.

    Zentralkubas zweitgrößte Stadt (220.000 Einw.) ist Verkehrsknotenpunkt, Industriestandort und bedeutendes Wissenschaftszemtrum, denn hier lehrt eine der namhaftesten Universitäten des Landes. Die vielen Studenten verleihen der Stadt ein junges Flair und sorgen Tag und Nacht für Leben auf dem zentralen Parque Vidal. Eine rege Kulturszene mit abwechslungsreichem Nachtleben lockt viele Besucher.Read more

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