After our busy day, we returned to the ship for dinner and got ready to go partying at the Tropicana. It is interesting to note, once we went through the security into Cuba the first time, there was no one watching us go back off the ship a second time.
In any event, our four antique American cars showed up. They were all convertibles and the drivers were very handsome men. We all found a car and went on our way to the Tropicana. Once we got there, we couldn’t find some of our group. Turned out one of the cars lost its clutch and they had to replace it on the fly. Those engines are basically held together with scotch tape and gum but somehow, everyone arrived at the Tropicana.
The
Tropicana is really awesome. It is a throwback to pre-Castro days. I was
surprised that it was outdoors. You walk into a doorway and then are led to
tables that faced an outdoor stage with lots of walkways along side the stage. Launched in 1939 on the outskirts of Havana, it
provides a mix of flash and feathers, song and statuesque dancers under the
stars. You could almost imagine
what Havana was in its heyday.
The show was fast paced and the music highlighted the rhythms of Cuba – rumba, mambo, danzonete, Latin jazz, cha-cha-cha and pulsating drums and featured so many singers, acrobats and lots of dancers, everywhere you looked. The show was electric! It went on for 2 hours.
Along with our tickets, was a 325 ml bottle of rum and a bottle of coke between two of us. Too much rum, really!
Fortunately, the cars returned for us and took us back to the ship. What a wonderful day! It is too bad more people won’t have the awesome experience. I would love to go back and spend more time in that beautiful city.
Last May, I had the pleasure of going on a “girls” cruise to Key West and a place that has been on my “bucket list” for a long time: Havana, Cuba. The trip was arranged by my friend Fran who is a cruise specialist (www.travelbyfran.com). We went on a Royal Caribbean ship (Majesty of the Seas) from Fort Lauderdale. The trip went to Key West and Havana but since I have blogged about Key West before, I am just going to talk about Havana.
In my college days, I worked at a hotel that employed many Cubans. They told stories about their homeland and spoke about the wealth they enjoyed, the wide, beautiful boulevards and beautiful homes they had to leave when Castro took over. I found the stories to be fascinating. Once Cuba was opened again, I wanted to go there. Well, I finally got there even if it was only for a day. As it turned out, we were on one of the last ships to visit Havana before it was declared off limits.
To tell the truth, I loved it. I loved every minute we were
there and it was too bad it wasn’t longer but at least we had got a little
flavor of the beauty that is Havana.
First of all, we needed a visa that you buy on-board the
ship. Once we got off the ship, we had to go through their security area and we
had to change money into their currency that was the Cuban Convertible Peso called
CUC’s. Interestingly, some places did take dollars.
We also had to go on a tour guided by an officially
sanctioned tour company. I chose the 5-hour tour that ended up lasting through
lunch so it was a 7-hour tour. The buses were quite new and very clean. They were
Chinese and were clearly made for a shorter population but the good news was it
had a bathroom. The tour guide spoke English very well. She deftly left out anything
about the Castro’s. Their name wasn’t even mentioned.
We traveled through the streets. Everyone was fairly well
dressed, maybe not expensively but definitely clean and well groomed. Everyone
we met was very nice. They know that tourism is important and the people were all
very accommodating. We went by beautiful old homes that were sadly neglected. Unfortunately,
there isn’t enough money to restore them. You could imagine what they looked
like when Havana was wealthy.
Among the places we saw were old Havana with Capital, the Cathedral
de San Cristóbal, the
University and the Hospitals and the Plaza de la Revolución. Around the plaza were government
buildings one of which was the Che Guevara building and the Jose Marti
building. The Plaza de la Revolución really looks more like parking lot.
It was a bit disappointing really except there were a number of old American cars
parked there. We asked the owner if we could take a seat in a turquoise
convertible. He said yes and in we sat! While we were taking pictures of ourselves
in the cars, one of us was working and hired four of the cars to take us to the
Tropicana that evening.
We also visited the Colón cemetery and
got off the bus for a tour. The cemetery is famous and quite beautiful place
with lots interesting mausoleums to visit and learn about. The tour guide for
the cemetery took us through special parts of the cemetery including ones
dedicated to firefighters, a tomb of a dog who was so distraught when his owner
died that he sat there until he died and someone sculpted a statue that is part
of the /owner’s mausoleum. Another is a mausoleum of the man who built the stadium
for the Pan American games.
One that stood out the legend of “La Milgrosa.” According to the legend, Amelia and her baby did not survive childbirth but the inconsolable widower, José Vicente Adot y Rabell could not accept it and visited every day. One day they opened the tomb and the child was in Amelia’s arms not separated as they were when they were buried in the tomb. Even today, over 100 years later, people visit Amelia’s resting place as a shrine where they could ask for protection for their children, for childbirth without complications or for couples with fertility issues. When we were there, there were lots of fresh flowers were at the tomb.
We ended up at the Castillo De Los Tres
Reyes Del Morro which is the fort guarding the entrance to the harbor.
It is named for the three kings. El Morro looks very much like the fortress in
Puerto Rico. I guess if you see one, you see them all. Among other things, we
passed Che Guevara’s home called La Cabana de Che Guevara. It is a museum but
we didn’t have the time to go in.
At
the end of the tour, they took us to an artist building located in the dock area
to go shopping for souvenirs. It was a building full of booths with all kinds
of art and artists. I did pick up a picture to bring home. They did take
dollars after I ran out of CUCs.
When the tour was over, the guide said if we would like to go to eat at a local restaurant, they would take us with the bus as long as there was 10 people who wanted to go. Off we went to a non-government restaurant named Dona Carmel. It was a fun place with lots of cats walking around. You almost felt like it was Key West and not Havana. It was here we had our first mojito for the trip. They had a pretty extensive menu but when we asked for items it turned out all they had was local fish and shrimp. Any meat or chickens were not available because they have to wait on long lines to buy it. The mojitos were excellent! The food was good. We had rice and plantains with the fish.
On the way back, among other buildings we saw was the American Embassy. It was just sad that no one is there anymore. It is on the main street going to the port. We returned to the ship to get ready for our evening at the Tropicana.