Did
You Know?... Christopher Columbus discovered
Cuba on his way back to Spain after his second voyage
to the New World in 1492.
Havana:
The centre of all things Cuban. There's an air
of faded glory about the city; streamlined 50s and 60s
American cars cruise the streets as the paint peels
from the walls of almost everywhere. The city is lined
with glorious Spanish colonial architecture, much of
which is under restoration.
Nightlife:
Havana has a swinging nightlife, and less traffic and
commercialisation than your average Latin American city.
But from the rough brilliance of Old Havana to residential
areas ranging from shabby to demanding demolition, the
exuberant friendliness of Havana's inhabitants is what
shines through.
Did
You Know?... Cuba is so large that it allegedly
confused Columbus, who thought he had discovered a continent
and not an island. It sits at the mouth of the Gulf
of Mexico; the main island is 746 miles (1,200km) long
with an irregular coastline that offers hundreds of
bays and beaches.
Santiago
de Cuba: The second largest city and also the
most Caribbean, has its own musical rhythm and pace.
Located in the eastern region, in a valley alongside
a sweeping bay at the foothills of the legendary Sierra
Maestra. This hilly city has many sites of tourist and
historic interests, some of which are closely related
to our struggles for independence. It is also home to
a famous brand of rum, the most unique carnival in the
island and also of many musical genres.
Mountains:
Cuba has a beautiful mix of mountain ranges and plains,
over 200 bays and 289 sun drenched beaches to explore.
Did
You Know?... Cuba's first inhabitants were indigenous
people who arrived by sea, following the trade winds
westward from the coast of Venezuela along the islands
of the Caribbean.
History:
Little evidence remains of the first indigenous
people, the Ciboney (or Guanahacabibe), who began settling
the island about 1000 BC. The Ciboney lived along the
coast and survived by fishing, hunting, and gathering
plant foods. They lived in small, seminomadic clans
and left no written record of their society, religions,
or languages.
Tourists:
Cuba is the Caribbean's largest and least commercialised
island and one of the world's last bastions of communism.
Its relative political isolation has prevented it from
being overrun by tourists, and locals are sincerely
friendly to those who do venture in.
The
Malecon Seawall: Started at the beginning of
the 19th century and stretches across 7 km of the northern
coastline of Havana from the entrance to the Castillo
de La Punta until La Chorrera fort at the entrance to
the Almendares river.
Santiago de Cuba Attractions
include: 26th of July
Historical Museum, Tropicana Santiago, Padre Pico, The
Troubadour's House, Metropolitan Cathedral, Santiago
Carnaval , Shrine of Our Lady of Charity of El Cobre,
Bacardí Museum, Baracoa, Sierra Maestra, The
Diego Velázquez House-Museum, Santa Ifigenia
Cemetery.
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