Colorado Traveling Ducks and their humans wish you a very Happy Presidents Day holiday. We appreciate and enjoy the work and sacifices of George Washington and other founding fathers and presidents for the government they envisioned and created. We enjoy the freedoms of the this, the greatest country on earth. May you enjoy and defend your freedoms today and every day.
Uncategorized
Hemingway Remembered in Cuba
Zeb the Duck here again. Today we visited Finca Vigia,
Ernest Hemingway’s Cuba retreat. Then to lunch and a walk around in Cojimar, the fishing village portrayed in his book The Old Man and the Sea.
Ernest Hemingway rented Finca la Vigia in 1939 and purchased it a year later. He lived there until 1960 when he moved back to the United States. Hemingway’s home is as it was when he left.
To preserve and protect the contents, tourists are not allowed inside. We walked on the porch, peeking in windows and doors.
The estate has a swimming pool and used to have a tennis court.
Between the pool and tennis court are 4 tombstones for Hemingway’s dogs.
People that care about animals are good people, in this duck’s opinion. The tennis court was covered and now is a resting place for Hemingway’s boat, Pilar. We were told that Hemingway was considered a good employer and a good neighbor. I like to hear about nice humans.
The property has a small market and gift shop. The humans did some shopping while sipping sugar cane juice. This gentleman freshly squeezed the sugar cane for the juice.
Our next stop to honor Hemingway was in Cojimar. In Cojimar we enjoyed a wonderful lunch at Bodega Las Brisas. This small fishing village does not appear to look different than it would have when Hemingway visited.
As I previously told you, Hemingway found the inspiration to write The Old Man and the Sea while relaxing in Cojimar.
Walking around town, taking photos,
we reached this statue of Hemingway.
We were told it was one of the first statues to honor the author. I think I, Zeb the Duck, look good on Hemingway’s shoulder.
We did not see fishing boats and learned that many fishermen cannot afford boats and if they had boats, they could not afford gas for the motors. Our guide told us the fishing industry was depressed.
I hope you have read some of Hemingway’s books and get an opportunity to visit his home and favorite fishing village. You would like to visit these places.
Happy Valentine’s Day
Cristobal Colon Cemetery in Havana, Cuba
We are going to the cemetery today. This cemetery is named for Christopher Columbus. The 140-acre cemetery has more than 500 major mausoleums, chapels and family vaults. It is one of the greatest historical cemeteries of the world and the second most important in Latin America, second only to La Recoleta in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
I stayed on the bus.
Mom didn’t think I should be posing on these monuments. Here is some of what we saw.
One of the most famous tombs is for Senora Amelia Goyri or popularly called La Milagrosa.
When approaching, one must knock 4 times with the iron ring and when leaving, walk backwards.
This tradition was started by her husband and is continued today. The senora and baby died during childbirth and were buried. When the bodies were later exhumed, the baby was in the mother’s arms. The baby had been buried at the mother’s feet.
This is main chapel for the cemetery.
Near the chapel this lady was restoring some other monuments. Very slow, tedious work, but very important.
Many of these sites have been neglected as many of the families now live outside of Cuba.
In this cemetery there is a 75 foot memorial to firefighters. Also two monuments to baseball players. There is one bartender buried here. He was Hemingway’s bartender. Here are more photos.
Space in this cemetery is a a premium, so after three years remains are removed from their tombs, boxed and placed in a storage building.
And here is the bat.
This was not the cemeteries I see in Colorado. I hope you see this soon. It is beautiful.
Cigars made in Cuba
Today Alejandro told us we could be real Cubans. We went to Casa de Habano.
I, Zeb will be a real Cuban duck??
First we watched this lady roll a cigar.
She has been rolling cigars for many years and is very good. She put different varieties of tobacco leaves in her hand and arranged them just so.
These leaves, or bundle, are then rolled in the binder. The original hand full of leaves makes the blend. The binder is to hold them together. Her hands are very busy and she knows exactly what to do. The binder is held in place with a very small amount of vegetable paste. The cigar is placed in a mold.
This is a wooden form of two parts, which is then placed in a press. The mold properly shapes the cigar and helps allow proper airflow while smoking.
After several hours in the mold, the cigar is rolled again. One of the best leaves will be the wrapper.
The wrapper has a good flavor, complementing the blend of tobacco inside the cigar, and the wrapper gives the cigar a good appearance.
After the cigar rolling demonstration, we look around the store. Several famous people have purchased and smoked cigars here.
Casa de Habana sells many kinds of cigars, cigar accessories and Cuban rum.
We leave the main store and enter a shopping mall courtyard. These girl musicians entertain us.
Alejandro tells us that this is time for us to be real Cubans. We sample Cuban rum. Very good but we don’t drink much. Soon we receive small cups of strong Cuba coffee. This is also good. Mom doesn’t usually drink coffee but she liked it. Did not have a bitter taste to her.
Our third step to being real Cubans is smoking a cigar. A gentleman shows us how to light a cigar.
Use thin strips of cedar to light the cigar. Cedar has no resin, so the flavor of the cigar will not be compromised. Cigar lighting is not easy. But tourists are persistent and the cigars are lit and being smoked. These four cigar-smoking ladies are friends of Zeb the Duck.
They look good with these cigars. So Cuban!
After smoking and drinking, we explore a little of this mall.
There are three levels of stores.
Looking down the smoking and drinking area is pretty. We spent some time and money in this paper mache store.
I like this store.
Soon it is time to return to the bus and head for our hotel. This was a great stop. We had fun here.
Back in Havana with Zeb the Duck
My humans and I returned to Havana. We are staying at the Hotel Nacional de Cuba.
I have so much to tell you about this hotel, but it must wait until another day. Today we visit a senior center with a childcare facility. The seniors come here for day activities. And they are an active group! Then we will walk to an elementary school.
Santos drove us to an older section of Havana. Walking to the senior center, this is some of what I observed.
It rained last night, so we still have some water in the streets.
Arriving at the senior center, we entered this room. The people were dancing and talking.
There was music. It was like a party. Some of the humans in my group joined the dancing and
some visited with the senior Cubans.
After awhile, we climbed the stairs and talked to other people and saw the children from the daycare.
From the second floor we enjoyed the view
of the interior of the building.
Leaving the senior center,
we walked to the elementary school. On the narrow streets, we saw cars, bicycles and horses. You can see that Havana, like many old cities, has some restored buildings and some that are crumbling and falling apart.
I liked this man and the cart with fresh vegetables.
We were able to visit Escuela Primaria Carlos Manuel de Cespedes or Carlos Manuel de Cespedes Elementary School. We saw these students playing in the courtyard.
Photographs of national heroes were on the wall inside the school.
We saw these students being tutored.
These girls loved posing for photos.
They loved to see the pictures of themselves.
After lunch, we walked toward the Palacio del Teatro Lirico Nacional. Along the way, we saw the former Bacardi headquarters.
Bacardi rum was started in Cuba in the 1800s. They moved the headquarters to Hamilton, Bermuda after the Castro regime took some assets. On top of the building is the Bacardi bat. The bat became the logo because the bat is good for sugar cane growers. Also one of the first buildings had bats in the rafters.
Our private concert at the Palacio del Teatro Lirico Nacional was on the second floor. Mom and I loved these stained glass windows near the stairs.
They are beautiful. This group sang for us. We all enjoyed the music.
These talented singers perform in many countries around the world. We are happy they were in Havana when we were.
Most of the humans brought gifts for the senior center and for the elementary school. They were happy to receive our gifts and we were happy to help them. I like the people of Cuba. Check back to see more of my Cuban experience.
More Cienfuegos, Cuba with Zeb the Duck
Arriving at La Sociedad Grafica de Cienfuegos
I, Zeb the Duck, spotted this motorcycle. Like any guy, I asked my friend Channel, to go for a ride.
Here we are on the motorcycle. But we do not have the keys.
Inside this school, we see some finished work
and listen to the plans and accomplishments of the school and the students. The Sociedad Grafica de Cienfuegos is similar to a City College. The print shop’s mission is to provide activities and support for children with Down’s syndrome. The finished pieces were created here, with this equipment.
The students and faculty are very talented and dedicated.
We cross the patio to enter the gallery or sales room. Many paintings are available for purchase. There are masterpieces available in the patio also. Here my friend, Connie, admires some pieces of art.
Leaving the school we admire the murals on the buildings.
I think the Cubans like to paint
and I believe they are very good artists.
Santos drives through Cienfuegos to Punta Gorda and the Palacio del Valle.
We will eat lunch in the restaurant here.
This building was constructed between 1913 and 1917. Near the entrance, I spot a resting place for me. Short duck legs require many resting spots and this one is perfect for me.
We enjoyed a delicious fish lunch and then wandered through the Palacio del Valle.
Palacio del Valle has a gorgeous upper patio. If there were more time, later I would ask for a drink and snacks here.
But we return to Havana tonight, so no snacks here today. From this patio the views of the Caribbean Sea are wonderful.
This building has restaurants, patio with bar and food, a museum and rooms for rent. Palacio del Valle is beautiful. I hope you visit here soon.
Next time I will share more adventures in Havana, Cuba. Cuba is a new experience for this duck and my human. To visit and experience Cuba, check out http://www.FriendlyPlanet.com You will enjoy your time in Cuba.
Cienfuegos, Cuba with Zeb the Duck
While Santos drove us from Trinidad to Cienfuegos, Alejandro answered our questions about life in Cuba. He also told us about Benny More, a famous Cuban musician from Cienfuegos. Benny More is often considered the greatest Cuban popular singer of all time. He possessed a fluid tenor voice, which he colored and phrased with great expressivity. Benny More formed and led the leading Cuban big band of the 1950s until his death in 1963.
Here I am with Benny in Cienfuegos.
I am sitting on the end of Benny More’s signature cane. That is not a cigar under my feathers.
Walking through Cienfuegos, I liked this mural.
This is some of what I saw on the street. Notice the telephone booths.
So many friendly people.
We stopped in the Hotel la Union. Such a pretty hotel. This restaurant was inviting,
but mom said we were having lunch later. She purchased a couple bookmarks. One is still marking pages in our Cuban guidebook from Lonely Planet.
Jose Marti Park is very nice. I especially liked this tree with the bumps on the trunk.
Here I am with Jose Marti, a revolutionary and philosopher.
Cienfuegos was founded in 1819 by Don Louis D’Clouet, a Frenchman from Louisiana. Others followed but the settlement was destroyed by a hurricane in 1821. The city was rebuilt and named Cienfuegos after the then governor of Cuba. In 1957 officers at the local naval base staged a revolt against Batista sealing the place of the city in revolutionary history.
In 2005 UNESCO named the center of Cienfuegos the best example of 19th entry early Spanish Enlightenment in urban planning.
This is one of several old colonial buildings in Cienfuegos.
Our Last Day in Trinidad Cuba
Our last afternoon in Trinidad mom and Connie went to the beach. They rode in an old classic car for a taxi. But you will never guess what happened. Mom forgot the camera and me. She was hurrying, and I did not get to go. But Connie did have a camera, so this is what they saw. I was excited to see it also.
They went to Playa Ancon, which our guidebook said is the best beach on the southern coast.
Looks great!
When they retuned, mom took me to the lobby of our hotel. Are these presents for me??
We stayed at Iberostar Trinidad. This is a nice hotel on a town square. The lobby looks very pretty.
From our central location, we walked on our tour of the city. We really like this hotel.
One evening we returned to the Plaza Mayor area and listened to music on the stairs I showed you a few days ago. We heard a group of musicians play and people started dancing.
It was very nice and a lot of fun. Then another group of musicians played and professional dancers performed for us.
We liked it all.
Before we left Trinidad in the morning, mom and I walked more streets to further experience this city. These are public telephones.
I never saw public or pay phones before. Telephone booths were everywhere before cell phones were widely used. Across the plaza from our hotel we saw children waiting to enter the school.
This church across the park from our hotel seems serene.
The old car parked on the street
and the horse cart,
moving down the street, are morning activities in Trinidad. I am on a bench by our hotel.
I will miss Trinidad, but am looking forward to visiting Cienfuegos, Cuba.
Trinidad Cuba Valley de los Ingenios
On the bus and ready for lunch. I, Zeb the duck, on my way to Hacienda de Manaca Iznaga for lunch.
Riding through the country and watching the lush vegetation, I learn that this was once a center of sugar cane production. In the early 19th century hundreds of French refugees fled Haiti and set up about 50 small sugar mills in this Valley de los Ingenios. Soon this region produced a third of Cuba’s sugar.
Here we are, ready for lunch. We sat outside near the gardens.
A very beautiful and peaceful setting. While we waited for our food, these musicians entertained us.
It was very nice.
After our delicious lunch we inspected this trapiche.
The trapiche was used to extract juice from sugar cane. The force or power for this tapiche was often provided by animals, but not by ducks.
We ate outside, enjoying the fresh air, but as we walked through the restaurant, I loved these table decorations.
So much a part of a vacation experience.
I am a very happy duck today.
This tower was used during the sugar cane plantation days. At the top is my friend Barbara.
She climbed all the way to the top. Wow Barbara! These friendly people were selling craft items
and linens.
They were beautiful. I like to see all the items for sale.
Time to get back on the bus now. We are going to visit Casa del Alfarero, a pottery house. The Santander Family founded this pottery house and they have produced pottery here for generations. We love family businesses.
Here the gentleman shows how to make pottery.
He makes it look so easy. Now he asks if anyone else has ever made pottery. Here is my friend Susan.
She is making pottery. She is very good.
There are many beautiful pieces of pottery to see and purchase. Mom bought this mask and ashtray with a cigar.
Pottery must be packed in checked luggage to go home, so we bought small items. More about cigars later, when we visit the cigar factory and store.
































































































