Blau Varadero ****
Carretera de las Morlas Km. 15
VARADERO-MATANZAS
Tel. (+53) 45667545
Fax. (+53) 45667494
salesmanager@blauvaradero.cyt.cu
Location: just on the shore of the magnificent and famous Varadero beach, the hotel consists of a 13 floor building, completely new.
Ideal for those who want to enjoy the beauty and the atmosphere of the most well known beach of Cuba, with the best facilities and a wide list of activities.
Juan Gualberto Gómez Airport 35 km / Varadero 0 km / La Habana Airport 140 km
Hotel Facilities
Doubles and Suites: Doubles with fully equipped bathrooms,220 V. hairdryer, vanity mirrors, towel for the swimming pool, telephone, music channel on TV SAT-TV air conditioning, minibar, safe-deposit box and terrace. Suites in additon contain a livin groom and bathrobes.
Gastronomy: All Inclusive basis, breakfast and dinner Buffet, including a typical Cuban Buffet once a week and lunch at the Grill-Restaurant. The hotel also has two Restaurants a Ia carte “Palma Real” and “El Criollo”, Grill “Las Adelfas”, buffet “Flamboyan” bar Hall “Orqu Ranchon playa. Snack Bar “Las Dunas” opened 24h. and Piano Bar.
All Inclusive: - Breakfast and dinner Buffet in the main Restaurant - live music in our Speciality’s - Lunch in the Grill Restaurant - Snacks, national and international drinks 24 hours, alcoholic drinks 24 hours - Wellness Buffet during breakfast and dinner - One dinner, per booking and week, in ours a Ia carte Restaurants (previous reservation required) - Typical Cuban dinner once a week - Minibar daily refilled with bottled water, soft drinks and local - Meeting Rooms (capacity for 300 people) - A day and night entertainment program.
All Inclusive Sports: -2 Tennis courts - I Multiple sports court - Outdoor pool - Gym/Sauna/Steam bath/Jacuzzi/hydromasage shower Gymnastics/I/olleyball/Aerobics/ Water gymnastics/French bowling - Windsurf/Canoes/Pedal boats/Sailing boats - 1 lesson of scuba diving in group - Tennis lessons - Scuba diving lessons (with a surcharge). Spa with 4 massage rooms, 2 mud therapy rooms, hairdresser, and Medical consultation.
Entertainment: Our entertainer team offers sport and leisure activities during daytime as well as night shows.
Children’s Entertainment: Free Mini Club for children from 2-12 years, as well as playground and children’s pool.
Meeting Rooms: meeting rooms with capacity for 300 people with the possibility of dividing this room in three different parts (100 people per room).
Blau Costa Verde ****
Playa Pesquero, Rafael Freyre
Tel. 53-24 433510
Fax. 53-24 433515
info@blau-cv.co.cu
Location: In front of the beautiful Playa Pesquero, with fine white sand and the turquoise blue of the Caribbean Sea is located our resort which is surrounded of an exuberant seaside vegetation in a privileged and absolutely tropical environment where the beauty of the Cuban nature can be admired. It’s ideal for those who are looking for completely relaxing holidays, for people who are travelling alone or with the partner, for families or for groups of friends; the pleasant atmosphere and the considerate and cheerful service, which is characteristic for all habitants from the biggest island of the Antilleans, will make your holidays unforgettable.
Airport 65 km / Holguin 45 km / Santiago de Cuba 175 km.
Hotel Facilities
Doubles and Suites: All units have fully equipped bathrooms, hairdryer, Sat Tt telephone, individual air conditioning, mm/bar with water, beers and national drinks, safe-deposit box, terrace or balcony 36 Double rooms have an inside door to be connected. The suites are provided also with Jacuzzis, separated shower and a wide living room. In addition the VIP package features:
sea views, bathrobe, one free excursion to Guardalavaca.
Gastronomy: Breakfast, lunch and dinner/n the buffet restaurant “La Arcada”
Restaurants: Italian restaurant “II Ponticello’ Cuban restaurant “La Cascada”, beach restaurant “Mary sol” with grill specialties and fast food is offering lunch directly on the beach. Snack Bar “Laguna Azul” with fast food from 10.00 until 17.00, tea time from 17.00 until 18.00 and cold sandwiches from 23.00 until 02.00.
Bars: “Laguna Azul”, Lobby Bar “La fuente” Aqua bar in the swimming pool and beach restaurant “Mar y sol”
All Inclusive: Breakfast, lunch and buffet dinner. One dinner per week in each specialties restaurant (prior reservation) — Alcoholic and not alcoholic drinks, national and selected imported brands 24 hours — Minibar (daily filled with different drinks) — Snacks — Safe deposit box — Sauna and Jacuzzi — Discotheque (admission free and drinks included — Handing over of beach towels
All Inclusive Sports: I Swimming pool for adults — I separate children’s pool, Fitness-room — Tennis courts — Multiple sport court (volleyball, basketball)
— Snorkeling — Nautical sports without engine (kayak, pedalos) — Bicycles — Archery and air gun shooting
Entertainment: Daily entertainment with sports, competitions, dance lessons, Spanish lessons, aerobic. Exclusive salsa course for the hotel guests (5 lessons per week) given by professional dancers (limited registration). Evening entertainment: Traditional folklore shows, shows to take part/n, live music.
Entertainment for children: Miniclub with professional babysitters, weekly entertainment programmes including: trips games on the beach and in the swimming pool, mini disco, dancing with fancy dresses. Babysitting to be requested (with charge).
Blau Colonial Hotel *****
Cayo Coco / Jardines del Rey
Ciego de Avila, Cuba
TEL. 533330 1311 FAX. 533330 1384
sales@blaucolonial.co.cu
Location: the hotel is located in Cayo Coco, surrounded by long beaches of fine sand and crystal clear water; it was opened in 1993 and after its total renovation during the summer of 2004 reopened as a 5 stars hotel on the 16 of December2004 offering new services as well as facilities.
The perfect hotel for all those who, with or without children, want to enjoy one of the bests beach areas of Cuba, combining relax and activities.
Intemational Airport Jarclines del Rey: 12km / Moron 65 Km/ La Habana 550 km
Hotel Facilities
Doubles: Doubles with fully equipped bathrooms, 220 V, hairdryer vanity mirrors, air conditioning, safe-deposit box, towel for the swimming pool, minibar, telephone, SAT-TV music channel on TV, terrace or balcony In addition the VIP package features: sea views, bathrobe, slippers, kettle service and room service.
Gastronomy: Buffet “Plaza” for breakfast and dinner, for lunch our guests can choose between Grill restaurant “Yarey” and Ranchon playa “Hemingway’ Moreover, our specialties restaurants for dinner are the following Gourmet “La Fontanella”, of fish and seafood “El Dorado” and Creole El Caribeho’ Our Bars are the followings: “Placita” (24 hours), Piano Bar “Fontanella”, Discotheque “Salsa Café”, Bar “Yarey”.
All Inclusive. - Breakfast and dinner buffet - National and international drinks (24 hours), alcoholic drinks (10 a.m - 02.00 am) -Wellness Buffet during breakfast and dinner - One dinner, per reservation and week, in our specialties’ restaurants (reservation required) - Safe-deposit box - Mm/bar daily replenished with local bottled water, soft drinks and beers
- Snacks in “La Placita”24 hours - Use of the Atelier - Library - Free entrance to the disco and the Piano bar, drinks included (from 22.00- 02.00 h.) Typical Cuban dinner once a week.
All Inclusive Sports: - 1 Swimming pool - Gym - Tennis - Windsurf/sail boats/catamarans/pedal boats/canoes - Snorkeling - Bicycles, 2 hours per room and day - One free initial lesson of scuba-diving in our swimming pool.
Aerobics/Volleyball/Waterpolo/Beach Volleyball - Multiple sports court
Entertainment: Daily sports and maintenance entertainment. The entertainment at nights, taking advantage of the special configuration of the hotel, will be organized in different places consisting of original activities like hand made activities, live music, etc….
Children’s Entertainment. All day long service including Mini Club, Re/az area, Teenager Club (during schools holidays), children’s area with gardens, pools, cots and babysitting.
BIau Arenal Hotel ****
Santa Maria Mar
LAGUNA DE BOCA CIEGA
SANTA MARIA DEL MAR
LA HABANA, CUBA
TEL. 53 77971 272
FAX. 53 77971 287
reservas@arenal.get.tur.cu
Location: Opened in 1985 and renovated in 1997, it is a warm resort of 3 buildings of 2 floors each, located in the area of Playas del Este, of a very fine sand and the most turquoise blue of the Cuban beaches.
Due to its proximity to La Habana it is the ideal Club for people who search for the combination of sun and see holidays together with the culture and fun that the city offers.
Airport 34 km/La Habana 27km
Doubles and Junior Suites: All units have fully equipped bathrooms, hairdryer, SAT-TV telephone, 110 V, individual air conditioning, minibar with water and safe-deposit box. Double Rooms have shower and balcony. Junior Suites have bathtub and a wide living room.
Gastronomy: Buffet “Oasis” - Bars: “La Glorieta’ and “Lobby Bar” - Restaurant a Ia Carte “El Pescador”
All Inclusive. -Breakfast, lunch and dinner Buffet - National and international drinks -Snacks in “La Glorieta” from 1200a.m. to 500p.m. - Typical Cuban dinner, once a week -shuttle bus service to the city and back, twice a day
All Inclusive Sports: - Outdoor pool and children’s pool -2 Tennis courts, floodlight without charge - Beach Volleyball - Gymnastics, water gymnastics and aerobics - Water Sports: Canoes/ Catamarans/Pedal boats! Windsurf
Entertainment: Daytime and evening wide entertainment programme with sport activities, shows, competitions, etc.
Meeting Rooms: With capacity for 100 people and technical equipment rental service.
Cuba’s sea bed has coral reefs running along the coastline of the entire Island. Cuba boasts over 300 beaches and keys, 20 cave formations and more than 150 species of fish from the Atlantic Ocean. Snorkeling in the waters of Cuba’s marine platform is a veritable paradise - with gorgonians (order Gorgonacea), sponges (Spongia spp., Euspongia spp., Hippospongia spp., Demospongia spp.) and a wide variety of colorful fish submerged in its corals. There are also many caves that serve as a refuge for multiple forms of sea life.
Cuban waters are warm and transparent, with temperatures that vary between 23 C and 30 C with a visibility of 20-30 meters. There are various seaports and places of great beauty where one can practice water sports in all its forms, including snorkeling.
Things you should about snorkeling in Cuba
• The best beach near Havana for snorkeling is Jibacoa Beach about 1 hour drive from Havana. You can stay at Breezes Jibacoa Hotel for around 60.00 CUC per person per night.
• If you are an avid snorkeling fan you should take your own equipment.
• Off the beach at Playa Pesquero there is a decent depth for shore snorkeling and variety of species. You can find schools of squid and the odd moray.
• Playa Pesquero near Guardalavaca is excellent to introduce your kids to the world of snorkel. Coral reefs are just meters off the shore.
• If you are staying in Guardalavaca you can book a picnic/snorkeling excursion to Pesquero.
• Playa Esmeralda near Guardalavaca is highly recommended for snorkeling.
• Playa Las Colorados in Cayo Coco has great snorkeling too. Right in front of Sol Club Cayo Coco you can find some nice big barracudas.
• No jewellery, bright colors or freaking out when that big barracuda comes in for a much closer look.
Varadero, a small natural wonder, is a health resort that enjoys well-earned international renown. It covers an area of just over 22 km around the Hicacos Peninsula, the northernmost point of the island of Cuba, situated in the western province of Matanzas. Varadero is considered the Mecca of tourism in the Cuban archipelago, for it offers an integral, diverse and extensive product, which enables it to meet the expectations of the widest range of customers. As welt as its first-class beach where visitors are given the opportunity to practice all kinds of water sports, it is set in beautiful natural surroundings and provides facilities for conducting all kinds of events, playing golf and parachuting, incentive travel, weddings and honeymoons, and even for long-stay tourism. On top of all that, the nearby cities of Matanzas and Cárdenas and Montemar Nature Reserve, in Peninsula de Zapata Biosphere Reserve, round off the opportunities available to tourists at this friendly and welcoming health resort, where visitors can enjoy all the shades of blue in the Caribbean.
How to get there:
A convenient road bordering the northern coast of Cuba leads from Havana to Varadero, 140 km to the east of the capital. Situated in the area surrounding the health resort is Juan Gualberto Gómez international airport, which facilitates direct access from other continents and multiple destinations with other regions in the country, Central America and the Caribbean. It is also a free port and its three international harbors offer all the technical requirements necessary to receive a large range of vessels.
Sun and sand:
The beach at Varadero, of an extraordinarily high standard and measuring a length of 22.6 km, with its gentle slope and clear, calm waters that encompass all the shades of blue imaginable, is undoubtedly the centre’s major attraction. Varadero is a tourist resort that currently offers over 55% of the total number of rooms built in areas of sun and sand on the Cuban archipelago. Virtually all of the hotels existing on the Hicacos Peninsula have areas in the sea where it is safe for visitors to enjoy wind-surfing, trips in a kayak, jet skiing and cycling, as well as other similar sports activities. On the southern coast of the province of Matanzas visitors can also enjoy Playa Larga and Girón beaches.
City:
A holiday in Varadero enables tourists to visit two towns with no end of different attractions: Matanzas (36 km away), the provincial capital founded in 1693, which became the most cultured and prosperous city in the country, and Cárdenas (12 km away), known as the Flag City as this was where the national standard flew for the first time (1850). In Matanzas it is well worth taking a trip to see Vigia and Libertad squares and witnessing at first-hand the magnificence of the buildings designed in the neo-classical style surrounding the square; or observing the peaceful bay and the imposing Valle de Yumuri from the Ermita de Monserrat; visiting the Castillo de San Severino, San Pedro Apóstol church, or taking a trip to see the Pharmaceutical Museum, where Doctor Ernest Triotet gathered a valuable collection of original porcelain bottles, beautiful wooden shelves and laboratory equipment from the second half of the 19th century, which remain exactly as they were originally designed and represent the most important example of their kind outside France. Major attractions in Cárdenas include Colon and Spriü squares, Rojas fort, the former Arrechabala distillery (1870), and the ruins of the first electricity plant in operation in the country (1889).
Culture:
The fact that Matanzas is considered the Athens of Cuba is clear testimony to the intense cultural life that has always charac tensed this city situated very close to Varadero. Today the Teatro Sauto (1863), a theatre that is an authentic jewel of architecture, and the Sala White (1854), where the danzón, the national Cuban dance, was first performed for the public, continue to be pop ular stages where prominent figures from the national and international arts often per form. Every two years, Matanzas also holds the International Puppet Festival and Danzan Dos International Choreography Competition for contemporary, folkloric and classical ballet dancing.
Nature:
Around 30% of the total area of the Hicacos Peninsula (on its eastern side) is occupied by Varahicacos ecology reserve, whose exceptional attributes include a well-preserved coastal ecosystem and the survival of rare examples of tree cacti (Dendrocerus Nudiflorus), in some cases estimated to date back over 500 years. Together with these vegetable formations there is a very special collection of fauna with abundant examples of reptiles and birds. Situated right in the centre of Varadero, Josone Park is a place for nature lovers to enjoy.
The nearby valleys of YumurI and the Canimar and Bacunayagua rivers are also outstanding areas for those who wish to enjoy nature. However, undoubtedly its largest outlet is Montemar Nature Reserve, in the Peninsula de Zapata Biosphere Reserve, where the largest wetland on the insular Caribbean is situated. Once here be sure to visit the Laguna del Tesoro, the Taino village of Guamá, La Boca crocodile breeding ground, and La Salina refuge for fauna, an outstanding place for bird-watching.
Active tourism:
The options for enjoying an active holiday in Varadero are varied and highly attractive, even right in the heart of the health resort, where Josone Park reserves a special place for nature lovers to spend some time. As well as being able to practice any water sport, the spa and its nearby keys provide an ideal place to go diving and snorkeling. Three international diving centres are in operation and over 30 immersion points have been identified, including those in the Cayo Piedras del Norte Sea Park—an exclusive attraction throughout the country and the Cueva de Saturno, a flooded underground passageway. Divers can also practice their sport in the waters of Bahia de Cochinos, Peninsula de Zapata, where there are a further 14 immersion points.
This health resort has the only professional golf course of the archipelago (18 holes 72 pan; it has a flying club for those who like parachuting (it is possible to jump with or without an instructor), or those who wish to fly in a balsa wood micro light aircraft. It is also possible to take a trip in a helicopter to the Valle de Yumuri; participate in a lorry safari along the banks of the river Canimar and journey back up its waters in sailing or rowing boat; join a tour of a sugar plantation and go on an old steam train; or travel around the navigable channels in the south of the peninsula on jet skis.
Other sound options for entertainment in Varadero include swimming with dolphins; trips on an underwater observation vessel; trips to the nearby keys on board sailing ships and catamarans; day and night-time pirate adventures on a galleon; processions to sites of archaeological digs; visits to the Cuevas de Bellamar, caves situated in Matanzas, or the Ambrosio and Musulmanes caves on Hicacos peninsula itself; or days of fishing with light tackle on the Zapata peninsula.
Events and conventions
1i The Centro de Corivenciones PLaza America is a modern and functional facility that enables any kind of event to be held in this health resort. For five years this modern facility equipped with the latest technology in each of its rooms has held the Tourism Convention, during the month of May each year and in September the Expo Varadero, the commercial showcase for the territory of Yumuri. In addition, a growing number of establishments are classed as Hotels for Events, vouched for by the Buró de Convenciones de Cuba (Cuba Conventions Bureau)
Health tourism and quality of life:
Programmes for improving quality of life are offered at the Clinica Internacional de Varadero and the Horizontes Casa del Valle hotel, set in the Valle de Yumuri. Adjoining the Centro de Convenciones Plaza America (the conference centre( is a SPA Club and many hotels have a Jacuzzi, modern gymnasiums and massage areas.
Leisure and restaurants:
The network of restaurants, clubs, dance halls, pubs and karaoke bars is extensive and is concentrated both inside and outside the hotels. Among the most famous nightspots are the Tropicana Matanzas; the cabaret Continental at the Internacional hotel; the Cueva del Pirata; the Palacio de La Rumba; the Bamba; the Mambo Club and the Habana Café.
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Cayo Largo del Sur is a true paradise for those who are looking for secluded beaches, fine white sand and transparent waters, ideal for diving and practicing water sports. Its size (37.5 square kilometres) makes it the second largest island in the Canarreos archipelago, one of the four groups of isles that surround the island of Cuba. It is located in the south-western part of the Cuban archipelago, at a distance of 177 km from Havana, 170 km from Varadero and 140 km from Nueva Gerona, the capital of Isla de Ia Juventud special district, for merely the refuge of pirates and corsairs and then known as Treasure Island. Thanks to its natural characteristics and the existence of a modern and functional hotel infrastructure that is continually being improved, Cayo Largo del Sur is also an ideal location for wedding trips and honeymoons.
How to get there:
Airline companies from Europe and America and domestic airlines fly directly to Vito Acuña international airport, in Cayo Largo del Sur. It is also possible to arrive by sea, at Puertosol marina, which operates as a free port. In Punta Frances, Isla de Ia Juventud, there are also facilities available for mooring pleasure cruisers.
Sun and sand:
Playa Sirena, (with sand which, thanks to its particular composition, fails to heat up even under the most intense rays of the sun), Lindamar, Tortuga, Playa Blanca, Los Cocos and Paraiso, six magnificent Caribbean beaches, each endowed with its own natural surroundings and which together cover an area of 24 km, ensure thorough enjoyment of the attractions and delights of Cayo Largo del Sur. On the neighboring island of Isla de Ia Juventud, Bibijagua beach, with its exotic black sand, offers a different kind of appeal.
City:
Discovering the delights of Isla del Tesoro (Treasure Island), a setting alleged ly recreated by Scottish writer Robert L.Stevenson in his homonymous novel, is a good reason for traveling to Isla de Ia Juventud and getting to know the historical centre of the city. This includes the Workshop of Applied Arts; the Model Prison, a place where Fidel Castro and his fellow assailants from the Cuartel Moncada (Moncada Barracks) were incarcerated (1953); and the Finca ElAbra museum, the temporary residence of Cuban national hero José Marti (1870). A visit to the island is also worthwhile to get to know a musical genre that is specific to this part of Cuba: El Sucu-Sucu.
Nature:
The excellent standard of preservation of the natural environment in Cayo Largo del Sur, which makes it appear as virgin a spot as it was at the outset, is demonstrated by the fact that each year hundreds of turtles come to its fine sands to lay their eggs, leaving behind them a memorable spectacle. On Isla de Ia Juventud, nature tourism enthusiasts can take a trip to see Jungla de Jones, an age-old wood; or discover Los Indios Ecological Reserve and Cayos de San Felipe fauna reserve.
Active tourism:
Both Cayo Largo del Sur and Isla de Ia Juventud have international diving centres and offer fantastic conditions for enjoying this activity in areas such as Punta Frances, Playa Sirena and Los Batlenatos keys, which are also ideal locations for underwater photography. The presence of coral formations right next to the coast also makes it possible to go snorkeling. Fishing can be carried out in the area around near by Cayo Piedra, Cayeria Los Majáes, Cayos Alcatraces and Cayos Pedraza. Trips on a yacht or catamaran are recommended to Cayo Iguana, a small, natural, Caribbean Jurassic Park; Cayo Rico, Cayo Los Pájaros, Cayo Rosario, Cayo Cantiles and Cayo Sigua. Those keen on speleology tourism have a fantastic opportunity awaiting them:
to visit the caves of Punta del Este, on Isla de Ia Juventud. These were declared a National Monument thanks to the historical value of the cave paintings found on the walls, with such a unique style that they are considered the most important in the Antilles.
Leisure and restaurants
The majority of the selection of restaurants and leisure opportunities can be found at the hotels themselves or at the Plaza del Pirata.
Havana and its History
Air transfer to/from Havana. Walking Tour in Historical Centre. Driving tour in the Modern part of Havana. Visit tof Colombus Cemetery, Plaza de la Revolución and Capitanes Generales museum. Lunch is included. Price from 160.00 CUC
Havana with Tropicana
Overnight in Havana to enjoy the famous Tropicana Show followed by a day touring around the Havana’s Old Town and the Modern part of Havana. Lunch and dinner is included. Price from 280.00 CUC
Dolphin Delights
Air transfer to/from Cienfuegos. Tour of delightful town and bay included. Half an hour swimming with dolphins. Lunch is included. Price from 120.00 CUC
Colonial Trinidad
Air transfer to/from Trinidad, declared by UNESCO as humanity heritage. This excursion includes the following visits : the tobacco factory, museums, ceramic labs and the Iznaga Tower. Free time for shopping. Lunch is included.
Trinidad Spectacular
Overnight in mountain lodge located on the Escambray Mountains, swimming in river and touring around Trinidad. Price from 150.00 CUC
Coral Reef
Local expert guides take you twice a day to a fantastic coral reef. Price from 20.00 CUC
Jeep Safari
Tour in jeep all along the Cuban country side. Horse riding and visit to a tobacco house. Typical Cuban Lunch is included. Price from 70.00 CUC
Moron City Tour
Tour in horse and carriage along Moron city. Price from 25.00 CUC
Tropical Safari in Katamaran
Snorkelling in a coral barrier, and visit to a virgin beach. Open bar and lunch is included. Price from 65.00 CUC
Colourful Cuba
Steam train, speedboats, crocodile farm, abandoned sugar mill. Good value. Price from 50.00 CUC
Jungle Tour
Biggest hit. Drive speedboat through mangroves and snorkel in deep water. Price from 35.00 CUC
Cuban nature enjoys on a wide range of astonishing features. Some of these are still untouched by civilization and some others have been developed for the joy of tourists. Cayo Coco is one of those favored by nature places that have become one of the main destinations for holidaymakers in Cuba.
Cayo Coco is a 370 squared kilometer island located 17 kilometers off the north coast of Ciego de Avila province. The island has its own airport which makes it ideal for beach hunters who can not be bother with the nuisance of having to travel long distances.
If you come by road from any other city in Cuba you will be able to enjoy a very nice drive along the Pedraplén (the way Cubans call these roadways over the sea).It is made of stones and land, with few bridges along the way in order to protect the ecosystems in the area.
In Cayo Coco, around 15,000 species of pink flamingos live in shallow lagoons, perfect sights for taking pictures. In the area dwell 200 species of birds and 340 of flora.
You can count on nice temperatures (28 Celsius Average) throughout most of the year. Its beaches are famous for its low water levels. You can walk 100’s of meters to get to the deep and yet the water only reaches your ankles. There are very well preserved coral reefs which offer excellent entertainment for snorkeling and diving lovers.
Surrounding Cayo Coco, you can find Cayo Guillermo, Paredón Grande and other islets that belong to the Sabana-Camagüey Archipelago formed by more than 2,000 islets all along 465 kilometers, between the Hicacos Peninsula and the Bahía de Nuevitas (Cuban eastern part).
Authorities in the Island anticipate 33 thousand potential hotel rooms and there is currently a third of that amount functioning. This is one of the most demanded places by the foreign visitor, due to the possibility of combining a rest with all modern capabilities and, at the same time, diving, trekking, nature watching, and other active modalities in an almost pristine land.
There are only 6 hotels in this island.
Melia Cayo Coco
Sol Cayo Coco
Tryp Cayo Coco
Hotel NH Krystal Laguna Villas & Resort
Hotel Blau Colonial Cayo Coco
Hotel Oasis Playa Coco
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Considering holidays in Cuba? Excellent, this is one island in the Caribbean where you will want to do more than just a beach holiday. The people are bright, self-assertive and handsome. The heritage of Cuba is so rich as are the monuments and palaces throughout the country.
The country has evolved with a strong personality from its experience from Spanish colonization, slavery, civil war, invasion, revolution and relentless economic embargo. Havana the islands proud capital is energetically restoring the buildings of its elegant historic quarters and the grand old cities of Santiago de Cuba and Trinidad still recall their 16th century beginnings.
Go hiking or horseback riding in the countryside and you will see the palm trees and other subtropical flora in their green plenty in a landscape alternating rugged mountains with pleasant valleys farmland. The resorts do ample justice to Cuba’s tangy Caribbean cuisine—good seafood, great beach barbecues, luscious fruit— not forgetting those famous rum cocktails.
One in three visitors to Cuba heads straight for its biggest resort, Varadero, some 100 km (60 miles) east of Havana. Many can not tear themselves away from its magnificent beaches on the Atlantic Ocean. At the western end of the island, beyond Havana in the Pinar del Rioprovince, enjoy the quieter, slower pace of rural Cuba in the pretty country side hugging the Cordillera de Guaniguanico mountains. At Vinales, you can go horseback riding to admire the strange mogote mounds and explore the caves.
The Pinar del Rio region is of course most famous for producing the tobacco that goes into the best Havana cigars. The main plantations are concentrated in the triangle formed by the towns of Pinar del RIo itself, San Luis and San Juan y Martinez and, fur ther west, in the fabled Vuelta Abajo area along the Cuyaguateje river. But tobacco accounts only for a small fraction of the region’s farmland. Fields of sugar cane blanket the eastern plains until rice paddies take over to fill the marshlands south of Los Palacios. Cattle herds graze the Guaniguanico foothills and citrus or chards, grapefruit and oranges, occupy the western area around Sandino.
In Varadero hotels and beaches stretch along 20km (12 miles) of white sands on the Hicacos peninsula jutting out from the Atlantic coast of Matanzas province. Cuban holiday-makers have been com ing here since 1872, but it was launched as an international re sort with the 1929 purchase of land here by US munitions and chemical magnate Eleuthère Irénée Du Pont. He built himself a huge sprawling mansion, yacht ing harbour, iguana farm, golf course and airstrip. At the height of the American Depression, other American millionaires fol lowed, including Mafia boss Al Capone from Chicago—his home is now a restaurant named La Casa de Al.
Today, Canadian and European tourists come to Cuba’s 35 most popular playground for its super water sports facilities by day and the countless discotecas and the hotels’ lavish cabaret floorshows by night.
Cuba’s heartland stretches from the sugar and coffee plantations around the Guamuhaya (or Escambray) mountains of Cienfuegos to the cattle pastures of the Camaguey plains. As the region that has traditionally separated the poor peasants of the Oriente from the wealthy land-owners around Havana in the west, it has played a significant role in Cuban history. It has witnessed the early Spanish settlers’ fleeting dreams of gold in Trinidad, the first serious campaigns for independence led by the sugar-planters and Camaguey cattle barons, and, in modern times, Che Guevara’s decisive defeat of Batista’s troops at Santa Clara in 1958, followed three years later by the debacle of the Cuban exiles’ Bay of Pigs invasion. And the Ancón peninsula offers the best beaches on Cuba’s south coast.
Landscape:
Three mountainous regions account for more than a third of the total land mass. In the south— eastern oriental region, The Sierra Maestra range, extending from Cabo Cruz to Guantanamo is rich in flora and fauna and includes the island’s highest peak, Pico Turquino, alt: 1,972 metres (6,470 ft).
Cuba is the biggest island in the Caribbean, almost as big as all the others put together. It stands at the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico, its western end only 145 km (90 miles) from Florida’s Key West. Haiti is even closer, 77 km (48 miles) to the east across the Windward Passage.
The island extends some 1,300 km (over 800 miles) in length. At its widest point, it measures about 200 km (124 miles), and at its narrowest, just 5 km (22 miles) across. Cuba comprises an archipelago of around 1 ,600 isles and cayos (cays), the largest being the Isla de Ia Juventud (Isle of Youth) south of Batabanó Bay. Sheltered by long coral reefs, the coastal beaches face the Bahamas and Atlantic Ocean to the northeast, Jamaica and the Caribbean Sea to the south.
Cuba’s offshore isles, islets, cayos (keys), and rocky sandbars with a tree or two, number in all 4,195, grouped in five archipelagos around the main island. The biggest, Isla de la Juventud, has been inhabited since prehistoric times, the others worth a visit have been partly transformed into modern beach resorts—Cayo Guillermo, Cayo Largo, Cayo Romano and Cayo Coco—each with superb white sands and good facilities for swimming, sailing and deep-sea fishing.
Flora:
The Flora numbers no less than 8.1(00 varieties, Dense sub-tropical forest cover the humid lower mountain slopes, providing valuable timber products. Woods on the higher, drier slopes are principally pine and eucalyptus. The island boasts an astonishing assortment of palm trees, the best known being the royal palm, indigenous to Cuba.
Economy:
Sugar and its derivatives are the principal source of revenue, followed by tobacco, the Cuban cigar still being the most sought after in the world—and favourite contraband into the United States. Other sources are cattle breeding and fisheries, while agricultural products include rice, beans, coffee, maize and fruit.
Weather:
Thanks to the warm waters of the Gull Stream and the trade winds (northeast in the summer, southeast in winter), the island’s climate is moderate and stable, sub tropical but less hot than elsewhere in the Caribbean. In Havana, the average temperature hovers around 25°C (77°F). The dry season lasts from November to mid-May and the rainy season from end-May to October.
Havana, Santiago de Cuba, Varadero and the other beach resorts rarely have more than two consecutive days of rain if they come at all. Hurricanes blow into the Caribbean from June to November—150 recorded in the 500 years after Christopher Columbus nearly lost his fleet. Since then, Cuba has installed an excellent early-warning system. The worst storms usually arrive in September and October, blowing torrential rain with winds of up to 250 km an hour (nearly 160 mph).
The people:
The island’s population is just over 11,000,000 and a fifth of them is living in Havana, the largest city in the Caribbean—in addition to some 700,000 exiles, mostly in Miami. Other major cities are Santiago de Cuba (440,000), Camagiiey (294,000) and Holguin (242,000).
According to official census figures, 70 per cent of Cubans are white, 12 per cent black, most of them in Oriental provinces, and 17 per cent mixed (mestizo and mulatto). It is generally agreed, however, that the percentage of “mixed blood” is much higher, perhaps as much as half the population. (The island’s Caribbean Indians were almost totally wiped out under Spanish colonization.).
At any rate, the blend of Spanish and African has produced men and women of often quite stunning good looks, lithe and graceful.
Airports
Most international flights serve Havana’s José MartI Airport, Varadero and Santiago de Cuba. The terminals provide banking, car- hire and tourist information office services, in addition to duty-free shop, restaurant and snack bar facilities. There are bus and taxi links to town.
Climate or Weather
Caressed by the prevailing north east trade winds, the island’s climate is agreeably sub-tropical, most often around 25°C (77°F), rising to an average 28°C (82°F) in July and August and “dipping” to 22°C (71°F) in the coolest month, February. The east, especially the mountains, gets more rain than the west. The hurricane season is from June to November, most likely in September and October and more often in the west around Havana and Pinar del Rio than in the east. Storm winds can reach 250 kph (156 mph). Swimmers take note: Caribbean waters are slightly warmer than the Atlantic.
Communications
Postal services, as almost every where these days, are very slow and unreliable. If you have urgent mail, ask your hotel about the international courier services available. The island’s telephone services are problematic, though a phone card system is being progressively installed in the major tourist areas. Calls are best handled through your hotel, which also usually has fax facilities. Check the price first to avoid unpleasant surprises. The outgoing code is 119.
Crime
Cuba is much safer than other Latin American countries—and many places in North America. Pickpockets, however, work the tourist areas of Havana and the resort towns. A much sought- after item is your passport, so keep it well-protected. Street-corner hustlers (jineteros) are an in evitable offshoot of tourism and economic difficulties, but beggars and anyone else that hassles you can be shooed off with a calm “Por favor, no moleste “— “Please, don’t bother me.”
Driving
The island has a well-developed network of roads, with a main highway linking Pinar del Rio to Guantánamo, more than 1,120 km (700 miles) away, and several good coastal highways between the resorts.
Driving is on the right. The rules follow Western European and North American norms and speed limits—50 kph (30 mph) in town, 90 kph (56 mph) on paved country highways, 100 kph (62 mph) on the Autopista Nacional.
To rent a car, you must be 21 or over, have a valid driver’s licence and preferably an internationally accepted credit card (not drawing on a US bank).
Even when there is a shortage for Cubans, fuel is usually avail able to foreign tourists at 24-hour Servi-Cupet filling stations. Tolls are charged on major highways and the Cayos cause ways.
Electric Current
The current is mostly 110 volts, 60 cycles, with US-style flat-pin plugs, but European-run hotels are increasingly equipped with 220-volt current and round-pin plugs, so be prepared with an adaptor for both.
Emergencies
Most problems can be handled at your hotel desk. Telephone number for police is 116, for fire 115, and for ambulance 118, Spanish- speaking only. Consular help is there only for critical situations, lost passports or worse, not for lost cash or plane tickets.
Essentials
Travel light, especially as far as clothing is concerned. You won’t need much formal wear. Pack a sun-hat and add a sweater for cool evenings. Good walking shoes are vital, especially for the mountains, and sandals or moccasins for the beach. Bring along sun-block, insect repellent and a pocket torch (flashlight) in case of electricity cuts.
Formalities
Apart from a passport, still valid for at least six months after you enter Cuba, you should obtain a tourist card (tarjeta de turista), usually provided by your travel agency or tour operator. Keep it safe during your stay as you will need to hand it in when leaving. (US citizens are discouraged only by their own government, not at all by Cuban authorities, who give them a warm welcome if they come equipped with an appropriate tarjeta de turista and will not put a potentially embarrassing stamp in their passports.)
At entry, DVDs, DVD players and computers with incorporated player will be confiscated at customs. When you leave Cuba, customs officers always look out for cigars, so if you buy them, keep your official receipts. The free export limit without a receipt is 23 cigars per person. US customs will confiscate Cuban cigars.
Religion:
The island’s Catholic community, 85 per cent of the population before the 1959 revolution, is making a comeback, especially since the Pope’s visit in 1998, though they still number fewer than 40 per cent. More popular are the Afro-Cuban Santerla cults blending West African Yoruba rituals with references to Catholic saints and the Virgin Mary.
After 40 years of subservience to the Marxist demands of the Cuban Revolution, open religious observance is back in force on the island. But it is not the Catholic church that is the most popular. The dominant religion remains Santeria, created 500 years ago by African slaves, amalgamating Christianity with the animist cults of Yoruba tribes of West Africa and others from the Congo region. Today, there are more than 10,000 Babalao conducting the rituals of Santeria, while the Catholic churches, progressively re opened since the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1998, number fewer than 300 priests.
Forbidden to practise their traditional cults, Afro-Cubans sought to preserve their cultural heritage by paying lip-service to Catholic saints and various aspects of the Virgin Mary while identifying these with their own tribal deities, orishas. In rituals similar to Haitian voodoo and Brazilian mocumba and ubanda, these prestigious deified ancestors are invoked— like the saints and Virgin Mary in the Catholic Church—to deal with the daily problems of the Santeras. There are perhaps some 40 Cuban orishas in all, but only half are the object of regular worship. To the Santeros, St Francis of Assisi for Orula, a revered deity of knowledge and divination who is consulted, for instance, by worshippers embarking on an important journey. Orula’s wife, Ochun, is the sensual goddess of love and femininity, identified with the Virgin Mary of Charity, patron saint of Cuba, whose statue was found off the coast of El Cobre (Oriente) in 1605. Ochi is nonetheless also the mistress of, among others, Ogun, god of iron, mountains and wisdom, famous for his great anger and assimilated to St Peter. The warrior orisha Chango is St Barbara, Christian patron of artillery. Jesus is associated with Oddua, god of the dead and of ghosts and invoked to revive the dying. Another important manifestation of Mary, the Virgin of Merced, is regarded as Obatala, who reigns the divinity of creation. The “black” Virgin of a Regla is Yemayá, goddess of the sea and sailors.
Night life
There are some people who come to Cuba and never see it by the light of day. And still have a fine time. Even those who do not intend staying up all night and sleeping all day should enjoy one of the best sides of Cuban life and join the exuberant islanders in their singing, dancing and all-round party-going.
Nightclubs, bars, cabarets and discotheques abound in Havana, Varadero and Santiago de Cuba. You should know in advance that you cannot hope to combine an evening of good music and dancing with an early night.
Many of the favourite nightspots do not really get started or even open be fore 10p.m. and then goon to the wee small hours of the morning.
We guide you here to the best known places. Most are well established institutions, but on the fast-changing Cuban entertainment scene, some inevitably close, some change their names. However, one of the great pleasures of Cuba for the more adventurous is to stumble on an open-air party when the fun on a hot night has spilled out onto the street or beach. Strangers are almost always welcome, all the more so if they bring a good bottle of rum. These places you must find for yourself. Just follow the sound of the music.
Tropicana
This huge nightclub, open-air in fair weather, is certainly the most famous in Cuba and perhaps in the whole Caribbean. A national institution since its opening in 1939, it is located at the south end of Vedado, quite far out in the city’s western outskirts, but is served by shuttle-buses stopping at the major hotels. Prices may seem steep, including transportation and one cocktail, but you get your money’s worth. The floorshow is truly spectacular, with scores of gorgeous, extravagantly costumed dancers, male and female, strutting their stuff on the stage and snaking their way among the tables in an exotic setting of tropical vegetation. The atmosphere is quite as intoxicating as the freely flowing rum, tempting the most staid custurners to get up on their chairs and dance.
Parisien
The opulent cabaret is located in the hotel whose guests once ranged from Winston Churchill to Ava Gardner—and several less savoury but equally renowned American mafiosi such as Meyer Lansky. Before the Revolution, Frank Sinatra sang here. Today, you can enjoy a splashy floor- show, smaller in scale than the Tropicana (and priced more modestly), but just as lively, and then launch into your own salsa, rumba and mambo when the dance- floor is opened to disco music.
Copa Rum
Replacing the legendary Palacio de Ia Salsa, the old hotel’s night club has been refurbished to capture the glittering atmosphere of the 1950s. Under the old nick name of the famous Copacabana, it has two floorshows, at 10 p.m. and midnight, with prices moderately expensive.
Café Cantante.
There are no frills here, and the prices are more modest, but the performance of Havana’s most celebrated son and salsa groups such as Los Van Van and Charanga Habanera make this club in the basement of the national theatre a favourite nightspot for young Cubans. You may have to compete with long queues of Habaneros to get in, but it is well worth it for the high-octane ambience. Whether there is a concert or disco, people are dancing non stop.
Delirio Habanero
Despite its delirious name, this café bar upstairs in the national theatre has a more sedate atmosphere than most of the other clubs. It attracts mostly Cuban students and artists listening and occasionally dancing to the city’s newest groups. The music is first class and the price of drinks very reasonable.
La Tropical
Located on the southern outskirts of town, this big open-air night club is without doubt Havana’s hottest spot, where 9 out of 10 guests are Cubans. This is the place to learn the newest Latin American dances. To enjoy the uninhibited atmosphere to the full, but without unnecessary paranoia, leave your jewels and extra cash at the hotel.
La Zorra y el Cuervo.
With an old bright red London telephone box for its entrance, “The Vixen and the Crow” presents the best in live Afro-Cuban and Latin American jazz in a modest but pleasant club atmosphere—but for listening rather than dancing. The prices are moderate.
Cabaret Continental in Varadero.
The beach resort is huge and equally expensive counterpart to Havana’s Tropicana, with a show at 10p.m. followed by disco dancing. The floorshow is dazzling, and the costumes awesomely daring.
La Cueva del Pirata in Varadero.
The “Pirate’s Cave” provides a colourful setting for its 10 p.m. floorshow followed by boisterous disco dancing. Prices moderate.
La Bamba in Varadero
Varadero’s liveliest and most popular beachfront disco, with futuristic decoration and videos. Moderate to expensive.
Activities
For family swimming, the long white sandy beaches at Varadero, Guardalavaca and on the Cayos are a sheer delight. Remember that the waters are calmer in the winter on the south and west coasts (November to April) and in summer on the north coast (May to September).
Wind-surfing equipment is available for rent at most resorts. Besides Varadero and Guardalavaca, the best conditions are at Cayo Largo and Marea del Portillo, the black-sand beach on the south coast of the Sierra Maestra. Surfers have to bring their own boards to enjoy the great waves brought in by the northeast trade winds on the Atlantic coast from December to April and, on the Caribbean coast, in August and September.
Diving
At Havana, Marina Hemingway, 20km (12 miles) west of the city centre, provides good facilities and training courses for sCuba diving, as do most of the major resorts. Aficionados home in on Cayo Coco and MarIa La Gorda. For exploring underwater caves, try Varadero and Playa Girón. Both Varadero (through Cubancan Nautica near the Kawama hotel) and Havana’s Marina Hemingway rent out yachts for day trips or for overnight with lobster meals and drinks galore.
Fishing
The Gulf Stream creates conditions for deep-sea fishing at its best on the northwest coast Havana, Varadero, Cayo Guillermo and Guardalavaca’s Bahia de Naranjo for barracuda, sailfish, shark, swordfish, tuna and mackerel. For freshwater lake fishing for bass, perch and trout, try Pinar del Rio’s Laguna Grande and Moron’s Laguna La Redonda (easy access by causeway from Cayo Coco).
Horseback Riding
The beach resorts hire out horses by the hour, as does Havana’s Parque Lenin. For longer treks, you might try the tourist ranches near Trinidad at Casa del Campesino or Los Molinos. Other good facilities in the interior are available in the Viñales valley and Pinar del Rio.
Hiking
The most ambitious hiking trails are to be found in the Sierra Maestra national park, but there are also delightful rambles in the forests around the Gran Piedra and, in the west, Soroa and Viñales. In the absence of detailed trail-maps, it may be best to hire a local guide.
Golf
You will find an 18-hole course at Varadero’s Las Americas club and nine holes at the Havana Golf Club. More are planned.
Architecture
The elegant, even grand, colonial mansions still evident in Havana, Santiago do Cuba and Trinidad combine traditional elements of 1 6th- and 1 7th-century Spanish architecture and its earlier Moorish influences with the special needs of the Cuban climate. No table Moorish features are the ornately carved wooden balconies, and the inner central patio around which the residential quarters are built. Entrances to 1 7th-centur houses are relatively austere, wit plain wooden doors set between simple Grecian-style pillars. The 18th-century mansions are more elaborately baroque. Entrances have monumental columns and sculpted pediments framing doors of carved wood-panelling. They lead to a patio with ornate fountains, surrounded by porticoes on the ground floor and arcaded loggias on the upper storeys, to pro vide shelter from the sub-tropical sun and rains. The more sober neoclassical residences of the 19th century replace the upper-floor arcades with painted wooden window-shutters.
Béisbol
Yes, baseball is Cuba’s national sport. A version of the United States’ national game, which Arcwak Indians called batos, existed here even before the Spanish arrived. It developed in its modern form with the growth of American influence in the late 19th century. Today every town has a baseball diamond. Encouraged by Fidel Castro who impressed Americans in 1 950s with his talent as a pitcher, Cuba’s national team is the best in Latin America and be came Olympic champions at Atlanta, Georgia, in 1996.
Carnival
The Cubans’ taste for festivities, public and private, reaches its climax with the two great carnivals celebrated in Santiago de Cuba, usually the last week in July, and in Havana for three weeks in August. For the capital’s procession through the streets of La Habana Vieja, the neighbour- hoods stage comparsa: spectacles of masked and costumed dancers, singers and musicians playing the conga. Each comparsa enacts a traditional theme. These include the life of the colonial aristocracy, Los Marqueses; the erotic or social satire of Los Guaracheros; or the legendary massacre of El Alacrán (the scorpion). Santiago’s comparsas date back to the late 17th-century festivities for St James, the town’s patron saint, but the music is resolutely modern Afro-Cuban. The distinctive “sound” of the Santiago carnival is provided by the corneta China, a flute introduced by Chinese immigrants in the 19th century.
Music:
In 1997, Buena Vista Social Club exploded on the international scene with records and the documentary film of Wim Wonders. In their 70s and 80s, singers Cam pay Segundo and Ibrahim Ferrer and pianist Ruben Gonzalez suddenly became world stars. They reintroduced Europeans and Americans to the magic of Afro-Cuban music.
The richness of Cuban music derives from its mixture of African and Spanish rhythms and instruments. The first European music that African slaves encountered in Cuba was that of the Catholic Church and of Spanish military brass bands. To this was added the fiery drum rhythms learned in Africa, mostly in the Congo and Nigeria. The music was further enriched in the 17th century with the introduction of the Spanish Zarzuela, a popular musical play using folk songs for winy and satirical treatment of everyday life. Between acts of the musical melodramas, the old satirical tornadilla songs were given a frankly erotic twist by guaracheros who specialized in sexual innuendos. Occasionally, a touch of bucolic “innocence” was added by guajiro peasant songs created by workers on the sugar and tobacco plantations.
Spanish colonial musicians such as 19th-century composer- pianist lgnacio Cervantes spiced up traditional danzón folk-dances with Afro-Cuban rhythms. The most famous was his Habanera. In the 20th century, Amadeo Roldan included instruments of African origin in his symphonic orchestra. By the 1 930s, Ernesto Lecuona, whose talents had attracted the attention of composers Maurice Ravel and George Gershwin and pianist Arthur Rubinstein, introduced the world to Afro-Cuban jazz with his band, the Lecuona Cuban Boys.
To the Spanish lute and guitar, Afro-Cuban musicians added the three-stringed Tres and a whole panoply of percussion instruments for the all-important rhythm section: bongo, Udu and Conga drums; the marimbula, a xylo phone plucked rather than hammered; claves, a pair of cylindrical hardwood sticks tapped one on the other in the palm of the hand; maracas rattles and ser rated güiros fashioned from hollow gourds.
The romantic trova ballad had its beginnings in Santiago de Cubo, usually sung as a duet of trovadores, with a melancholy homespun philosophy. The best known is Guantanamera. More properly Guajira Guantamero (Guantánamo Peasant-Girl), this most famous of all Cuban songs, composed in 1929 by Joseito Fernández, later had text added from José Marti’s 1891 Versos Sencillos.
At the origin of practically all contemporary Cuban dance music is the son created in the 1 920s the mountains of Oriente province and the streets of Santiago. Classically, the songs are an exchange, often improvised, between soloist and the musicians’ choral back-up. Typical is Corn- pay Segundo’s Chan Chan, now rivalling Guantanamera in popularity in Cuban bars.
The rumba, born in the back- street slums of Havana and Matanzas and popularized in New York in 1 920s, had its beginnings religious rituals of the santeria, where tune was less important than strong rhythm. Since, for white American tastes, Cuban rumba was felt to be too erotic in its slow yambó form or frenzied guagancó, Cubans proposed the more sedate mambo and cha-cha cha in the 40s and SOs. Today, purists scorn the ever-popular salsa as a hybrid combination of Cuba’s lyrical son with American jazz and rock’n roll, forgetting the mixed African and Spanish origins of all Cuban music.
Even when music isn’t pouring out of a cassette recorder on the balcony, Afro-Cuban rhythms seem to punctuate conversation and even moments of silence, when the islanders may start to sway their shoulders and hips or shuffle their feet to the imagined beat of a salsa, mambo, rumba or cha-cha-chá. If Mexico and Brazil are the Cubans’ favorite Latin American countries, it’s because of the shared taste for their music, drawing on Spanish, African and distant, but never entirely lost, American Indian roots.
Even when life is at its toughest, the Cubans find time for a party in a backyard or down at the beach—and happily invite curious passers-by, who make themselves even more welcome when they bring a bottle of rum.
A bit of History:
Christopher Columbus disembarked on October 28, 1492, somewhere between Gibara and Guardalavaca. Following threats of mutiny and an overnight rain- storm, he wrote with undisguised relief in his journal: “Everything I saw was so lovely that my eyes could not weary beholding such beauty.”