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The Cubans are such welcoming people, and Gladys's evening meals of pork, chicken and top quality home cooking were simply delicious. Without a doubt, eating in private houses is the way to go. It's easy to sympathise with this method of storing water; one group of Canadian tourists we bumped into in town said they liked Cuba, but that there simply wasn't enough water. They'd been staying in hotels rather than casas particulares , and water can be a real problem; Manuel in Trinidad said it hadn't rained for a year though that very night the heavens opened and an almighty tropical storm dumped its load on top of us and Ricardo confirmed the same story though he didn't believe us about the rainstorm in Trinidad, so perhaps there's an element of bravado in the suffering too. Water is delivered by tractor to many houses in the cities, but luckily our casa had a borehole in the garden with a hand-pump, so we never ran out. I've often found this problem with guidebooks. To use a guidebook successfully you have to get to know how the author thinks, particularly with Lonely Planet guides, which tend to be more opinionated than others incidentally, we also took the Footprint Guide to Cuba , which was better in almost all respects. Some Lonely Planets have been excellent India and Australia spring to mind , some have been adequate such as Malaysia and Nepal and some totally out of kilter with my own approach to life like West Africa and Indonesia , and it seems the Lonely Planet Guide to Cuba falls into the latter category. It doesn't help that it's littered with annoying American phrases and spelling — I don't 'haul ass' or 'kick it' a great deal, and all the other Lonely Planets I've bought in England have bothered to put the 'u' into 'colour' — but all that is window dressing compared to the facts. Its main draw card for tourists is the proliferation of plazas dotted throughout the city, some of which are rather pleasant and some of which are completely forgettable. We spent a very hot morning and afternoon wandering round the best of them, taking a long break at lunch in a pretty little restaurant which emptied of tourists as soon as we arrived, only to be replaced by what I can only assume were local girls having photographic makeovers. If the mothers were anything to go by, it was a wise move to try to capture their daughters' beauty on film before the effects of gravity and high-fat food started to win, and we had a ringside view of proceedings. Some things are the same the world over, and given the unease with which the girls staggered around in high heels and thick make-up, adolescence is just as confusing in Cuba as it is elsewhere, though as it's normal to get married here at around 20, perhaps some aspects of adolescence live a little shorter than they do in the West. The prettiest of the lot, Plaza Carmen, has a charming church at one end, newly painted and patched-up houses, a lovely little restaurant that charges tourist prices that are quite a shock after the rest of town, and a collection of life-size clay statues of people going about their business, from the old man pushing a cart full of water jugs and a couple canoodling on a bench, to another man reading the newspaper and three women sitting on chairs and catching up on the gossip. There are some nice touches: there's a fourth, empty chair in the middle of the old women where tourists can scarcely resist the photo opportunity, and the cuddling couple sits at one end of a bench, inviting visitors to become art imitating art, but despite this obvious attempt to create an enticing and picturesque square, I found it a little clinical. Everything was just a little too neat, and a little too clean; Cuba isn't like that, and the people living in the renovated houses round the square looked a little out of place after the chaotic bustle of the nearby suburban ramshackle. The other squares vary. There are many squares, but not many great ones. It's almost as if they have been designed to concentrate the heat; trees would transform them into oases, but trees just aren't the thing round here though not because of a lack of water, as palms thrive happily all over Cuba. Cuba excels in hidden little restaurants in pretty backyard settings, but this means the squares themselves are rarely places to enjoy; this is not the country for sitting in squares, sipping a coffee and watching the world go by. The world is generally inside, sweltering, and I can only assume that things get worse in the summer. Even in the evening, things don't liven up much. And we waited, and waited, and waited, until we finally asked our waitress whether anything was going to happen later. There was one saving grace, though, and that was the central Plaza de la Solidaridad. Prostitution used to be one of the big draws of Cuba in the pre-revolution days of excess, and although it all but disappeared after , when Cuba was effectively off the tourist trail, prostitution has made a bit of a comeback in recent years. It's tinged with more than a little sadness on both sides, but that's business. You have to know it's there to spot it, though, and I'm sure plenty of visitors float through Cuba without even noticing the pros in action. Cuban women dress to impress whatever their profession, and short skirts and tight tops are de rigeur for those who can and often for those who can't, rather unfortunately. The men do the same, with tight trousers and pec-hugging tops, and the overall effect is of a country in love with wiggling hips, long legs, sexy dancing and flirting as a way of life. Waitresses in the smartest restaurants wear white shirts, black waistcoats, neatly tied hair, tiny miniskirts and long stockings, a look that in a city like London would edge onto the tarty, but which looks nothing other than smart in Cuba. However, the pros do go one step further and sport the shortest skirts, the tightest tops, the glossiest lipstick and the longest hair.

A One-Two Punch of Natural Disasters in Cuba’s Camagüey

Buying blow Camaguey

Damage to homes caused by the tornado. Photo by Rogelio Serrano. Used with permission. Phone in hand, she went to hunt the tornado. A few years ago she was close to two waterspouts, and in Hurricane Ike threw her and her family into a wall as they battled to save their apartment door. It wasn't even raining! A few blocks away from the packed Plaza San Juan de Dios, Georgina Vergel Aguilar saw how the wind lifted the entire roof off a house:. Thank goodness there was no one there! Electricians were working into the early hours to get it down from the power lines. The historic quarter was taken by surprise by the tornado, but there no one was unprepared for Hurricane Irma, the extremely powerful storm that would barrel through the Caribbean several days later. Hurricanes are familiar on the island; tornados, not so much. Los tornados en Cuba no se pronostican. Cuba's tornadoes are never predicted. An expert can be certain that all the conditions are right for a tornado that day, but there's never enough data to identify where it will take place. When there is a tornado a study should be made of its path, analysing every kind of damage and collecting information from anyone who saw it develop. This wasn't possible this time, and it's becoming more and more difficult. Not a single media outlet releases warnings to prepare the locals for tornadoes. For her, Irma wasn't too bad as her house is made of stone. The unusual strength of the tornado, on the other hand, was bad news. She was trapped in the hallway of her own house by the force of the wind, which ended up carrying away towels and clothes and breaking three of her windows. Nobody from the government came to these people's homes to ask about the damage caused by the tornado. The Nuevo Venezuela area is new and has sidewalks, paved streets and stone houses. Many people squat illegally between the city limits and the central railway lines. He's new here, and is living here illegally like the rest. I've lost pesos just on tiles. The tornado ripped Rolando Carmenate Consuegra's house apart. The worst part is that no one came here to evacuate us or anything — with the number of children there are in the area! Irma caused even more damage to his house and doubled the number of holes in the roof. Rolando and his wife are now making do with pieces of nylon to shelter their six-month-old son from the leaks. His small house made from tables with a ceiling of tiles was in a panic on the day of the tornado. We locked up the house, sat in the doorway of our wardrobe and put our crying daughters inside it. The oldest is three and the little one is a year and a half. Now, whenever they play outside, they only have to hear a rumble of thunder and they come running. For those who saw it on TV, the tornado was sad, curious, brief and faraway. Now, everything is the same: the media never stops talking about the impact of Hurricane Irma and the rescue efforts made by the people and the government. No one says anything about those who were left to their fate, like Rolando and his children. For them, Irma will always be the peak of the most turbulent time in their lives, which started on 29 August in Tornado City. Originally published in Global Voices. Open navigation menu. Close suggestions Search Search. User Settings. Skip carousel. Carousel Previous. Carousel Next. What is Everand? Explore Ebooks. Bestsellers Editors' Picks All Ebooks. Explore Audiobooks. Bestsellers Editors' Picks All audiobooks. Explore Magazines. Editors' Picks All magazines. Explore Podcasts All podcasts. Difficulty Beginner Intermediate Advanced. Irma was the final blow after the tornado that battered them on 29 August More from Global Voices. Global Voices 4 min read. Since , there were more than femicide cases in Kenya; only 13 verdicts have been reached. Global Voices 3 min read. In Azerbaijan, drones are placed in the same category as weapons, explosive devices, and money-printing equipment, making it nearly impossible for citizens to access them. Ebook Sisters by Tabatha Kristy. Save Sisters for later. Tornadoes: Be Informed-Be Safe. Flickers of the Future: Fractured Reality. Save Flickers of the Future: Fractured Reality for later. The End. Ebook The End by Abraham Kipkemboi. Save The End for later. Ebook Nibiru's Shadow by Peter Donovan. Storm Rising. Audiobook Storm Rising by Sara Driscoll. Save Storm Rising for later. Mysterious Islands. Ebook Mysterious Islands by David Meade. Save Mysterious Islands for later. The Statuette. Ebook The Statuette by Brigitte Eagle. Save The Statuette for later. Quick navigation Home.

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