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有没有人打算四五月份去古巴玩?

古巴对中国人和加拿大人一视同仁, 都不用签证, 拿着护照就可去.

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应比墨西哥安全多了.  我们四年以前去过一次. Resort 里很安全, 外面很像中国80年代.

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玩的住的 , 各个resort应不尽相同: 没有污染的无尽海滩, 小船舢板,. 阳光灿烂, 椰树叶沙沙, ... resort 外面除了哈瓦那老城外, 都很旧破, 但人情不错, 很像中国80年代初 (连resort 里的工作人员每天开会也很像中国当年的天天雷打不动的政治学习).
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吃的, 古巴穷,没钱买农药和改良种子, 所以食物是自然的有机, 再加上气候使古巴有三样世界第一的东西: 咖啡,  rum-坩蔗做的烈酒, 还有雪茄, 都是食饮吸物.
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本人不喝烈酒也不吸烟, 没资铬评烟论酒.  但古巴的咖啡是真香, 咖啡好resort做的也好.
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& r& c3 u2 c2 X6 B- G  G7 }这三样都可在resort或外边买到带回, 各种等级和价钱都有(rum和雪茄比在古巴外买便宜50%以上).   但据说最好的咖啡不零售, 只出口去日本换古巴最需要的外汇.1 {1 G. I, x! e' g5 b' N
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我们玩完回来后写了一份游记.  比较详细, 但是英文的, .当时有几个同事看了后也去了古巴.  如有兴趣看就贴上.

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我们2006年的古巴游记 (一)

We didn't expect our all-inclusive vacation in Varadero, Cuba to be very: P4 A' `9 ~- u. `" l! s
interesting, but we never had a sunshine vacation before and also we
8 t: D. C1 \: c7 M) Ywanted to see and learn a bit about Cuba, if possible.# J, u7 j- K) m& ?

- A  p$ q  x8 t9 J6 uIt was a mixed bag of people on our plane and in the resort: 20% young,! J' b5 D1 t% T5 ?9 g
30% old, and 50% in between, also quite a few single men.  People are in" ]& `/ S2 x  v# q5 {
a very different mode in the resort, lots of them dress as little as6 n3 D; k0 g  J) P2 C# d
possible and drink as much as they can, stay up very late (resort
8 t9 ~7 g( a9 oshow/dance music is very loud and runs into 1am daily), and sleep
3 z1 r. F8 ^* {; O* l9 v" lbetween the meals on the beach, beside the swimming pool, and in the
9 A/ J- j+ |+ H6 X0 E; f8 O- A9 Clobby.  The resort lobby is really used as a family/living room for all,
4 D! S+ ^0 ?8 ~) s8 P- {! z4 Gwith people doing all sorts of things and nothing is too strange there.. s; C* a3 {7 S
People on vacation are even more friendly then they are in Canada, but
+ Y3 a2 j' H& W; Bnames (especially the last name) seems to be one thing that not1 q+ N9 b1 T' `6 u: R
exchanged much.  It is interesting to see people change color in our
9 F  I+ ?9 T- s9 k8 u/ Wflight at the beginning and at the end of our trip, like peanuts through3 z$ ?3 n4 _7 q3 Z
a roast oven - white before and roasted afterwards.
7 E, f: o1 ~! P) L8 O5 ~' X% [7 Z  m& ^  K' {# F+ q- S/ x! y3 `
The weather was beautiful during our stay: mid to high 20s in the day,
2 d4 }7 v9 \- F2 p' W' Ulow 20s in the night.  We did sea kayak, swam in the ocean and the pool* l* m  e0 I4 D
(when it was too windy), went to town by bike, and saw the island on top
4 a  _- ?: T4 U0 [) U+ C' m# J; Kof the hop-on/off double-decker bus, walked along the beach, watched the
" ~0 u' e, M, o5 Q# E' }stars (note the sky at 23 degree latitude looks quite different from8 H# x. o; J1 U9 d* ~5 r+ h  h
49), played ping-pong everyday after lunch.  Em even tried 20 minutes
; q7 [, p( e6 |" ]6 xCuba neck-back massage that felt like intensive cha-cha dancing with8 x2 j: _2 z2 H' r6 @! r( _+ L
fingers, palms and fists; very different from what we have in Canada.
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% i+ @) U5 u" JThe resort staff are mostly very good, some do so for tips, but some are
6 y% {* i) A) q$ o! wjust very nice, like our room maid (see the pictures of the bed she made
, B: {' n& }( Z6 K' C. Z' ]2 K! tfor us).  The resort looks to be owned by the government, as Cuba
) t+ l* |. d2 m( l5 U, Q( {tourist industry and most other things in general.  Watching them having8 n6 E4 `$ F5 l
a staff meeting with the Cuba flag up, made Em think about China% k& m( [2 d0 i' b, Q
daily political studies.

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我们2006年的古巴游记 (二)

Cuba in general, looks a lot like China in late 1970s and early 1980s, living0 |& ~* @) Q: ?5 F3 {4 R
standard and government control wise.  To see and know it more, we went9 V" n+ v" B1 A( C/ t
on a day trip to Havana ("La Habana" in Spanish).  Our tour guide,+ u  q3 j/ k: p3 b& [) O4 ]
"George" seems to be very knowledgeable and, as we pushed, he did give
' \0 k1 R1 R5 W$ L0 d+ b7 I7 T/ lanswers to our pointed questions.
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- B4 G& K8 ~5 t' uThe racial mix in Cuba is very diverse, with about 40% white, 15% black,8 I0 T% K8 n) S
45% mixed (aka mulatto), even about 1% Chinese, so no one would stand
/ Y6 K* M2 v* a3 uout too much here (especially after you got a sun tan).  Education is
! h% [' e, \5 P9 ?7 D; zfree all the way up to University level (need to pass competition exams
6 v3 j: @% ~7 C3 H2 Bto get in), and it sounds like close to half of the Universities are0 \6 W+ ?6 O% C
medical schools.6 t& s) l% q  l# t; h0 \5 o
+ L3 p" F7 ?2 v2 q  v, }
Every university graduate needs to do 3 years service assigned by the
- H9 R7 }& E' Q5 ]% L5 ^3 Q: G, S4 Egovernment before moving to the job/place they want, and if anyone wants
/ L) U5 a* W  N9 w4 Eto go abroad afterwards, he/she needs to do an additional 3 years* r# s7 L! |; }7 A! J7 L, ~$ I* r
assigned service before leaving the country.  The salary range in Cuba
$ o* {- b2 r1 c  x9 A0 Pis from  $200 Cuba Peso (~$11 CAD) per month (minimum state wage) to  R, h& k$ [( q9 H. r- p
over $600 Cuba Peso (~$32.5 CAD) per month (for medical doctors).  There7 @6 `9 R2 @9 l
seems to be no big issue with food, as most basic foods are cheap and+ S; q! k) P! p" f5 i
mostly supplied/rationed by government. Though they do have a milk4 B" e, L* s; _0 \( [
shortage which the government is addressing by converting some
) A, `4 a% L! p( Z0 v0 Isugar-cane farm lands into cattle lands.
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) L+ ~9 L3 r( G3 w4 [1 FThe main issues are housing, transportation, and clothing.  There is no# t8 m& J9 B4 z/ m* o0 n
private real estate in Cuba, as all the housing is controlled and
- n$ Q& Y5 ^4 }8 rsupplied by the government, and the supply is so tight that young people
8 e2 f" F. H3 ?5 C- m) A( ]% zhave to stay with their family even after they are married.  The good: m- T' A0 |0 B5 a9 q# M; r+ j1 L
thing about this is that there is always someone in the house to do baby
- E3 P7 u1 c; z+ d2 ]sitting and care for older/sick people, but bad impacts include a high3 I3 A7 e% |3 Q- _, C
divorce rate: over 50% newlyweds go separate ways within two years.% E0 z" i3 {7 s) u
Divorce is very easy: 15 days waiting period and $4 Cuba Peso fee.  When8 W% v9 _( s/ d$ ]# C# a
a lawyer is involved, the fee is $15 Cuba Peso, as lawyer can only
0 b% T  W1 ]: m9 O3 ucharge the fee defined by the state.
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* I* n/ g8 Q9 IThere are three main types of transportation: taxi ($20 Cuba Peso to get0 b+ ^9 b7 l& u% j6 ]8 M
on), bus similar like what we have but made in China, and a special type
% V8 j+ T4 f( f) F- _# V) Mof bus called Camel (see picture) which has two "humps" and the big, S4 e9 |; E& W9 y; z
truck head of the bus comes from NFLD (used as we were told).  The Camel
5 N! M8 w: o6 m8 R! L+ G2 d" R, }seems to be the main transportation for most Cubans, especially the6 \- R" o. r7 o* e) s4 H5 H3 s- Q
working class people, 20 cents per ride, but it is often not on3 O1 e! v8 @, J: o/ Z* l
schedule.  No one knows when the Camel will come to a bus stop, so if( [1 Z" E5 p9 _3 U! |7 b- n" h3 b2 Z' K
you ask, people say "maybe today, maybe tomorrow".  We saw some people; l, k6 K/ s, S7 g+ `
trying to hitch a ride in quite a few places. George mentioned hitch
4 m/ U: B  D: Z5 Y* ^3 Phiking is very common in Cuba due to transportation shortage and that
3 M9 u, D* F# r4 hpeople have developed a sign language to indicate cities where they want: t: y" N; V& J& Y- H
to go.  There are places that government officials would stop cars or% D: @) X- T7 ~. I2 B7 `# m
buses owned by the state and order them to take hitch hikers if there
, z8 E" ~  _) R" @are spaces.3 S! P/ J$ S8 U' |: n

. v1 k+ R- |7 H- fThere are private car owners, and some of them use their car as a taxi/ f7 K& U8 r' O, U% b  n+ x
to make some money, people call them "the thinkers" (that is why they
! x7 L1 B8 u! U$ \# Vown a car).  Due to US blockade, most American cars here are from the
$ ~4 W+ l% W7 W7 M& e! C( R40s and 50s, but most of them had lots work done inside (all different
1 D" J; q9 g8 }  m! i" F, r, lparts including homemade) to keep them running, so Cuba probably has the
% v1 }) U- ]6 Ubest and most innovative auto mechanics in the world.  We also saw a few
2 ]- }- H! E5 l8 P- t9 p! L! Dnice new Japanese and Korean cars.  We asked George about the color of
. x# U. h" |9 L& \. g2 s+ L" Ycar license plate when we saw a nice new Audi - he said the red means it
- d9 u0 N5 T) W- H7 [is a rental, the yellow ones are private, the blue ones are state owned.
/ P8 N3 a' p3 T; Z/ R! A4 T- t; I We then went to check our bus, sure enough, it has a blue plate.

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我们2006年的古巴游记 (三)

Havana seems to be a lively city, with lots people and some beautiful! \, o2 ~( y9 N3 K" \
spots.  But in general, it is quite run down. We felt very sorry for all( d4 S5 k, G$ r
the nice colonial style buildings near the ocean front. With very
( S2 C3 E9 J+ l5 n& _limited resources, especially still recovering from early 90's deep$ o, `$ w) S( ?3 Z
recession after Soviet Union collapse (Cuba lost its $30 million per day
- N* [- ?6 [5 e, K$ ?supplement), little has been done to maintain/restore them, and some of" j1 q0 l! R6 j/ w- E, R
them are already gone.  Shops have very limited goods, public bathrooms  C6 H/ G1 |& X+ t* Q3 l
have no running water (and you pay for paper of course), even in the
4 j. n4 w& V$ J8 V& X  Xtourist area.
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3 ^7 d3 y  n, K7 X" J, uOne thing quite interesting is that we couldn't find much of Castro's
& s3 M! q* h7 r  e$ i- a+ e6 u5 Ypictures or statues in Havana at all (although lots of Che Guevara).
, D+ b  k3 N) Z, `: o& CCompared to China in 60s and 70s, Mao's pictures and statues were
' o, J# D# r6 x. b% Y  {( T8 E1 feverywhere. So although Cuba is very poor, it seems more open and perhaps
& L/ b2 Q4 D1 G# b% Qless leader-religious.
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: W$ j+ T% M; `( l! UAbout 6 months ago, the old US embassy building put up some anti-Cuba0 |3 u  `4 E) g
government slogans in their top floor window.  Cuba then put up 138 big
3 P5 i" i# p2 c/ xblack flags in front of the embassy to block them.  As the result, US9 T. T. B2 [/ Y, g0 t, A: h
embassy lost their nice ocean view (see picture).- R. v5 g& S5 Z+ j* k: Z  z

1 Y! [0 f) T3 b; w7 k) i; jWe did have a nice vacation and felt very relaxed.  But we only saw the
9 D/ o/ s% f0 P% |! n8 Xparts of Cuba as what we could, even the money we used in Cuba is not
; ]; |, c7 d% n- qthe normal Cuba Peso used by Cubans, but a convertible Peso ((like 外汇卷 in China before) $1
& P% N) x2 g" p) Z& P, ]$ @2 qconvertible Peso = $24 Cuba Peso = $1.3 CAD = $1.25 US), and things for
2 v) m+ u9 \5 c; e+ wforeigners are in similar price as in Canada, except Rum and Cigars; ^- t  ^/ [# Z+ V( h
(less than half).  If we could speak Spanish and could stay longer, we
+ y6 d3 \6 N, Tprobably could wander around and talk to locals to know more about the
& h3 V) r9 G' @0 q6 |real Cuba, as ordinary people here seem friendly and very easy going.5 V. b" c8 V, m
And it seems the tropical weather can really make people happier, local0 N) l& u5 y- e" {2 C
or visitors.
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0 }* B2 {; Z; v--  The End --

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