lunes, 17 de julio de 2023

CUBA. HABANA. VIAJEROS EN SOLITARIO

Como acompañante de alto standing para viajeros solos que visitan La Habana, ofrezco una experiencia única y personalizada. Aquí hay algunas razones por las que deberías considerarme:

Educación: Soy altamente educado y elocuente, lo que me convierte en un excelente conversador. Hablo varios idiomas , por lo que la comunicación no será un problema, como tampoco los temas de conversación. 

Fiabilidad: Puedes contar conmigo para ser puntual y confiable. Entiendo la importancia de ser puntual y respetar tu horario.

Referencias: Estoy feliz de proporcionar referencias de clientes anteriores que pueden atestiguar mi profesionalismo y discreción.

Seguridad: Como compañero de confianza, priorizo tu seguridad y bienestar. Puedes sentirte seguro sabiendo que estás en buenas manos.

Experiencia personalizada: Ofrezco una experiencia personalizada adaptada a tus intereses y preferencias. Ya sea que desees explorar los lugares de interés cultural de la ciudad o disfrutar de una noche en la ciudad, puedo crear un itinerario que se adapte a tus necesidades.

A diferencia de otros servicios que se ofrecen por internet yo ofrezco una experiencia de compañía genuina y respetuosa.
 Contáctame hoy para obtener más información sobre cómo puedo mejorar tu visita a La Habana.

Humberto
información y reservas: +5352646921





Havana. A companion for solo travelers.

 As a companion for solo travelers visiting Cuba, I offer a unique and personalized experience. Here are some reasons why you should consider me:

Education: I am highly educated and well-spoken, making me an excellent conversationalist. I speak several languages fluently, so communication will not be a problem.

Reliability: You can count on me to be punctual and dependable. I understand the importance of being on time and respecting your schedule.

References: I am happy to provide references from previous clients who can attest to my professionalism and discretion.

Safety: As a trusted companion, I prioritize your safety and well-being. You can feel secure knowing that you are in good hands.

Personalized Experience: I offer a customized experience tailored to your interests and preferences. Whether you want to explore the city's cultural landmarks or enjoy a night out on the town, I can create an itinerary that suits your needs.

Unlike other services,  I provide a genuine and respectful companionship experience. Contact me today to learn more about how I can enhance your visit to Havana.

HUMBERTO. guide and teacher in Havana
INFO & BOOKING +5352646921
instagram: humberto_havana






viernes, 14 de julio de 2023

Hotel Plaza: de edificio familiar a alojamiento de colección

 Corre el año 1895 y una mansión acaba de ver la luz en una zona céntrica de la capital cubana. Perteneciente a la familia Pedroso, el nuevo inmueble es un palacete triangular que se extiende a lo largo de dos caminos: una magnifica excentricidad para la época, que deja a todos boquiabiertos y admirados.


Corre el año 1895 y una mansión acaba de ver la luz en una zona céntrica de la capital cubana. Perteneciente a la familia Pedroso, el nuevo inmueble es un palacete triangular que se extiende a lo largo de dos caminos: una magnifica excentricidad para la época, que deja a todos boquiabiertos y admirados.

Los años posteriores lo verán convertirse en casino y lugar de ocio y reposo de los más ricos y famosos. José Raúl Capablanca, Albert Einstein y el mismísimo Meyer Lansky dejarán huellas en sus salones y amplias habitaciones; a partir de la segunda mitad del siglo XX quien aquí se aloje estará latiendo en el corazón de una Habana el triple de grande y hermosa.

En un futuro muy próximo,  Meliá Hotels International tendrá la suerte de ser guardián de su memoria. El Plaza se incorporará al catálogo de la hotelera mallorquina bajo la marca The Meliá Collection, una iniciativa que llevará los estándares y valores de la empresa a propiedades boutique o de gran valor patrimonial e histórico.




Más de 180 habitaciones en el centro de la Habana y una gran variedad de servicios estarán disponibles para los viajeros, quienes podrán disfrutar desde sus predios de una ciudad vibrante y bendecida por la multiculturalidad. El Capitolio, el Paseo del Prado, el majestuoso edificio Bacardí, la fortaleza de San Carlos de la Cabaña y los Tres Reyes del Morro, -vecinos añejos y otros más contemporáneos- acompañarán al Plaza en su perdurar junto a una comunidad de hospitalarios y alegres pobladores.





Los calendarios venideros se pintan de éxitos para esta excepcional construcción que, más de un siglo después, reinará en la calle Zulueta entre Virtudes y Neptuno como parte de una colección de grandes hoteles, servicios y experiencias. Por supuesto, con el sello Meliá Cuba.

Humberto. Habana. Havana. Local Guide & teacher.



walking tours. Vintage Car Tours

info & reservas whatssap: +5352646921





jueves, 16 de septiembre de 2021

DETROIT'S FINEST STILL ROLLING / VINTAGE CAR TOURS

 Can you imagine the state that your current car will be in 2061, much less whether it will still be driveable? It is estimated that there are at least 50,000 museum pieces still rolling around Cuba's streets, often in use as taxis. Set against the beautiful and crumbling facades of Old Havana, the effect of these chromebedecked classics is to transport the onlooker back to the 1950s and gives one the sensation of having walked onto a film set.

For car enthusiasts, the best background against which to photograph these machines, other than the classic Malecón shot, is the Capitolio Building, which was point zero for measuring distances by road from Havana.

Throughout the course of the 1950's, tail fins of Cadillac, Buick, Chevrolet and Dodge grew and grew as if infused with a desire to sit resplendent on a jet fighter rather than drive to the nearest convenience store. By 1958-9, they had collapsed altogether into huge eyebrows in what now seems like canny stylistic preparation for the swinging 60's.

Whilst Chevrolets outsold other models, including the enormous Cadillac, in pre-Revolutionary Cuba the latter have actually lasted better and are probably more common today. In the 1950's, Cuba was in fact the top world export market for Cadillacs, with one of the highest ownership ratios per head anywhere in the world. Given the general Mafia involvement in the island and corrupt nature of Batista's political apparatus, this is perhaps unsurprising.

A marketing mistake that could perhaps have foretold some of today's woes was the Ford Edsel which, while conceived in the 1954 boom, was only launched in 1957 by which time America was in the midst of a recession. The Edsel was designed as a new mid-price brand, which would enable Ford better to compete with General Motors. Unfortunately for Ford the public did not want, or was not ready for, another relatively expensive car, especially one of dubious style and substance. Sales only just breached 100,000 (the annual target) in the entire life of the car before the line was dropped with Ford suffering a serious US$ 250 million loss onthe project.

The unique radiator design, (called the" horse-collar" at the time) is pure Freud on steroids, perhaps appropriately so since there are a number of these beauties now in use as wedding cars in Havana.

In the early 1990's, in the midst of the special period, some of these cars were taken out of Cuba and have reportedly been sold, once restored, for astronomical prices. Due to regulatory changes, the export of these cars is now impossible, and the cars themselves seem determined never to give up roaring majestically through Havana's streets.

HUMBERTO LINARES

Whatssap & Telegram: +53 5264692

email: cubamigos@yahoo.es , cubangel@gmail.com

CUBA BEFORE INTERNET 

https://iamcuban.blogspot.com/2022/02/internet-short-wave.html

COLONIAL HOUSE FOR RENT IN HAVANA

https://cubatravelhelp.blogspot.com/2016/05/colonial-vedado-en-cuba-holiday-rental.html

CUBA VACATION IN A DIFFERENT WAY

https://cubatravelhelp.blogspot.com/2016/08/cuba-vacations-in-different-way.html

HAVANA LOCAL GUIDE

https://cubatravelhelp.blogspot.com/2016/10/i-guide.html

domingo, 18 de abril de 2021

The wonderful City of Havana

 

The wonderful City of Havana

For some people who has recently  visited Cuba, Havana is the loveliest city in the world. The capital’s ability to seduce all never fails to astonish every one, thus they  feel it only right to reflect on its charms.

 A defining feature of Havana’s appeal has been its singular mix of ethnicities, beliefs, traditions, smells and contrasting colors since November 16, 1519, when - after having had three different locations - the Villa de San Cristóbal de La Habana was officially established, at the site where the Plaza de Armas, El Templete and its revered ceiba tree, are found today.

However, Havana is currently more popular than ever as confirmed by the third edition of the Seven Wonder Cities of the World competition, organized by the New7Wonders Foundation based in Switzerland, in 2014. Havana placed among the top wonder cities of the world, alongside Beirut (Lebanon), Doha (Qatar), Durban (South Africa), Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), La Paz (Bolivia) and Vigan (The Philippines).

It is worth highlighting that the competition featured 1,200 cities from 220 countries, while Havana also featured among the 25 most photographed places in the world. According to the President of New7Wonders, Bernard Weber, the title of Wonder City of the World will be awarded to the Cuban capital on June 7, as a symbol of the global diversity of urban society and because everything – tangible or intangible – included within the 726.75 square kilometer area is Cuba.

 

THE KEY TO A NEW WORLD

 

Although there are many stories about how the city got its name, the most widely accepted is that relating to the Taíno chief Habaguanex. Boasting an advantageously positioned port and enviable geographic location, Havana became the most prized of Spain’s colonies throughout the Americas during the colonial period, and subsequently became known as the “Key to the New World and Rampart of the West Indies.”

Officially declared a city on December 20, 1592, by King Philip II of Spain, and following the relocation of the Spanish government headquarters to the area in 1593, from Santiago de Cuba, Havana became the island’s capital. The city currently covers 0.7% of the country’s surface area and has, among its extraordinary relics, over 30 National Monuments.

With its unique natural environment, Havana will forever be remembered as the “city of architecture, poetry, rebellions; the conspiring city, of great heroics, and of course, of culture.”

Diría Xonia Beltrán, director of Tourism for the popular city destination of Havana, noted that efforts are underway to further develop varied events and protect cultural, patrimonial and educational treasures; with work focused on cultural and scientific activities, which include the majority of the island’s professionals.

But despite the fact that one fifth of the island’s total population and 30% of its professionals live in Havana, and although the city generates over half of the country’s tourism revenue and Gross Domestic Product, the capital lacks mobility.

 

A HISTORIC CITY

What is more, as the city celebrates its 490th anniversary, Havana “is rundown in many places, in ruins in others, often the victim of neglect, negligent tendencies and lack of appreciation for the symbolic value of a city that was able to announce a new order which it has maintained for over half a century with the noble character of our own people.” Unlike many places throughout the Americas, Havana has successfully preserved its colonial architectural heritage.

The world famous Old Havana, which includes the city’s historic center and network of forts declared World Heritage sites by UNESCO in 1982, is interwoven among former palaces, mansions, small and large squares, cobblestone streets, churches, saints and lofty balconies filled with a mixture of people, voices, and flavors. Cuba’s oldest square, Plaza de Las Armas; that known as Plaza Vieja; Plaza San Francisco de Asís and Plaza de la Catedral, which were built at the end of the 16th century, have all become important icons of the area.

 

In addition to the San Carlos de la Cabaña Fort, which protected Spanish forces after the British navy captured Havana in 1762, and which still symbolically guards the bay, the city is home to castles built to ward off corsairs and pirates, while it also boasts some of the oldest forts in the Americas including the Real Fuerza (1577), San Salvador de La Punta (1600) and Tres Reyes Magos del Morro (1630).

One hundred and forty structures dating from the 16th-17th centuries still stand in the historic center, almost all military or religious buildings; as well as some 200 from the 18th century, the majority civil infrastructure spaces; and over 450 from the 19th century, during which urbanization greatly expanded. The city continued to develop rapidly expanding beyond the perimeters of the defensive wall constructed to protect it. Almost 100 years later, around 1863, that wall began to be demolished.

 

BEYOND THE WALLS

Havana began to grow rapidly during the first half of the 20th century. The city expanded from east to west in a rapid process of addition rather than substitution, over less than six decades. With the triumph of the Revolution the idea was now to focus on investing in the rest of the country in order to reduce the historic disparity between the capital and the rest of the island

Pre-1990s migration figures show that Havana had a sustainable migration rate. However, with the on set of the Special Period, this trend shot up and the city become an even more diverse place.

This is the same city that is home to the stunning Playas del Este beaches; whose Parque Metropolitano represents the enormous green lung of the capital; which today still features the first promenade built in the city; as well as Paula street, along which a young Martí would stroll, and the University of Havana stairway, where the most radical and authentic revolutionary ideals were formulated; which among Daiquirís and other alcoholic beverages guards the memory of visits by Ernest Hemingway to the El Floridita bar and restaurant, and Creole cuisine and wall scribblings at the La Bodeguita del Medio.

Havana also boasts the majestic Colon Cemetery and exquisite Hotel Nacional, which has seen important figures from the arts, culture and politics, parade along its hallways; ancestral Asian culture brought over by the Chinese from 1847; the grand neo-classical buildings which surround the Capitolio, the memorial at the Plaza de la Revolución, or the talented artists who have performed on stages such as that of the Alicia Alonso Grand Theater of Havana, the National Fine Arts Museum and Paseo del Prado.

 

To the west of the city the streets begin to widen leading to the busy neighborhood of Vedado, then onto the dazzling Tropicana Cabaret and 5th Avenue, whose elegance has seen it become a diplomatic and business center, until the Havana Convention Center, which hosts a wide variety of events.

It was to this Havana that the rebel soldiers entered in 1959, and where almost half of all visitors to the island come every year. Havana is quite simply the sui géneris mother of the social, cultural, economic and political evolution of a country committed to its people’s wellbeing.

Protected to the north by a eight  kilometer-long sea wall (the Malecón), the warm and welcoming city, the inspiration for many poems and songs, greets visitors with the open arms of its Christ, and watched over by the La Giraldilla weathervane. Havana is the traditional melting pot, as described by Fernando Ortiz; a city which belongs to its residents and to all Cubans.

LOCAL GUIDE IN HAVANA

HUMBERTO

+5352646921 Whatssap & Telegram

http://humberto. webcindario,com




COLONIAL HOUSE FOR RENT

VACATION IN A DIFFERENT WAY

HAVANA LOCAL GUIDE

viernes, 25 de diciembre de 2020

CUBA, HAVANA 'S CHINA TOWN

Today almost non-existent, but in its moment of splendor the largest in Latin America.
By the year 1850 the first Chinese who opened a business in what would later be the Chinatown arrived in Havana. His name was Chen Leng, but once he arrived in Havana, he changed it to. . . Luis Pérez.
His business was a restaurant for the workers of the tobacco factories. Immediately more Chinese joined him to give life to a whole neighborhood, especially when a decade later began to arrive other wealthy Chinese from the United States.
The Chinese came to Cuba to replace the slave labor force. Actually they came with contracts for 8 years for cutting sugarcane. The working conditions were very bad, almost as much as that of the black slaves. The salary was 4 pesos per month.
 It was very common in their traditions that the Mmtrimonies among the Chinese were arranged by the parents. At first the Chinese imported brides from Hong Kong or Canton. Like everything in life there is always a first time. One of these arranged marriages could not be made because the 20-year-old girlfriend on arriving in Havana found that the boyfriend was 60 and said she did not get married. The scandal among the Chinese communities was tremendous and the arrangement was dissolved with a strong financial compensation.
The Cuban Chinese were grouped by last names and professions. If there was a litigation, it would not go to the country's justice. If they had the same last name, they used the leaders of their brotherhood, but if they had different surnames they would go to the CHUNG WUA Casino, the highest Chinese institution in the country.
Another curious fact is that the first Bank of China in Latin America opened in Cuba. It was opened at the request of the Cuban Chinese because they did not deposit their money in American or Cuban banks. The custom was either to keep it at home, or to bury it or give it to a merchant who had a safe and with a receipt (in Chinese) who could withdraw it whenever they wished, but without earning interest.
So the Bank of China was opened in Havana and in the first year of operations it reached number 23, given the amount of operations and deposits.

Another day I tell you the story of one of the most famous theaters of Havana in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century and it was in Chinatown. It gave many types of different shows and among them the pornographic ones, something very relevant for the time. I mean, even if it was in Chinatown, it had nothing to do with the Chinese themselves, but it attracted a lot of male customers.

personal memory: when I was a child I remember even those descendants of third and fourth generation of the mixture of Chinese with blacks and poor whites. They were tall, with mulatto or coppery skin, chinese eyes that were  green or blue, their  straight hair. They knew they were beautiful and most of them left Cuba when the exodus of 1994 or they married foreigners when  the government opened Cuba to tourism.


cubamigos.webcindario.com
cubamigos@yahoo.es
Humberto, Guide and teacher in Havana 
+5352646921 whatssap & telegram 

Humberto Linares

+5352646921 Telegram and Whatssap

 http://humberto.webcindario.com

viernes, 3 de enero de 2020

CUBA, Modern Apartment in Havana with 2 bedrooms / Apartamento Moderno en la Habana con 2 habitaciones

Modern Apartment in Havana with 2 bedrooms/ Apartamento Moderno en la Habana con 2 habitaciones

ENGLISH:

This modern apartment is located on one of the most central avenues in Havana, 23rd avenue. It has air conditioner in every room and also the possibility of fresh air as every window can be opened. Each bedroom has air conditioner, private bathroom, TV, safebox, DVD, refrigerator, fully equipped kitchen, Linen and towels included in the price. Scheduled cleaning while the guest is out. The building has security guards, two modern elevators (although the apartment is on the first floor).
Price: 70 cuc per night if 2 bedrooms used. 40 cuc if only one bedroom is used. Negotiable depending of the season and amounts of days to be rented.



ESPAÑOL
Este moderno apartamento esta ubicado en una de las avenidas mas céntricas de la Habana: La avenida 23. Tiene aire acondicionado central y también la posibilidad de disfrutar de aire natural ya que cada ventana puede ser abierta. Cada habitacion tiene ademas su propio aire acondicionado, un baño , TV, caja de seguridad, refrigerador, cocina totalmente equipada. Ropa de cama y toallas incluidas en el precio de la renta. Limpieza diaria previa coordinación para que sea mientras el cliente esta' de paseo.
Precio : si se renta para usar 2 habitaciones : 70 cuc por noche, si solo se usa una habitación el precio es de 40 cuc por noche. El precio negociable dependiendo de la temporada y de la cantidad de dias a ser rentado.


http://cubamigos.webcindario.com/apartamento_niurka.html