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Advice for Cuba

Dear people on this website, I'm strongly considering going on a trip to Cuba soon alone. I'm a decent Spanish speaker and an American, wondering if anyone has any good tips or advice for the trip. I know I want to see that ice cream shop that fidel was obsessed with.

Thanks in advance!

32 comments
  • Americans are not permitted to stay in hotels owned by the Cuban government (most of them) you'll get in trouble when you return home. You need to stay in an AirBnB or some other privately owned accommodation, otherwise you'll be viewed as violating the yankee sanctions on the Cuban government.

    As far as the actual trip is concerned, it's a bit expensive and very touristy but Tropicana is an absolutely fucking amazing show and well worth the money if you can swing it. And, of course all the usual things like the Museum of the Revolution etc but I'm sure you were going to end up there at some point anyway.

  • Parque Coppelia

    is the largest ice cream parlor in the world when serving about 35.000 customers per day, at the highest can serve 1.000 people at the same time. Built in 1966, Parque Coppelia is located in the Vedado district, Havana, is the largest ice cream parlor in the world, according to BBC

  • brush up on the cuban spanish dialect

    really is very strong and if you are used to mexican spanish or european spanish you might be in for a rude awakening

  • If you don't have an itinerary all planned out I highly recommend going on a tour bus trip, it'll help you get the fullest scope of knowledge about Cuba. If you go with a normal tour bus you'll get some American-brained reactionary as the tour guide though, be warned, most folks who interact with tourists regularly are openly anticommunist (fancy themselves more imperial core than periphery I guess). I've heard good things about Young Pioneer tours and they've got a tour for this may day. My impression is that they won't be wildly reactionary, I hope 🤞, and I've recommended the tour to another curious Hexbear so y'all might be able to comrade it up.

    Edit: Also if you're in Viñales PLEASE check out Heladería El Rapidito, it's so good and so cheap (like 30-40 cup per cone I think? That's like literally a quarter for delicious ice cream).

  • I hear many Americans fly into Mexico City or Cancun and then buy tickets from there to Havana in cash and don't get their passports stamped, just get a visa for a small fee and then pay an exit visa for a small fee. No ATMs on the Island will be accessible to Americans so all money to be used would be brought in cash. Then they fly back to either Mexico City or Cancun and then fly back home after a trip in Mexico. No mention of Cuba.

    I haven't done this and I'm not telling you to do this, but others do it.

  • Make sure to stay at Casas if you're not going on a tour bus!they're cheaper, preferred, and an easy way to exchange your USD to CUP. Btw bring a TON of cash into the island (and a suitcase full of medicine if you can, the communist party can direct you to the best clinic to bring it to). I'd say 1k per week of free cash to keep things easy and flowing and get yourself fun trinkets to fill the empty medicine suitcase. Imperial core cards and banks refuse to operate in Cuba, so do it all before you're on the plane!

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