Trinidad, with the Sierra de Sancti Spiritus Mountains in the background |
We get an early morning start to Trinidad. The city, not the country. Although it’s not that far away, the road is winding and the trip will take a while. We have a lot on our collective plate today.
We roll past mango plantations but most of the scenery looks like it’s not cultivated. And there’s a reason for that. It’s covered with an invasive plant called marabu, known to English-speakers as sicklebush. Native to Africa, marabu was brought to Cuba in the 19th century. As long as agriculture kept it in check, things were all right, but after private farms were taken over by the state and later when sugar prices crashed, many fields were left fallow. That’s all it took for the marabu to spread until it now covers about five million acres. There’s no use burning it because it spreads by the roots and will grow back. The only hope is to pull it out by its roots. Although the bark is used in Africa in native medicine, the only use for marabu here might be as a biomass fuel. Like the kudzu imported to the States, it’s become a real headache.
At a crossroads we see a man in a yellow vest. Chris explains that he’s what’s called a Yellow Jacket. As vehicles are scarce and far too expensive for the common man, the Yellow Jacket’s job is to wave down any passing vehicle with empty seats and make the driver pick up the people who wait patiently on the side of the road, provided they’re headed in the driver’s direction. You cannot refuse. Our bus is owned and operated by the State Tourism Board and can’t be commandeered, but normal buses can. Or private cars and trucks. Or tractors. Anything to keep the masses moving and going about their business.
Our first appointment in Trinidad is with Nancy, a historian and an expert on the restoration of this city, which dates back to 1514. Almost all the buildings were built in what she calls The Golden Period of the sugar boom: 1725 to 1860. After that things apparently all went south. The lack of slaves and the rise of competition from the sugar beet in Europe brought about an economic crisis. The soil was depleted anyway. There were no roads, so people arrived by boat but the harbor was too small for the newer, larger ships. So Trinidad remained frozen in time until 1960. A kind of time-warp.
Now, with Cuba opening up to tourism, this town is again flourishing. Since 1992, 2% of all income from restaurants and B&Bs has gone to restore the city. But the increased demand on the electricity, water and sewer systems caused by tourism is overwhelming the municipal utilities that basically date back to the colonial period. It’s a perfect example of the problem facing all of Cuba, especially if the United States lifts its sanction on travel to the island (which has pretty much happened since I wrote this two months ago).
Our second appointment is at Fabulas del Cedro, the studio of Lazaro Niebla Castro (no relation to Fidel and Raul, I believe). A quiet man, he talks softly of his work and waits patiently while Alicia translates what little he says. After trying different art mediums, he chose wood-carving. But he wasn’t happy with the “shiny” look of new wood. After one of Cuba’s hurricanes a few years ago, he saw piles of old wood lying around the streets, ready for the dump. He carefully selected a few unbroken shutters and started carving them. He settled on the cedar ones, because they age well... and, he adds sheepishly, “they smell so good when I carve them”. He transforms the shutters into colorful portraits of his neighbors and other people he’s photographed. My favorite is an older lady with a bucket and a face pleated by the years; Lazaro tels me it’s his favorite too. He and I exchange e-mail addresses. Maybe I can buy one of his works for shipment; it certainly wouldn’t have fit in my carry-on for the flight back.
Then it’s some free time before our next people-to-people. We’re told to meet in the town square and we scatter in all directions. Walking around, I see many tractors, as I would in The Thumb of Michigan. This is indeed farm country. Coming around a corner, I stumble on the arts-and-crafts market. Some of our group are already there. As I walk down the long passage between the tables, people call out to me by name. “Sandy, buy my hats.” “Sandy, look at my lace.” It’s only when one calls out “Sandy Schopbach” that I remember the National Geographic name tag on my shirt.
I manage to find the old house - now a museum - Alicia told me about. It has a look-out tower that affords a great view out over the rooftops. But Alicia didn’t warn me about the athletic climb up two floors of steep, steep stairs followed by an almost vertical stair-ladder. Still, it’s well worth it, if you’re able-bodied. It’s quiet up here and you can look down on the museum’s courtyard or out over much of Trinidad and the hills and Caribbean Sea beyond.
Back downstairs again, an elderly lady pops out through a doorway and wants to show me her box of lacework. Whispering and looking over her shoulder repeatedly, I suspect she’s not supposed to do this on the job, but is paid to keep tourists from touching the antique furniture. She makes the lace and embroidered linen herself and each piece is only 3 CUCs (convertible pesos). It’s so little money to me and means so much to her, so I choose a piece for my Paris apartment.
Iglesia de la Santisima Trinidad |
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