Destinations 2016

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Best vacation ever INSIDE: SEE READERS’ TOP VACATION PHOTOS AND GET TIPS ON TAKING YOUR OWN SHOTS TULUM, MEXICO – Blue green waters draw a visitor to this isolated cenote or natural well carved out of limestone. Photo by Jesse Miller

Destinations PLAN YOUR ROUTE TO...

... THAT INSPIRE & AMAZE

CUBA

JOE CAVARETTA, SUN SENTINEL

HAVANA, CUBA – Garcia Baxe, a dance instructor for Carnival, waves the U.S. and Cuban lags as the Fathom Adonia arrives in Havana in May.

CRUISING TO CUBA: WHAT TO KNOW

T

he Fathom ship Adonia has launched a schedule of cruises from Miami to Cuba and more cruises are expected later this year and in 2017. The 704-passenger Adonia now leaves the Port of Miami every other Sunday for a week-long voyage to Havana, Cienfuegos and Santiago de Cuba. Q: Is traveling to Cuba by ship a good way to see the country? A: In a seven-day trip around the island, passengers spend two-thirds of their time at sea, and only about 50 hours on the ground in Cuba. So a more time-eicient way to explore Cuba is to take a charter light directly to Havana, Santiago de Cuba or one of several other Cuban cities and begin exploring from there. Q. What are the advantages of traveling by ship? A. After a day of exploring a city on foot, many passengers appreciated being able to return to a loating hotel at the dock where they could ind a hot shower, a comfortable cabin and a cafeteria that is almost always open. Although there are ine restaurants in Cuba’s major cities, inding light fare while touring is not always easy. There are no Starbucks, no fast-food franchises. For those not comfortable wandering the streets of Cuba on their own, Fathom ofers walking and coach tours to places such as national historic sites, organic farms and artist studios. Q. Will I need to get a visa before I go to Cuba? A. Visitors to Cuba are required to have a visa. When you book a trip to the island, Fathom and other tour operators provide the visas at an average cost of about $80. Cuban-born travelers who came to the U.S. after 1970 are required by the Cuban government to have a Cuban passport in addition to their U.S. passport. The cost of the visa and passport for those travelers is about $430. Q. What does a voyage to Cuba on the Adonia cost? A. Fares start at about $2,700 per person for an interior cabin, and rise to about $4,000 for an outside cabin with a balcony. — Mike Clary, Sun Sentinel

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Inside

B.J. BUEL, FOR LEE ENTERPRISES

HAVANA, CUBA – Classic cars, such as this one seen outside the Hotel Nacional in Havana, are an iconic sight.

New ways to discover the magic of Cuba B.J. BUEL For Lee Enterprises

Tips

I

t’s easier than ever to travel to Cuba, but U.S. law stills forbids going there on vacation. That is not a problem, though, because one of the 12 categories of authorized travel is for “people to people” educational activities. And meeting Cubans is the best reason to visit. Cubans are friendly, helpful and curious. Actors, writers, dancers and a poet were eager to perform and talk about their work with a small group of Americans on a recent tour. Owners of private restaurants, which Cuba has permitted in recent years, proudly talked about their businesses. A cab driver, upon hearing that his passenger was from Arizona, wanted to know what she thought about one of her senator’s, Jef Flake, a Republican, frequent visitor and advocate of ending the U.S. embargo of Cuba. Cubans are also thankful for visitors who bring much-needed dollars to the island. The country is poor, and especially so since it lost inancial support, irst from the Soviet Union and now from Venezuela. In one taxi, the driver used his single door handle like a tool, hopping in and out of his ancient Soviet-made Lada to open and close all four doors. A waiter in a restaurant fashioned toilet paper into roses and presented them to women at the end of breakfast. Sure, he was after a tip, but what a clever way to earn it and make customers smile.

FIND NEW VACATION ADVENTURES

BECOME AN EXPERT PACKER

Expect inconveniences such as

brief power outages. The food in private restaurants,

HAVANA, CUBA – Touches of color add to the vibrant Havana streetscape. Authorized trips to Cuba via charter lights have long easily been arranged through tour operators approved by the Cuban government. Since May, one cruise line, Fathom, a brand of Carnival, sails from Miami to Havana. Other cruise operators plan to start travel to Cuba in late 2016 and early 2017. Regular commercial air service is about to start, too. Six U.S. carriers, including American and Southwest, are approved to begin lights as early as this fall to nine Cuban airports. The U.S. is expected late this summer to

AVOID COMMON TRAVEL MISTAKES

called paladares, is very good. The food in government-run operations, not so much. ATM cards and credit cards issued by U.S. banks do not work in Cuba. Bring cash. Cuba is hot and humid in the summer. Air conditioning is not widespread. Ask before you book a hotel or Airbnb accommodation. Internet connections are available, but they can be slow and unreliable. Users buy a card from the government telecom provider, ETECSA, and receive a code tied to a limited-time log-in. At an outdoor hot spot in Havana, the price was $2 or $3 for one hour. Hotels also sell access. approve schedules to Havana. Travelers who want to avoid group tours can arrange their own trip as long as they “self certify” that they meet the deinition of authorized travel. The Treasury Department posted an FAQ on Cuba in July with more detail about travel rules. It’s at https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/ Programs/Documents/cuba_faqs_ new.pdf

VOLUNTOURISM – DOING GOOD WHILE HAVING FUN


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