UN Day in Belize – Celebration and accidental fail

UN Day Belize

Last week we celebrated the UN Day here in Belize, along with the rest of the world. I supported in planning the event and supervising the two video productions – one to commemorate the 70 years of the UN in Belize, and the other to document the event in itself.

It was great fun, but I was accidentally caught on camera while taking a photo and holding my sunglasses – you’ll see it below. An otherwise cool image, I had to ask the producers to cut it out due to the quite obvious accidental super-fail. Haha!

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize - Ignite LTD

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize

UN Day Belize - Ignite LTD

UN Day Belize Video Screenshot

“What’s in my Family Hygiene Kit”

Publics Resized

Today, we supervised the delivery of family hygiene kits to the Government for distribution to the families affected by the recent floods in Belize. But instead of a photo of a person wearing one logo handing over a box to another person wearing another logo, I took a “what’s in my bag” kind of photo of the kit itself.

Because what’s more interesting than the fact that access to soap can be life saving for small children? These are important basic hygiene items that some families have been deprived of.

Breathing Under Water

Had a discussion with a friend the other day where he stated that “quality music” wasn’t being produced anymore. And while I may agree that few things are as timeless as Miles Davis or even Bob Marley (is there ANYBODY who doesn’t like Bob Marley?) I’m a firm believer that music keeps being reinvented – and I’m a big fan of all these new fusion styles with trappy, funky, souly, jazzy and even hip-hoppy tunes all being blended together, creating completely new sounds. And voices, good voices are always timeless.

Here’s something fresh and awesome, the Australian band with a complicated name, Hiatus Kaiyote, define their style as “future-soul”. They released their album Choose your Weapon in May this year, and released this great video in August.

I’m definitely enjoying this, it’s a pleasure for both the eyes and the ears. :)


Hiatus Kaiyote – Breathing Under Water
Choose Your Weapon (2015)

Weekend in Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

With a long weekend ahead of us in the end of September, I decided to sell my tickets for a concert I was planning to go to and instead accompany Nuria to pick up her car from a workshop in Tulum in Mexico. All completely unplanned, we jumped on the first best chickenbus on Saturday morning and made our way north though the green landscapes and swirly northern highway of Belize. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – I love going by bus. (Look at this collection of tripping from 2012) I was listening to music and disconnecting completely, and even if it eventually took us almost 11h (twice the time it takes by car) to arrive in Tulum, it was all pleasure.

In Tulum, we were picked up by my friend Alfonso who runs the creative and environmentally responsible space Residencia Gorila, a sort of artsy collective where creative minds from all over the world gather to spend some time, get inspired, and create. A very nice place to disconnect, and very much in line with what Tulum is all about.

We spent the night at Gorila and the days at the beach, and some time at Alfonso’s home and office in Aldea Zama. We went for dinner at the always amazing Casa Banana, breakfast at La Zebra according to tradition, and had pizza and tequila with new acquaintances, we also had random talks about art and went dancing a bit. The town was very quiet because of the low season, but it was still a million times better than spending a long weekend in Belize City.

We spent the entire last day at the car workshop, waiting for the car to get ready – which they had promised over and over it would be. I had my book and music so overall it was actually a nice relaxing time even if a bit frustrating and worrying. I finished the book – Jessica Alexander’s “Chasing Chaos” is an entertaining and very personal account of the life, doubts and insights of a humanitarian aid worker – recommended!

By 9pm the mechanics realized that the car wouldn’t get ready on time for us to drive back, which was a bit of a nightmare since the only option we had left to get back to Belize City on time for work was the ADO night bus. And this bus is nothing short of horrible – it’s ridiculously cold and blasts the AC so hard you can’t hide from it, it stops and throws you off for bureaucratic bullshit every time you’re about to fall asleep, and you arrive in the morning at 6.30am feeling completely destroyed, kind of like as if you haven’t slept for a week and as if 5 elephants stomped all over your body. I guess it works if you’re doing backpacking for months and have time to spare – although then I would definitely even more strongly opt for the chicken buses – but getting to work directly after is really not to be recommended.

I had coffee when I got to the office that morning and made it through the day even though I wished I could have spent all day in bed. I will try really hard to avoid ever going by this bus again, but overall it was worth it. And thanks for your utter kindness, Alfonso! You know you always have a home wherever I’m at.

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Tulum with Nuria

Cuba Pt. 10 – The last but not least of Cuba: A long walk, a nice dinner, and some last fun and play in that rooftop pool

La Habana,Cuba

The portrait above is without doubt one of my favourites from the Cuba albums, the unforced and charming smile, the shadows, the colours, the hat – and capturing something so old and foreign to us, yet so common on the island – payphones. In some places people were even standing in line to make a call from one of these. 

With only one day left to explore La Habana, we went for yet another full-day walk. I always think that we meet the most interesting people and see the most interesting things when strolling around without a goal, so to compromise, we usually do the “must-see’s” with my mom, and then make sure we have some time left to “just walk, talk and look” so I can take my photos and feel like I get into the vibe of the place. It’s a good deal and one of the reasons travelling with my mom is so comfortable – we get to do both because of our different priorities.  So we walked and explored 14km of the city by foot, and among some interesting characters, we met Ivan with the cool hair-do and then found our way to Plaza Vieja again where we sat for a while and had mojitos and delicious Cuban croquetas. We also stumbled upon the chocolate museum where we sat down and had a couple of pralines, and we basically walked all day until it got dark and we had to make our way to the San Cristobal Paladar on the other side of town where we had booked a table for dinner. A nice walk in less touristy parts of the city.

San Cristobal was a nice restaurant with a quite unpredictable decor, and the food was fantastic. We ordered black bean soup with sweet potato chips, fried yuca, and the lamb, which was delicious and a perfect choice for what has become my once-monthly ration of red meat. We had some mojitos in the mezzanine of the hotel on the way back, and then a nice long lazy sleep – our last night on the comfy Saratoga mattresses. 

Next morning we packed, had breakfast at the nearby Hotel Inglaterra which serves a nice and very priceworthy buffet for 6USD per person, and went straight to the pool to get some last moments of fun in the sun before flying out. The Saratoga staff agreed to give us a late checkout and I think by that point we decided that it actually had been a good choice despite the cost. Cuba had overall been quite an expensive trip, but all had worked out really well – from the convenience of the car rental, to what we felt was an appropriate amount of nights in every place, to the people we had met and the things we had seen. Cuba treated us really really well.

La Habana,Cuba La Habana,Cuba

La Habana,CubaLa Habana,Cuba

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La Habana,CubaLa Habana,Cuba La Habana,Cuba

La Habana,Cuba

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La Habana,CubaLa Habana,Cuba

La Habana,Cuba

La Habana,Cuba

La Habana,Cuba

Cuba Pt. 9 – A Vintage Ride to Dreamy Fusterlandia

Fusterlandia, Cuba

We escaped Saratoga in the morning to eat a less overpriced breakfast, but I was still in the mood for something a bit more exclusive than rice and beans or tacos that I can get in Belize. My wishes were granted in Hotel Parque Central, where they gave me delicious smoked salmon! Anybody who’s had breakfast with me knows that I absolutely adore smoked salmon (and avocado, and sunny-side-up eggs), and that it’s impossible to get many things in Belize, and that I miss them. Needless to say, I was very happy. Mami had beer – for breakfast! We giggled like kids.

After breakfast, we had to rush to the cigar factory to make it for the tour. You’re not allowed to take photos in the factory, protecting the secret of the hand made Cuban cigars, and the integrity of the people who work there I guess – it was an interesting tour and it was nice that we were alone so we could ask all the questions we wanted.

We made our way back to where all the vintage cabriolets are, and found a yellow 1957 Pontiac Super Chief that we wanted to take a ride in. A one hour city tour in a vintage car is usually 35USD, but we had another place in mind that we wanted to visit – Fusterlandia. Located in the small fishing village Jaimanitas, 30 minutes outside of La Habana, Fusterlandia is the home of the quirky, “Gaudí-esque”, surrealist Cuban artist José Fuster. We paid 40usd for the Pontiac driver to take us all the way to Fuster’s home and let us stroll around the neighbourhood, it took us 1.5 in total so it was a nice deal.

Fuster has not only decorated his own home with his art, but has over the past 10 years transformed the entire village into a dreamy land of surreal shapes, details and partiotic images, and covered more than 80 neighbours’ houses and fences in his characteristically styled randomness. A visit is warmly recommended if you’re looking for something different yet very Cuban. Taking the Pontiac to go to Fusterlandia was a great way to combine the two experiences – especially as the ride along the Malecon and the big 5th Avenue was a very nice experience in itself – windy, fresh, fun! Much better than driving around the congested streets in the downtown area if you ask me.

Okay, enough talking. Photos!

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

Pontiac Habana, CubaPontiac Habana, Cuba

Pontiac Habana, CubaPontiac Habana, Cuba

Pontiac Habana, CubaPontiac Habana, Cuba

Pontiac Habana, CubaPontiac Habana, Cuba

Pontiac Habana, Cubavideo Fusterlandia, Cuba

Fusterlandia, CubaFusterlandia, Cuba

Fusterlandia, CubaFusterlandia, Cuba

Fusterlandia, CubaFusterlandia, Cuba

Fusterlandia, CubaFusterlandia, Cuba

Fusterlandia, CubaLa Habana,CubaLa Habana,CubaLa Habana,Cuba 

Cuba Pt. 8 – Back in La Habana and Splurging on Luxuries

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

We came back to La Habana where we had booked a room at the supposedly luxurious Hotel Saratoga already before landing on the island. As I’ve mentioned before, it’s hard to arrange and book things online for Cuba, and for some reason most hotels were sold out already a week before we were scheduled to travel, so we picked the Saratoga (which also only had three rooms left). We weren’t sure what the situation would be with Internet, and since I knew that I would want to check in on work emails after almost a week off the grid, and my mother would want to upload photos to her Facebook, we chose to stay at the one hotel where we surely would have Internet.

Hotel Saratoga also happens to be the most expensive hotel in La Habana, and at 250USD a night it was indeed ridiculously expensive but we figured we could allow ourselves to splurge a little considering how we always choose the cheaper option when travelling – we wanted to experience both sides of La Habana and this was going to be an interesting alternative. The hotel had functioning internet indeed, was conveniently located, and had a beautiful rooftop pool and bar with a great view, the perfect place to have a rest and some “vacation” after our hopping around. Other than that, it really wasn’t that extraordinary – the rooms were not particularly astonishing, the rooftop bar didn’t accept putting cocktails on the room tab which I found annoying, breakfast wasn’t included and was 25USD per person (no, we didn’t!), and it was just really not good value for the money. But, roomservice did bring a cup of honey, hot water and lemon juice to the room when I complained of a sore throat, for free. (haha, wow!) And Usher and Ludacris were staying at the hotel at the same time as we were so we were greeted by screaming fans when getting out of the hotel which made us feel awkwardly and involuntarily famous, which was a funny experience. (The kids were screaming “Uche, uche!” so we didn’t understand who it was about until the concierge explained that it was all about Usher, haha)

And that rooftop bar was pretty special and we spent a good amount of time there catching up on the news, responding to emails and enjoying piña coladas in the evening, especially since I wasn’t feeling well the last days and had a really sore throat.. so I guess it was worth it as a place to wrap up the trip after all. :)

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

La Habana, CubaLa Habana, Cuba

Cuba Pt. 7 – Finca Vigía, Ernest Hemingway’s Cuba Home

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

On our way back to La Habana, we also stopped by Ernest Hemingway’s home in Cuba, today a museum. The house where Hemingway wrote most of “For Whom The Bell Tolls” (Hi, J!) and that never ending “The Old Man and the Sea” has been kept the way it supposedly was left by the writer before his suicide in 1961. It was a bit strange to look into somebody’s living room, although not much unlike the Bob Marley museum or Frida Kahlo’s house, and it was definitely an interesting stop, worth the little detour.

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

Finca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in CubaFinca Vigía - Hemingway's Home in Cuba

Cuba Pt. 6 – That Beautiful Blue Light of Access to Information. Cienfuegos, Palmira and Internet Hotspots.

Cienfuegos, Cuba

In July 2015, two months before we arrived to Cuba, the country decided to open 35 access points in public parks and spaces all over the island. This was obviously a huge deal in a place where internet restrictions have been among the harshest in the world and where access only had been available in state owned parlors and for a selected group of elites.

One of the things that impressed me the most about Cuba was exactly this, something that we consider a basic right and take for granted – access to information – was now suddenly available to anybody. I was amazed by how evident the hunger for knowledge and contact was. At night, the parks and squares were packed with young people with smartphones and computers, their faces lit up in blue from the screens, entire families standing around one smartphone showing off their kids to relatives abroad over Viber. The energy was very high and it was obvious that this was something that the people had been longing for for a long time.

While being “easily accessible” the internet hotspots are by no means cheap to access. For 2USD you can surf the internet for one hour – very expensive considering that people still earn on average 30USD per month. But anyway – Facebook, Wikipedia, Viber. Open. Suddenly it’s not impossible to communicate and it was clear that the people, and especially the young people, had been craving it.

We drove to Cienfuegos from Trinidad, and took a small detour to Palmira on the way where we had some cashewnut icecream and checked out the only local museum, we then continued to Cienfuegos where we walked around in the evening mostly doing people-watching. It was a quick tour on the way back to La Habana, but it was worth spending one night in Cienfuegos, a pretty place and different from both Trinidad and La Habana. The best thing about having a rental car is exactly this – being able to stop on the way and check other places out.

Trinidad, Cuba

Trinidad, Cuba

Roadtrip, Cuba

Roadtrip, Cuba

Roadtrip, Cuba

Palmira, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Palmira, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cuba Pt.5 – A journey back in time, Wonderful Trinidad

Trinidad, Cuba

Trinidad was probably our favourite place on Cuba. The colourful colonial architecture, cobblestone streets, horses with carriages and an overall feeling that time has completely stopped in this town, makes it wonderfully authentic. The amount of private homestays in beautiful homes with high ceilings and living rooms that look like museums make even room-hunting an interesting experience. Forget about booking Cuba lodging online, the nicest spots are found walking around and knocking on doors.

We slept two nights in Trinidad, spent an afternoon at Playa Ancon beach, and took a number of nice strolls around town – including at night. Trinidad felt even safer than La Habana. Actually, all of Cuba felt very safe.

Enjoy the photos!

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