Cuba 2014, Day 03

A Market, Santería, & the Malecòn

We are back from Cuba, once again, with reliable Internet access. That provided the challenge of purging my mail program of well over 1,000 messages, many junk ones, to be sure, but still in need of being tagged with a filter block. And then, there were messages I had sent out that I knew had been received. No need to keep them, either!

I don’t care where you travel, the markets are always great for photographers. Sure, there are the vegetables and fruits, photographed a gazillion times and looking essentially all the same, but there are other things to explore. After helping our participants, we went into another building. There, the round skylights made wonderful patterns on the walls and floor when the sun came out. This was just about the only shot I got, as the sun went in and did not return until we left (naturally).© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

In Cuba, kids play in the streets. Just as they used to do in the US. They can skate board, play baseball, and push each other around on dollies. They know how to entertain themselves, and they have fun.© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

It was time to head to the famous Hotel Nacional de Cuba for lunch. This is where the Mafia headquartered and hosted writers, actors and actresses, gamblers, and prostitutes. Great music was played there, as it was one of the major entertainment centers of La Habana. There is a hall lined with photographs of the famous and infamous. Some of us preferred to sit outside in the shade of Royal Palm trees (the national tree) at the foot of the sweeping lawn, look out at the Straits of Florida across the Bay of Habana, and chat over Mojitos made with rum añejo oscuro (dark, aged rum). The standard mojitos are made with white rum, but when our group tasted what I love, they all instantly converted!

It was time to move on …

The Santería religion, in its most simple explanation, is a blend of the Yorùbá religion that came from West Africa and the Roman Catholicism of the islands. It is strange to see a shelf in a priestess’ house with items from both cultures, to say the least. Even stranger to see fish drying in the window so the house cats cannot eat them and bright underwear drying on a line outside.© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.I never did find out what the dried fish were all about.

After vising two priestesses’ houses, our host, a scholar of the Santería religion and its place in Cuban culture, took us to a special presentation, a dress rehearsal done by teens for an upcoming Santería show. I looked up into a balcony, and saw two of the girls dressed and waiting to come down. To me, that was — with permisison, of course — an invitation to go up and photograph them. This girl had a particularly expressive face.© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

Once the rehearsal started, one of the characters really stood out … the Prankster. He was a non-stop bundle of energy and made us laugh with his antics.© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

The Malecòn is a place we love. It lures us back time and time again. This seven-kilometer-long boulevard is where the late-afternoon action happens. Musicians strum guitars or play brass instruments. Lovers twine themselves around each other. Families gather to scatter the ashes of a loved one. Older couples nestle close and laugh about this and that. Children dart here and there. Offerings are thrown into the sea for the Yorùbá gods. It is a mish-mash of life in Cuba. And always, we see kids, mostly boys, down by the water.© 2014 Margo Taussig PiOfferings are thrown into the sea to nkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

The light fades and so do the sounds of the Malecòn. People head home for dinner or cross the busy boulevard to sit at a café. A man stands on the sidewalk, hoping to entice visitors to the restaurant upstairs.© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

Crossing the boulevard is exciting, to say the least. The trick is to run across the near three lanes, screech to a halt on the very single yellow line in the middle, then wait until it is safe (more or less) to finish crossing to the other side. As people who have traveled to Cuba know, people do not have the right of way unless it is in a cross walk, and there were no cross walks here!

Cars whizz by, many from the 50s but also modern cars such as high-end Audis, Bimmers, and Alpha Romeos. Taxis pass in all forms. I particularly like the three-wheeled Cocos, so named, because they resemble a coconut.© 2014 Margo Taussig Pinkerton.  All Rights Reserved.  From Barefoot Contessa Photo Adventures.  For usage and fees, please e-mail TBC (at) BCphotoadventures (dot) com or contact us at 310 Lafayette Drive, Hillsborough, NC  27278 or at 919-643-3036 before 9 p.m. Eastern Time, ET.

It was a good day, filled with a variety of cultural exchanges, all of which offered ample opportunity for photography.

Next: An Amazing Restoration School and the Streets of La Habana

Please SUBSCRIBE. It’s easy to do by clicking on the appropriate link at the top of the right column.

Meanwhile, Comments on the blog are always encouraged and welcome. You do not need to be a WordPress member to do so.

We also hope you will LIKE this and SHARE this blog with those interested in photography by clicking on the buttons below. We also hope you will check out these links:

3 thoughts on “Cuba 2014, Day 03”

  1. I love the juxtaposition of the fish hanging with underwear in the background–not your typical postcard image!

    1. Mary,

      I was certainly what caught my eye and made me chuckle. Glad it had the same effect on you! And as you say, neither Arnie nor I go in for the “just another pretty postcard” views!

      Thanks for commenting!

      Take care,

      TBC

  2. Sorry, folks, for some reason, WordPress.org did not update the photos here, even though they read properly from their storage. Don’t know what is happening!

    Take care,

    TBC

Leave a Reply to TBC Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

Please follow us

Newsletter

If you wish to be added to our mailing list for newsletters sent out infrequently (we only have time for 3 or 4 a year), please click here.

Archives by Month