In early '98, I
returned with Craig Luebben (a long time climbing friend), George Bracksieck
(then editor of Rock and Ice Magazine) and Armando Menocal, a lawyer-climber
and climbing advocate who had great interest in returning to Cuba to explore
his Spanish roots. Much like on prior trips to
Cayman Brac and
Mona Island, Craig and I were raring to bolt!! After recruiting
some Cuban climbers, w
e explored the
island from tip to tip (over
1800
miles on the road!!) reconnoitering for climbing
potential (See the Cuba
map at the purple X's for areas of great climbing potential). I got in some
diving on the far southwest point at
Maria
la Gorda and from there, our hardy band traversed the entire island to the Sierra
Maestr
ae
Mountain Range on the far southeastern end. We had many
unexpected adventures along the way, but getting up and
over the Sierra Maestraes required far more than we could have imagined. The map
showed a road going across, but when we finally found
it, it had gone unused for at least a decade -
and surely no Americans had ever
been there before (the Cubans living here began following us along the
mountainous trails calling us 'ghost people'). This was an ordeal straight from hell, the subject of
another story. Emerging onto the southeastern shoreline late at night and
in a well-battered van near Pilon, we
drove eastwards to Santiago de Cuba, and
then west towards
Camaguey (another focal point of climbing
Cubans) and back to Havana.
By
this time, it became apparent we
needed to get back to some real climbing! As a warmup, we climb
ed the walls of
El Morro Castle in Havana with several young, enthusiastic
Habaneros who also took
us to a climbing area they had been developing called
Jaruco (see the map). Then, along with several very
special Cuban
acquaintances including Carlos Pinelo Esplugas, Vitalio "Viti"
Echazabal Acosta and his beautiful lady "Nannie", and Ju
an
Carlos
Gonzales Ramirez, we went straight back to Vinales
in Pinar del Rio Province. Huge limestone humps called "Magotes"
surround the
town and many have shear undercut faces literally dripping with stalactites and
flowstone, while others have 200' to 400' vertical
walls sometimes nearly
denuded of forestation. We couldn't have
asked
for more. We established a collection of routes near the giant cave of El
Palanque, about 1.5 miles north
See
photo showing the little village of Vinales and its surroundings.
The arrow indicates the El Palanque
'narrows' where many of the
routes are located). Routes as long as 5 pitches
were put up, and there will be more to come. Check out Rock
& Ice Magazine, Volume 94, October '99, for more of the story.

For
These ROUTES . . .
1:
El Palanque Wall, Cuba Libre, Flying Hyena Wall
GO HERE
2:
Mr. Magote
GO HERE

P A R T
I N G C O M M E N T S
Cuba,
the island of mystery,
revolt and isolation is a veritable adventureland -
with hiking in primitive
forests, underground exploration in massive caves, diving, rafting, 100's of
miles of beautiful beaches and so much more. Adventuring is limited only
by the shores of the island and the seeming inability of US citizens to travel
here. Not to miss out, Europeans have been coming to the island in
increasing numbers over the last decade.
Beyond
this,
I think it is probably
rare that visitors to Cuba, especially those venturing out pa
st the
tourist
havens, are not moved to a high state of compassion and sometimes even to tears. We were all
deeply affected at one time or another. Nearly everything and everyone
touches one's heartstrings. Its how the Cuban people
create so much out of
so little, how resourceful they are in the face of
abject bleakness. For example, our Cuban friends assembled very functional backpacks out of
discarded duffel bag parts (Gregory and Dana take notice!) and
harnesses from
scraps of webbing. It was these things plus their enthusiastic willingness to help
and learn that was so impressive. In getting to know them more
completely, it became evident that their strong sense of national
pride had been shaped by passionate struggles and a turbulent history rich in
conquest, slavery, rebellious dictatorships, bloody revolutions and starvation
(both mental and physical). Yet they remain so delightful and open.
Despite
widespread
adversity and restrictive policies of the
totalitarian government, the Cuban people are genuinely friendly and literally
captivated by visitors from other lands, especially the United States. No
matter where we went, the reaction was the same. It started out with looks
of shock and disbelief upon learning we were Americans. "Could it be that
this tattered band of rock climbers were actually the nasty, land hungry,
rifle-bearing imperialistos from the north that they should be so afraid of"? Obviously not! The initial response was followed by tentative
friendliness and quickly snowballed into complete, innocent acceptance and
boundless curiosity. I am sure we made friendships that will last a
lifetime. It could not have been better. Without doubt, there is
a very strong wind of change blowing across Cuba. It won't be long!!
And ...... YES, WE'LL BE BACK !!
H E Y . . . L O O K. . .
IN FACT LOTS OF
CLIMBERS ARE
GOING BACK TO ENJOY
WHAT WE STARTED
AND
CONTRIBUTING TO
MAKING IT
BIGGER AND BETTER!!
GO TO
WWW.CUBACLIMBING.COM

Good informational Sources:
Cuba:
Travel Survival Kit, David Stanley, Lonely Planet ('97), 155 Filbert St.,
Suite 251, Oakland, CA 94607.
Several Cuba URL's are listed on
the links page.
The
Cuba Handbook, Christopher Baker, Moon Travel Handbooks ('97), P.O. Box
3040, Chico, CA 95927, www.moon.com.
*READ
MORE ON CUBA ... GO HERE !top
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