Placeholder Content Image

Visiting Havana as a 96-year-old

<p>It’s 6am and I’m at Canada’s Montreal international airport with my friend Francine, having just checked in our two suitcases and an upscale foldable walker that my travelling companion refers to as her Rolls-Royce.</p> <p>Francine is wearing an elegant trench coat and, since credit cards aren’t yet accepted at our destination, a moneybelt into which she has slipped a large wad of banknotes. It’s the first time she’s carried so much cash, she says. But isn’t there always a first time for everything?</p> <p>Francine van der Heide is 96 years old. I met her three decades ago in New York, where she had a pied-à-terre near the East River, a few blocks from the apartment of her former colleague, my late aunt Françoise. The two women had been pioneers at the United Nations. My aunt started as a bilingual secretary in 1948, Francine in 1949. In 1951, Francine married Wiebe van der Heide, who had been a member of the resistance in the Netherlands during the Nazi occupation before settling in the US after the war. They had three boys. Two years after Wiebe died in 1995, and after nearly half a century of living in the US, Francine returned to her Canadian hometown, Montreal.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7826221/havana-at-96-insert.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/de69b373afdb41e2ac6e6bf439445de4" /></p> <p>It was around this time that we started hanging out together, going to the opera and having long meals in restaurants. And because Francine continued to swim into her 90s, our activities also included sessions at an indoor pool, inevitably followed by a sauna and a margarita (she mixes a wicked cocktail). Today, she has given up the front crawl, but when, during an especially harsh winter, I proposed we spend a week in Havana, she didn’t hesitate: “That would be wonderful.”</p> <p>Francine wants to travel across Old Havana in a bicitaxi, which is a pedal-powered cab. Safety features begin and end with a metal bar, to which we firmly cling. I have some doubts, but with Francine – who is 35 years my senior – gently mocking my apprehension, I decide to embrace the local life.</p> <p>We weave between fruit stands and DVD displays and pass children squabbling over timeless toys, like a hula hoop and a ball. “It makes me happy to see young people having fun like the old days,” says Francine.</p> <p>A big Chevrolet glides by. The cobalt-coloured car is vintage 1950s, and its appearance triggers fond memories. Francine reminisces about summertime in Montreal in 1948, a time when the now hip Plateau Mont-Royal was a working-class district. “Nobody had air conditioners then,” she recalls. “It’s just like that here now, people lingering in the doorways of their homes to escape the heat.”</p> <p>The bicitaxi drops us in front of stands of second-hand books in Plaza de Armas, which was the political centre of the colony when the Spanish ruled from the 16th to 19th centuries. “Do you notice all the blue?” she asks of the balconies adorning the square.</p> <p>Knowing her vision is limited, I’m always amazed when she makes these kinds of observations. Probably reading my thoughts, she adds, “And I cannot believe how clean the city is. There’s no paper littering the ground, no plastic bags caught on tree branches like back home.” I hadn’t noticed, but she was right.</p> <p>For more than 20 years, Francine has suffered from macular degeneration, a disease that causes gradual vision loss. To compensate, she makes a point of researching all outings thoroughly. In preparation for this trip, she perused several travel guides, using a magnifying glass to read small print. With US/Cuba relations thawing, Francine knew she was witnessing a historic moment. [The two nations restored diplomatic relations – which had been severed in 1961 after the Cuban Revolution – on July 20, 2015.]</p> <p>Francine has a fondness for the left, which is one reason why she feels a kinship with Lucía Sardiña. At 76, the employee of the Cuban Ministry of Culture is from the generation that fought alongside Fidel Castro in the 1950s. She is what one would call a keeper of the revolutionary faith.</p> <p>In her chauffeur-driven Lada, Sardiña takes us to visit a cultural centre created by Kcho, one of the island’s most internationally recognised contemporary artists. This modern space, so different from the dusty state museums, is populated by young people toting laptops and smartphones. Most Cubans don’t have access to the internet due to the prohibitive cost and the island’s poor connectivity. Kcho’s workshop, which is open to the public, may be the only place in Havana where Wi-Fi is free – even if it’s a little slow.</p> <p>The previous day, a guided architecture tour of the city had introduced us to a selection of contemporary Cuban buildings at the National Schools of Art, dating from the 1960s. In 30°C heat, under the institution’s acclaimed brick-and-tile cupolas, Francine pondered the island’s cultural legacy. Looking at the student artwork around us, she observed, “It’s stunning, in a country so poor, that all these young people are interested in creating art and are able to make a life.”</p> <p>Francine herself inspires a certain amount of jubilant incredulity when people learn of her age. At the Nécropolis Cristóbal Colón, 56 hectares of ornate mausoleums, graves and statues, the ticket agent exits her booth to greet us and grants Francine free access to the site.</p> <p>When our guide finds out Francine was born near the beginning of the previous century, he not only welcomes her, he kisses her. Then he offers to tell us all about the characters, love stories and tragedies behind the cemetery’s plaster and marble angels.</p> <p>Though her vitality belies her years, Francine is not immune to the physical effects of ageing. In 2013, she was experiencing excruciating back pain, especially when she first awoke.</p> <p>Doctors diagnosed her with lumbar spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal canal that can put pressure on the spinal cord and nerves.</p> <p>Francine suffered. She pleaded for an operation but was deemed too old. Then someone suggested she perform 20 minutes of exercises in bed each morning. Gradually, she recovered. During our stay in Havana, she would lie on the terrazzo floor of her room to do her stretching (her bed is too narrow). “To think that two years ago I didn’t want to live and today I’m walking in Cuba,” she muses.</p> <p>At Nazdarovie, a retro-Soviet restaurant on the Malecón, Francine climbs three flights of stairs in one go. The staff are impressed. “We have people in their 20s who grumble about coming up this far. Can we adopt you as our mascot?”</p> <p>Francine is stimulated by the challenges we encounter during our stay; compliments encourage her.</p> <p>“I wouldn’t like to disappoint you,” she had told me shortly before we arrived in Cuba. Our journey is unconventional and unscripted. Apart from a few organised tours, it’s never clear where we are heading. We learn to be adaptable, which, for my friend, means having to kneel in the shower to wash her hair to avoid slipping on the tiles.</p> <p>One day, we climb into a taxi with a woman behind the wheel. Thinking that the fare is too high, I try to haggle, but our driver won’t budge. Francine defends her. “It’s hard enough for us to make it in a man’s world,” she observes. “Even in New York, few women drive taxis.”</p> <p>Throughout the trip, I’m impressed by Francine’s physical stamina, but it’s her openness that defines our experience. Her ability to relate to others even extends to plant life. Contemplating a pair of palm trees in the courtyard of the Museo de Arte Colonial, she extols their beauty. “They are 150 years old, and see how straight they are!”</p> <p><strong>Travel Tips for Seniors</strong></p> <p><strong>1. Get the right support</strong></p> <p>Most airlines transport wheelchairs or other mobility aids free of charge. Depending on the disability or impairment, special mobility aid assistance can also be provided at the airport, including a wheelchair ride to the aircraft. Attendants will assist with boarding and help you settle in your seat</p> <p><strong>2. Find your speed</strong></p> <p>It’s important to take a break or rest when the need arises – particularly if it is very hot. In Havana, Francine enjoyed refuge in the cool lobby of the Hotel Parque Central. Resting against cushions in what she called “one of the best armchairs” in the city, she spent the afternoon listening to an audiobook.</p> <p><strong>3. Don’t be afraid to ask</strong></p> <p>On board a tourist bus during an architecture tour, Francine couldn’t properly hear our guide, whose voice was drowned out by ambient noise. She kindly requested that he come closer, and he happily obliged.</p> <p><strong>4. Stay in motion</strong></p> <p>According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, even people who engage in moderate amounts of exercise are likely to live longer. Those who, like Francine, are active for at least 150 minutes a week have a 31% lower mortality rate.</p> <p><em>Written by Hélène de Billy.</em> <em>This article first appeared</em> <a href="http://www.readersdigest.com.au/travel/destinations/Havana-at-96"><em>in Reader’s Digest.</em></a><em> For more of what you love from the world’s best-loved magazine, </em><a href="http://readersdigest.innovations.com.au/c/readersdigestemailsubscribe?utm_source=over60&amp;utm_medium=articles&amp;utm_campaign=RDSUB&amp;keycode=WRA87V"><em>here’s our best subscription offer.</em></a></p> <p><img style="width: 100px !important; height: 100px !important;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7820640/1.png" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/f30947086c8e47b89cb076eb5bb9b3e2" /></p>

Retirement Life

Placeholder Content Image

Cuba's travel industry on the cusp of change

<p>It's perhaps not the most recognised indicator of change but for me one of the most noticeable impacts of the changes under way in Cuba is lobsters.</p> <p>I'm not implying Cuba has telepathic crustaceans...simply that five years ago almost no restaurant seemed to know how to cook a lobster properly. Inevitably they'd be overcooked and chewy. Remarkably cheap, but chewy.</p> <p>However, the tide is now turning and with more Cubans able to set up private restaurants and Cubans returning home with extensive hospitality industry skills and with the prospect of better times ahead, lobster is worth eating, although inevitably the prices have also gone up.</p> <p>And that's the rub with Cuba ...a few years back when limitations on American tourists were even tighter than they are today and tourism numbers overall were lower, so too were prices.  Finding a hotel room was relatively easy and popular tourist sites such as the historic hearts of Havana and Trinidad were refreshingly free of crowds.</p> <p>But now the rush is on.  It seems everyone wants to get to Cuba before the inevitable influx of Americans (an estimated 10 million a year) arrives. At present the US Government still places restrictions on their citizens' ability to visit Cuba (they can't go independently as yet but there's an expanded range of approved special interest tours) but sometime that will change.</p> <p><img width="498" height="280" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/18955/shutterstock_312697145_498x280.jpg" alt="cuba street"/></p> <p>In the meantime, it's everyone else who is heading to Cuba – keen to get there before the country changes too drastically. Cuba has no multinational franchises such as McDonalds, KFC or Starbucks. You can't buy Coca Cola and there are a few international standard hotels outside the beach resort areas such as Varadero. And, for the great majority of travellers, this is an essential part of its charm.</p> <p>The impact of this increase in numbers (about 17 per cent last year) is causing some problems, at least in the short term however, as I have experienced first-hand.</p> <p>Even before private citizens could offer bed and breakfast accommodation and operate private restaurants as they can now, Cuba's tourist infrastructure was starting to creak under the strain.</p> <p>This is still a Communist country and the volume and inefficiency of the bureaucracy can be overwhelming.   If you visit Cuba with a government-run agency there is a centralised system of booking hotel, transport and other services.  Over the last few years I've experienced this imploding under the strain with overbooking of hotel rooms, shortages of guides, incorrect bookings. It's a good thing that Cuba has such great and still reasonably cheap cocktails because I usually have to resort to several of these for medicinal purposes to keep a tour on the rails.</p> <p>In theory, now that there are private accommodation providers some of these problems should be relieved but now even these new businesses are sometimes struggling to keep up with demand, leading sometimes to overbooking and other problems.</p> <p>I've arrived in Baracoa, in Cuba's far eastern province, and been told on arrival that the hotel booked for my group has been changed (despite earlier assurances this would not happen) and to be given the news that the hotel we were now assigned to had no bus access so my group would have to climb nearly 100 steps in 35C heat to reach the lobby.</p> <p>Last year, having finally secured a booking in one of Trinidad's few heritage hotels I was told just days before we were due to fly from New Zealand that the hotel had been exclusively let out to American groups and was unavailable to others - even if was empty.  On occasions our Kiwi group was "bumped" from reserved tables at restaurants because they'd been given to Americans instead.</p> <p>I have also arrived, group in tow, to discover the government-run agency had run out of English-speaking guides and instead had assigned me an Italian speaking one.  It took three days of battling to sort this out.</p> <p>Doing this on the phone to the local office took on a Pythonesque quality. </p> <p>"I need an English-speaking guide."</p> <p>"You have one."</p> <p> "No, I don't. She speaks Italian."</p> <p> "No, she speaks English."</p> <p>She told me she has no English, only Italian, while weeping on my shoulder at the airport!"</p> <p>At which point the rep hung up and a few hours later sent the office "heavy" to sort me out</p> <p>In a possibly totally inadvertent piece of national stereotyping, an extremely well-built lady marched into the hotel lobby and announced "I am the German-speaking assistant manager...why do you want a new guide?"</p> <p>It's rather ironic that, considering the long running political stand-off and suspicion between the US and Cuba, it seems  some Cubans are now giving US citizens preferential treatment. But it's maybe also understandable:  after decades of shortages and almost no money, given the prospect of a higher standard of living, people are keen to cash in. And who can blame them after years of existing on very low wages with few of the consumer goods we take for granted.</p> <p>However, many Cubans I talked to last time are rather affronted that the rest of the world thinks they are going to let American culture swamp their own distinctive and treasured culture.</p> <p>"We want their money, yes," said one hotel operator "but we don't want everything that comes with it.</p> <p>Getting one without the other might not be easy, however. There are rumours that sites along the picturesque and still rather crumbling Havana Malecon (seafront promenade) have already been earmarked by companies like McDonald's.</p> <p>The upside of the increased interest in Cuba is that the quality and variety of food has improved significantly – and not just the lobster. There's some innovative cuisine developing along with much better service (waiting staff in government-run establishments get paid exactly the same whether they provide quality service or no service at all and sometimes it shows).</p> <p>Best of all, there's been an astonishing amount of restoration work being done to Cuba's superb architectural heritage, in some cases just in the nick of time as many historic buildings are literally falling down. Havana now boasts chic new cafes, restaurants and bed and breakfast accommodation in renovated houses.</p> <p>So, how do you tackle Cuba on the cusp of change? The most important thing is don't be panicked into visiting before you've planned properly, particularly in the high season (especially November to March, but July and August can also be busy). The Americans are not there en masse yet but Cuba's popularity is surging so make sure you research carefully before you book anything and then double and triple check that booking before you leave home, or  work through an operator who knows what they are doing.  Travelling off peak is another way to avoid problems.</p> <p>Despite the positive changes already evident in Cuba there are still challenges for travellers: there is still a relatively limited range of food and many other consumer goods are in short supply (I queued in a government department store for 30 minutes to get a new electrical plug for a client and there was only one plug in stock), hotels are not always well maintained and telecommunications can be very frustrating with cellphone coverage erratic and few places as yet have wifi.</p> <p>However, the plusses completely outweigh the negatives for all but the most fussy of travellers. Cuba oozes music and dance; the locals are still genuinely pleased to see you, the history and culture are fascinating and the architecture astonishing. Add to that a tropical climate, relatively cheap prices and a vibrant arts scene.</p> <p>And if things get fraught just keep in mind that Cubans have been dealing with economic hardship and restrictions for decades so you can manage for a few days. So, just cruise it like the Cubans do and order another cocktail.</p> <p><em>Written by Jill Worrall. First appeared on <strong><a href="http://Stuff.co.nz" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz</span></a></strong>.</em></p> <p><strong><em>Have you arranged your travel insurance yet? Tailor your cover to your needs and save money by not paying for things you don’t need. <a href="https://elevate.agatravelinsurance.com.au/oversixty?utm_source=over60&amp;utm_medium=content&amp;utm_content=link1&amp;utm_campaign=travel-insurance" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">To arrange a quote, click here.</span></a> For more information about Over60 Travel Insurance, call 1800 622 966.</em></strong></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/news/news/2016/01/10-best-value-travel-destinations-2016/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>10 best-value travel destinations in 2016</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/02/tripadvisor-top-10-beaches-2016/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>TripAdvisor names top 10 beaches for 2016</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/travel/cruising/2016/01/16-locations-visited-by-ocean-cruises-2016/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>16 best locations visited by ocean cruises in 2016</strong></em></span></a></p>

Travel Tips

Our Partners