Navigation for Nine To Noon
Kennedy Warne in Cuba
Outdoorsman Kennedy Warne looks back on a visit to Cuba in the wake of the death of Fidel Castro
Standard town transport: the bicitaxi, here in Remedios.
Butterfly bat
Bone fishing is popular in the Zapata wetland
I contemplate a line credited to Che: "Words teach but examples lead."
Shops with only a handful of items on sale are standard. As are signs depicting the vessel that brought the revolutionaries to Cuba in 1956.
Crabs occupy the roads in the Zapata wetland.
Buying farm cheese from an illegal roadside vendor, mounted for a quick getaway.
Fidel installed a forest of flagpoles to obscure an electronic message board outside the "US Interests Section," a quasi embassy in Havana.
-- Street vendors are rare, because of high concession fees. Flower vendor in Remedios makes a sale, perhaps legally, perhaps not.
Trying to get phone connections was a constant frustration.
Iguana in Guanahacabibes National Park.
Children walk to school in Ciego de Avela.
Statue of national hero Jose Marti in Havana.
Woman in her gracious home in Remedios.
"The revolution is always going forward"—but at what speed?
Relic from Bay of Pigs invasion.
Tobacco-leaf picker
Spanish colonial architecture is everywhere.
The images in this gallery are used with permission and are subject to copyright conditions.