Guardalavaca was
originally a farming community, horse rearing is still a local
speciality although the shoreline area which is about about 1 ml from
end to end, abd is now given over totally to tourism.
The first hotel was inaugurated in the
late 70s by Fidel Castro who swam in the pool. The village inland
comprises several rundown apartment blocks and is home to about 200
inhabitants. The whole place depends
completely on its superb, carefully maintained beaches. Tropical rains
in May and June; sweltering weather in August.
The area is strictly for the
get-away-from-it-all brigade seeking sun, sea and sand. There are water
sports and scuba-diving enthusiasts catered for. There are lots of
Canadians and a smattering of Europeans.
The accommodation here is mainly
all-inclusive options, with some sited at Playa Esmeralda. However, most
all-inclusives actually exclude motorised water sports and some limit
drinks to locally produced rum and beer. So if you want to drink French
champagne and water-ski every day for free, check the tour-operator’s
brochure very carefully.
Guardalavaca is situated
towards the east end of Cuba’s north coast (500 mls SE of Havana, 15 mls
NE of Santa Lucia, 45 mls NE of Holguin and its airport). It is on a
stretch of rocky north west-facing shoreline with several fine beaches
backed by rolling tree-covered hills.
The main beach is of the
picture-postcard Caribbean variety with sand the colour and texture of
caster sugar shelving gently into clean, warm turquoise water, it is
about 800 yds long and up to 60 yds wide, backed by trees for shade and
with a picturesque flower-lined promenade.
It features a diving centre, water
sports, pedalloes, catamarans, sun loungers, bars, restaurants and even a
disco. The private beach in front of Hotel Las Brisas is artificial.
Playa Esmeralda is similar to the main Guardalavaca beach and is effectively for the private use of guests at its hotels.
There is a rather tatty shopping
centre by the beach caters mainly for locals but does include a bank,
minimarket and travel agency; a few other embryo businesses are
scattered about. Hotels all have more attractive offerings.
During the daytime apart from the
activities provided by hotels, there is very little apart from the
beach, water sports and scuba diving. There are several good dive sites
featuring submerged caves and abundant sponges. You can take Catamaran
cruises, go Horse riding and Sky diving.
The nightlife offers a disco near the beach, but all hotels provide nightly entertainment.
The nightlife offers a disco near the beach, but all hotels provide nightly entertainment.
For food the main choice is in hotels,
where the better, foreign-managed properties make a valiant effort with
what is available but even they struggle to satisfy European
expectations. A few independent offerings: seafood, Italian, Cuban and
international. Food everywhere in Cuba is restricted in choice and often
of comparatively poor quality, so it is definitely not a destination
for gourmets.
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