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Viñales El deja el lugar llamó ...
A beautiful peacefuland romantic vilage,
the mainstreet with small house all painted
in different colors.
Vinales is located in one of the most beautiful areas of Cuba, in specific for people who love nature and a quiet peacefull atmosphere is Vinales a must see.

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The Viñales Valley

One of Cuba’s greatest natural attractions, was declared a National Natural Monument for its remarkable landscapes. The valley has a surface area of 132 km2 and is a part of Sierra de los Organos, in Pinar del Río province. It is the finest example of a karst valley in Cuba, where mogotes, knolls with rounded tops and steep slopes, contrast harmoniously with the flat surface of the valley where they stand.

Deep in the valley bottom you find cultivated lands-mainly tobacco, taro and bananas-and scattered peasant houses, all forming a rural landscape of great beauty. The surrounding sierras abound in caves, making it an area of speleological interest. Outstanding among them are Cueva del Indio, a cave which San Vicente River runs through, and Cueva de José Miguel. Further west, the Santo Tomás cave system, criss-crossed by 45 km of galleries, is one of the largest in Hispanic America.

The flora is an important element in Viñales. Cuban endemic plants found there include: the ceibón tree (Bombax emarginatum), palmita de sierra (Thrinax microcarpa), cayman oak (Ekmanianthes actinophylla) and a kind of palm tree (Mycrocycas calocoma)-a living Jurassic fossil that can only be found in a small area of Pinar del Río.

There are also many endemic animal species, especially birds like hummingbirds, the Cuban trogon (Priotelus temnurus), tody (Todus multicolor), mockingbird (Cuban solitaire) and a small paserine bird that inhabits pinewoods.

UNESCO

The Viñales Valley has been on UNESCO’s World Heritage List since November 1999 as a cultural landscape enriched by traditional farm and village architecture. Old-fashioned farming methods are still used
in Viñales, notably to grow tobacco. The local population is an ethnic mix that illustrates the cultural development of the Caribbean and Cuba in particular.

  • Source: Report of the 23rd session of the World Heritage Committee, in Marrakesh, Morocco, 4 December 1999.
Lost in the smoke of time

Reina María Rodríguez, Cuban poet and novelist, author of La Foto del Invernadero (Casa de las Americas prize, 1998) and Te daré de comer como a los pájaros (La Habana, Letras Cubanas 2000). (Source: UNESCO.org)

The Viñales Valley, near the western tip of Cuba, is a magical landscape of hills and caves where life centres on growing tobacco. A Cuban writer recalls discovering this World Heritage site through books well before setting foot there

In the west side of the Cordillera de Guaniguanico, at the foot of the Sierra de los Órganos, lies a region of limestone outcrops known as mogotes. These huge round-topped hummocks rising out of the ground emerged from the sea more than two million years ago and were formed during the Jurassic period. Born in the vicissitudes of history, the land still bears the marks of precipices, chasms and seams carved out by erosion.
Tobacco grows in the valley—strange red leaves almost starved by the salty soil but brought to life by permanent sunshine.
I always dreamed of the Viñales Valley but never ventured there. In school I could touch the lush tobacco leaves pictured in textbooks and see the caterpillars that live off them, slowly and avidly taking on the aroma of tobacco before devouring the plant. My life was that of the concrete city, though the sensation left by dew on my hand was so strong that I still recall it as if it were real. The leaf, bright and green like a child, turns a deep toasted brown before it is smelt, chewed or burnt, becoming like time itself and ending up, in old age, as wisps of smoke.
Farmers, most of whom came from the Canary Islands, arrived around 1800 and began cultivating tobacco across the region, which is commonly known as the Vuelta Abajo. Two hundred years later, tobacco is still the lifeblood of the Viñales Valley, which produces 661,000 quintals of it every year. Only the best leaves get sent to Havana, where hundreds of workers called torcedores and anilladores handroll them into cigars. Cuba produces 65 million cigars a year, packed in cedarwood boxes and exported to the entire world.
Growing tobacco calls for patience. Some even say that the plant grows better if you speak to it. Once the seeds are sown (between October and December), the moment to reap and pack is of critical importance, marking all the difference between acidity, sourness or waste-product.
The valley is like its tobacco—discreet, thrifty and tranquil, stuck in the same serene pocket of time as its villagers.
People who have never been to the Viñales Valley, in the Cuban province of Piñar del Río, should know that it boasts a unique variety of plant and animal life, some of it in danger of extinction, such as the cork palm, the agabe, the macusey hembra, the alligator oak and the dragon tree. Unaccustomed to the ways of civilization and to music unlike their own songs, the valley’s birds also come in a kaleidoscope of species, with names as evocative as the pine-forest grass quit, the mockingbird and the totí.

Exploring caves to the tune of haunting tales
It was here that the Guanajatabey Indians built their primitive homes in caves hollowed out of the limestone mogotes, where relics of this nomadic people have been found along with fossils of Pleistocene mammals embedded in the rock. Deep inside the caves, albino fish swim and butterfly bats flit.
Some caverns, such as the Cueva del Indio, rediscovered in 1920, have close to four kilometres of underground streams which can be explored in a small dinghy so long as you don’t mind listening to all the scary tales the peasant guides love to recount.
As the streams slowly work through the limestone and mix with the mogote clay falling from above, they become solutions of minerals and coppery earth, both of which are then deposited on the roofs and walls of the caves, turning the surfaces ochre milky green, rendering the scenery all the more mysterious.
We are only 150 kilometres from Havana, but millions of years away.

Where Nature invites painters to take place
Returning to Viñales is a bit like returning to a museum. A silence hangs over it, a mysterious calm that dwells in the early morning mist. In Viñales village we visit a church built in the last century with sombre pews that have been repaired countless times. The musty odour mingles with the smell of warmed-up food. Heavy rainfall in the wet season has spoiled the splendid facades of the houses, which now look like faded mosaics.
And Cuban hands, always touching and caressing things, cherishing the past, have worn out the fine wooden railings at the front of the houses. As in every village in my country, Viñales also has a central square—a byword for order amid confusion.
Four kilometres from the village, on one side of the Dos Hermanas (Two Sisters) mogote, stands the Mural of Prehistory, a impressive 120-metre high fresco painted by Cuban artist Leovigildo González, disciple of the Mexican muralist Diego Rivera. Depicted are the animals and other creatures that lived in the valley in prehistoric times.
People who have not read the poem of José Lezama Lima (1912-76), Bajo el arco de Viñales (Beneath the arch of Viñales), or have never seen the paintings of Cuban artist Domingo Ramos or contemplated the Mural of Prehistory, should know that this valley, which rose from the bottom of the ocean near the western tip of the island, is above all a place of art, a site where Nature provides the frame and waits for the painter to be seated.
But how does one take leave of the valley? Through its cliffs, its hollows? Through the passage in a mogote and its columns of gentle stalagmites? Through the long line of big-belly palm trees with their fiery plumes lit by summer? Through its chattering streams full of blind fish? Through the echoes of cockfights left in an old sugar factory? Or through a cheap painting on the yellow wall of a restaurant somewhere in Havana’s tourist district? Which path home is best?

Links:

Addresses of Interesting Places to Visit
Culture
Museo Municipal
Salvador Cisneros #115
Casa de la Cultura
Cultural activities
Mural de la Prehistoria
4 km west of Vinales centro
Valle de Viñales
Patrimonio Mundial
Sierra de los Órganos, Viñales
Museo Paleontológico
Base de Campismo
“Dos Hermanas”, Viñales
 
NightLife
Cuevas de Viñales
Discotheque
Carretera de Pto. Esperanza, km. 36,
Viñales
Paladars & Restaurants
Casa de Don Tomas Cocina criolla
Salvador Cisneros #140
Viñales
Valle-Bar
Salvador Cisneros #100
Viñales
Aguilina Rodriguez Martinez
Calle Orlando Nodarse #24A
Viñales
Las Brisas
Salvador Cisneros #96
Viñales
Cueva del Indio Cocina criolla
C. a Puerto Esperanza,
km. 38, Viñales
Ranchón Cocina criolla
San Vicente
C. a Puerto Esperanza,
km. 38, Viñales
Casa del Marisco Pescados y mariscos
C. a Puerto Esperanza,
km. 38, Viñales
Cuevas de Viñales Cocina criolla
C. a Puerto Esperanza,
km. 3, Viñales
La Terraza Cocina criolla
Hotel La Ermita, Viñales
Mirador Comidas ligeras
Valle de Viñales
Carret. a Viñales, km. 25,
Viñales
La Terraza Mesa Buffet
Hotel La Ermita, Viñales
Mural de la Prehistoria Cocina criolla
Valle de Viñales, Viñales
Vera Cocina internacional
Hotel Los Jazmines, Viñales
Jurásico Cocina internacional
Mural de la Prehistoria
Valle de Viñales, Viñales
Las Arcadas Cocina criolla
Hotel Rancho San Vicente,
Viñales
 
General Information
Banks
Banco de Credito y Comercio
Salvador Cisneros #58
Open Mo / Fri 8 am to 3 pm
Sat 8 am to 11 am
Post Office
Post Office
Ceferino Fernandez #14

 

 

 

 

 

 


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