Cuba is for the birds!

Director Sarah Reichard muses on another reason to visit Cuba: fabulous birds. "I may not shift to studying birds instead of plants, but I thoroughly enjoyed my foray into bird-watching in Cuba."

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Travels to Cuba – Reflections on a Resilient Country

We have been back from Cuba for about a month and I am still sorting it out in my head. As I said before, it is a far more complicated place than I expected to find. My fellow adventurers continue to email new articles and books they are finding about Cuba, suggesting that they also are trying to reconcile what we experienced. 

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Travels to Cuba – More Adventures in the Countryside!

(click photos to see full size image) We were privileged to go to an “ecologically protected area” known as Mil Cumbres (Thousand Peaks). Our bus wound its way up a very rough dirt road (though our expert driver, Miquel, did a fantastic job of missing the giant potholes) to the field station. The area of Mil Cumbres is geologically varied, including large patches of serpentine soil. 

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Travels to Cuba - Seeing the Countryside

We headed out of Havana early on a Sunday morning. This was really our first look at the countryside, and at the transportation system. The stories about huge numbers of old American cars from the 1950s? All true! Under Cuban law, cars registered after the 1959 revolution could not be bought or sold, though that is changing. The result is that those who had a car hung onto it and tried to keep it running, passing it down as an inheritance. 

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The Adventure Begins - Travels to Cuba

Sarah Reichard, professor and Director of UW Botanic Gardens, recounts her recent experience leading a tour group to Cuba. This post describes shabby but elegant old Havana and a meeting with agroeconomist Miquel Salcines.

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UWBG Goes to Cuba!

Holbrook has planned a wonderful trip for us. We will be visiting botanic gardens, meeting their staff and scientists and consulting with some of the urban farmers in Havana to learn how they make the most of every square inch they farm.

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