Canadian Tourists Are Losing Interest in Cuba

Canadian tourists in Central Park, Havana. / 14ymedio By 14ymedio

By 14ymedio

HAVANA TIMES – “Low prices, magnificent beaches, a popular destination, and ignorance: these are the reasons that push Canadians to keep going to Cuba,” says Manon Girardin, deputy director of the Canadian travel agency Voyages CAA-Québec. Her company is one of those that refuse to buy into the message of safe and paradise-like tourism that the regime and its advertisers promote.

“The risk of client dissatisfaction is high, especially for those who are unaware – or prefer to ignore – the problems the country faces. Therefore, we give some warnings when proposing this destination. If you want to go, you need to know what you’re getting into to accept whatever comes and not be disappointed,” she says in a note from the Travel section of the local newspaper Le Nouvelliste, where the question is raised: Who still wants to travel to Cuba?

As the September tourism data is about to be released, it is already known that travelers from Canada dropped in August, with a total of 665,871, 1.5% less than the same month of the previous year. Canadians remain the top source of international travelers to Cuba, but it appears the growth has long since peaked, and now countries like Russia, Mexico, and Argentina have positive prospects.

As of September 1st, 1,608,078 tourists had arrived on the island this year, 58,920 fewer than during the same period in 2023, and expectations couldn’t be worse, especially for a regime that has invested everything in this industry. September and October, traditionally bad months for tourism, are expected to show poor data. The recent nationwide blackout and the passing of hurricane Oscar raise fear that November and December, Cuba’s high tourism season, will be catastrophic.

“In general, the price is much cheaper than in other nearby destinations. A colleague is going to the Dominican Republic, and the cost of her all-inclusive trip is now over 3,000 dollars (about 2,166 US dollars) for one week in February. Cuba would never be that expensive,” says Girardin, who warns potential travelers that cheap can end up being costly and recalls one of her agency’s recent trips to Cayo Largo.

“Passengers couldn’t shower for several days because the hotel had no water,” she notes. In this case, the Canadian company Sunwing took measures to avoid shortages by transporting local food and beverages to meet passengers’ needs. Only in this way could that group have, for example, foreign alcoholic drinks, although not everyone was as lucky.

On Tuesday, the Canadian government updated its travel alert status for Cuba. Like most states, Ottawa issues recommendations and warnings about every country worldwide, which future travelers can consult to know whether to take normal precautions, take extra precautions, or avoid a dangerous destination entirely. Until October 2023, Cuba had been marked green – except in cases of specific weather events – but it turned yellow at that time and has not improved since. The reason: shortages of some basic necessities, including food, medicines, and gasoline.

The island is spared from the regional alerts, where it remains green – normal precautions – for Havana, Jardines del Rey, and the resorts of Varadero, Cayo Largo, Jibacoa, Marea del Portillo, Playa Ancón, and Playa Santa Lucia. However, the update yesterday introduced an orange level for the provinces of Guantánamo and Holguín, where non-essential travel is advised against due to the aftermath of Hurricane Oscar.

This isn’t the only blow to the high season in its priority market. On Tuesday, François Laramée, a Quebecois travel agent who was in Varadero during the blackout, gave an interview to the LCN network, where he couldn’t have been more blunt: “It was time to come back because it was pathetic,” he said from Quebec, where he managed to return on Monday night.

Laramée, who had previously considered Cuba a “second home,” explained that when he left, his hotel still had no electricity. “Even staying in a five-star hotel, it was catastrophic.”

After experiencing it firsthand, Laramée took the trouble to advise the 40 people who called his agency on Tuesday morning interested in traveling to Cuba not to go for at least a month. “I tell them to wait until next month, while they recover,” he advised. “Even the staff, who are usually friendly and caring, were very tired. It really wasn’t fun at all.”

Laramée recommends sun and beach-loving Canadians to choose the Dominican Republic or Mexico instead.

This year, an incident that made international news may have contributed to the Canadian market’s paralysis in Cuba more than the government warnings. Faraj Allah Jarjour, a tourist from Montreal who died in Varadero last March, was buried in Russia after being mistaken for a traveler from that country, Ilya Neroev, who also died on the island. The bodies of both men were confused by Cuban authorities until the Canadian family discovered the mistake after failing to recognize the body they received.

Additionally, Canadian Caroline Tétrault experienced a nightmare alongside her husband, Christian Maurais, when an appendicitis nearly turned into peritonitis while vacationing in Villa Clara. The Quebec couple recounted on television the precarious conditions of the hospital where she was treated, and despite the professionalism of the health staff, they came to a conclusion: “Unfortunately, for us, Cuba is over. I’m sure the world is full of beautiful places to see.”

Read more from Cuba here on Havana Times.

6 thoughts on “Canadian Tourists Are Losing Interest in Cuba

  • heh Dan, I lived like a cuban for 3 years there, no hot water, no air condition, I know what reality is in cuba

  • Oh Donald, the nerve of those people, serving russians and cubans before you at the bar! And on top of that, asking for things that might help them get by! I’d go somewhere else too if I were you…and I suspect you won’t be missed in Cuba. Maybe people are finally realizing that when you go to a tourist resort you aren’t seeing reality? And when reality comes crashing in on you, even at the resort, it’s not always pretty. If you were going to Cuba and ignoring the reality all this time, then maybe their reality could be a surprise to you, although I have never understood how people could not see the reality there.

  • never mind that canadians have been taken for granted by the staff who allow the russians and cubans to bud into the line ups at the bars and restaurants, demand that canadians give /bring expensive items for them and generally rip off canadians when they can on money exchange, selling fake cigars, crappy coffee etc. if you go to cuba beware as the violence against tourists has increased

  • I’m not considering any other destination just yet. I can afford Mexico but rather go to Cuba 3 times for the price.

    The sun, the beach, the people, the music, the cigars are always great. Flights from $130 Toronto/Varadero with swoop(westjet). Get a casa for $20 a night and you’re set.

  • What’s happening with the thousands and thousands airbnb’s in Havana??

  • Cuba used to be quite poor and dystopian 5-6 years ago, but it was still ok and somewhat functional…. Now that tourism has collapsed, they’re back in the 20th century and it’s gone completely haywire. Barely any food, blackouts regularly, and oil goes missing for days sometimes.

    Off the deep end poverty levels. I just don’t understand how human beings can accept this kind of living conditions, at what point do people start getting together and farming to feed themselves. I mean they can’t even farm and feed themselves with all the modern farming machinery humans have, that’s how low they are. They’re even worst off than Afghanistan in terms of self sufficient food growing, which is radical to even say. It’s to the point where if these people don’t receive humanitarian aid on a regular basis, they would all starve to death, because they’re either too stupid or somehow unable/unwilling to farm wheat and basic vegetables. They literally can’t even feed themselves at this point in time, with all the arable land sitting idle around them…. Some videos I’m seeing being filmed of Havana in the past few weeks are very very sad, garbage everywhere on the roads alongside people starving and no hope whatsoever. What’s the country going to look like in 2028?

    They’re going extinct, all done by themselves to themselves…. It’s not reason, it’s not rational, it’s just mass insanity.

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