Ciego Montero
The smooth terraplén screams to be walked on. One huge guardarraya between walls of cane, broken only by brightly colored wooden houses and their simple yards. Garlic grows in this region as well, and dozens of houses are overrun by battalions of the brown tufts.
In Ciego, the mule stops at the edge of town, near a park that had the air, by its clean statue of Jose Marti and well-trimmed bushes, of being an important part of town. My handler walks with me half a block to a wooden house with a sign flat on the wall next to the door announcing it as La Casona, a private home that served as the town art gallery and community center.
Fotografía de Julio Larramendi |
I have always associated the town with the spring which produced the most popular bottled water and soft drinks on the island, the Ciego Montero brand. And this is the only reason why most Cubans would ever know about this small town which geographically is tied at the hip with the adjacent town of Arriete. Arriete-Ciengo Montero has approximately four and a half thousand residents. Ten of them welcome me to the town.