I arrived at the bus station at about 7:00, a little early, which of course meant the bus turned up a lot late. I’d thought I’d simply bought a ticket to Viñales – bit of a freewheeling day trip, I imagined. Turns out I’d signed up for a full-blown tour.
I’m a bit over tours these days, but to be fair, this one turned out better than I expected. I’d assumed we’d just see a few distant hills in some humid valley, but the itinerary was rather more ambitious: cigar-making, a cave, some hills, and the obligatory shopping stops. Still, it rounded out my Cuban experience nicely—in that mildly touristy way that makes you feel you’ve “done” the place.
Having done zero research, I hadn’t realised Viñales was quite so far or the journey quite so long. All I knew was that it was somewhere west of Havana. The not-knowing where we were headed or what was next got old pretty quickly. I was the only gringo, and our guide’s English vocabulary consisted of exactly three words: “hello,” “wait,” and “goodbye.”
Viñales Valley lies about two hours southwest of Havana, in Pinar del Río province – a world away from the city’s chaos. Lush, green, and responsible for Cuba’s best tobacco, it’s the birthplace of those famous cigars. The valley sits in the Sierra de los Órganos, a surreal karst landscape dotted with mogotes – chunky limestone mounds up to 300 metres high. Around them, the red earth is rich and fertile, ploughed the old-fashioned way with oxen, muscle and sweat.
To break up the journey, we stopped at a tourist shop in Pinar del Río – rum, cigars, the usual souvenirs. Outside, a swarm of street sellers descended the moment we stepped off the bus. One middle-aged, generously curved woman came a little too close, flashed a wicked grin, and offered a rather unorthodox handshake.
Pre-historic Mogote Paintings
The Mural de la Prehistoria is… well, it exists. Painted onto one of the mogotes by Leovigildo González Morillo, a former director of mapping at the Cuban Academy of Sciences, it supposedly depicts the entire history of life up to humankind. A curious blend of ambitious and absurd, but it seemed to delight the others on the tour. For me, it was mostly an excuse to stretch the legs and grab a photo before being herded back on the bus.
Viñales Valley Viewpoint
By the time we reached the famous viewpoint at Hotel Los Jazmines, the skies opened—proper tropical downpour. Still, the view was stunning: mogotes rising like green sentinels from the misty plains, fringed with palms as far as you could see. We didn’t linger, but there were the usual cafes and bars for anyone needing caffeine or cover.
The India Caves
Next, the Cueva del Indio—one of several caves open to the public. After a short walk through the dim tunnels, a tiny boat carried us along an underground river, twisting and echoing through the dark. The guide delivered his well-rehearsed spiel in rapid Spanish; I nodded along, pretending I understood every word after ‘hola’.
Back on the bus, damp and none the wiser, I assumed that might’ve been it for the day. But apparently not.