5 Tips for Blogging in a Developing Country

Social networking is providing never-before-seen glimpses into developing countries. Before, information about current events was limited to international media networks or first-hand experience. With the rise of social networking, including blogging, the rest of the world has a more complete picture of life and events there.

But you can’t tell your story if you don’t have the tools. Here are five tips for bloggers living in or traveling through developing countries.

Blogging on the Go is Easier with a Laptop, Photo by Anonymous Account, Flickr

Blogging on the Go is Easier with a Laptop, Photo by Anonymous Account, Flickr

1. Have Your Own Gear and be Prepared

Don’t rely on others and don’t count on having access to computers. Get your own wireless-enabled device (like a netbook or mini-laptop). It’s easier to find a wireless connection than to find an open computer in an internet café, library, or other public place. Plus, you won’t have a time limit or have to fight with other people who are waiting on you. Make sure you have an extra battery and a charger adapter (if needed).

2. Hang Out in Expensive Hotels

In many developing countries, only the fanciest hotels have a WiFi. Luckily, you don’t have to stay in one to enjoy the benefits of their connection. Check in to a gueshouse within your budget and then head out to a bar of an expensive hotel with your laptop in tow. Buy an inexpensive beverage and enjoy their WiFi while “patronizing their bar”.

3. Use Unsecured Connections

Unsecured wireless connections can be found everywhere, including developing countries. Even in this day and age, it’s amazing how many people just plug in their wireless router and without setting it thoroughly up, broadcast free wifi to the world. Mentally thank them for their contribution and fire up your laptop.

4. Copy-Paste

You don’t need an internet connection to blog – you only need it to post on your blog.

Write your thoughts beforehand – on the bus, plain, canoe, or wherever you are. When you finally have an internet connection, all you need to do is copy-paste your words. This is a far more efficient use of your time (and connection) than waiting until you have the internet to start brainstorming your blog topic.

5. Hide Your Gear

You can’t tell your story if you don’t have the tools – so take precautions to avoid getting robbed. Don’t carry a computer case. Instead, have a bag or some other kind of tote that doesn’t look like it’s intended for carrying laptops. At the same time, make sure nothing else – such as cables and adapters – give you out. Many would be robbers only risk taking a move at your belongings because they have no doubt the pull would land them a laptop. Shoddy bags that look like they’re full of stinky underwear don’t attract attention of robbers.

“An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,” so plan ahead to keep from being electronically stranded. The poorer a country, the more attention your gadgets attract. Blogging in developing countries doesn’t have to be any more difficult than blogging in the developed world, just don’t make yourself an easy victim and take advantage of many available wireless networks and you’re in the game.

Vacation in Cuba – Visit Before it Changes

Most people who haven’t yet made it to Cuba are the same – they’ve always meant to take a vacation there, it’s just never worked out for them. The thing is – if you’re gonna visit Cuba, take your trip as soon as possible. Fidel Castro stepped down as president of Cuba and even though it’s his brother who took over, Cuba’s going to change.

Mass Tourism in Cuba

Cuba has already undergone a significant change and whoever visited the island before it got the best of what the country has to offer. That change came in 1994. After the fall of Berlin Wall and the end of communism in Eastern Europe, Cuba’s main business partner – Russia was on the brink of bankruptcy and had to deal with its own crumbling economy and Cuba lost its foreign supportive hand. Fidel Castro – today recognized as the world’s greatest leader did the only thing he could do to save his country from complete financial collapse: opened Cuba to mass tourism.

Still Same Old Cuba

Everything about Cuban way of life, its crumbling continental architecture, saloon cars from the 50′s, tobacco fields, cigar factories and some of the world’s best medical care and education remained the same. The difference was most noticeable in areas known for world’s finest beaches. Varadero is basically a world class tourist resort now. It’s not even a Cuban town anymore. It’s a location with high density of hotels and crap loads of tourists.

Pristine Beaches Make Cuba an Ideal Vacation Spot in the Tropics, Photo by deVos, Flickr

Pristine Beaches Make Cuba an Ideal Vacation Spot in the Tropics, Photo by deVos, Flickr

Similarly, while streets of Cuba are still not too busy and still dominated by those old American vintage gas-guzzling monsters, it is not unusual to see a shiny modern car in the mix. That would be a foreigner on a rental.

Yes, mass tourism has taken its toll on Cuba, but I appreciate Fidel Castro’s decision to allow trip companies in as it was the only way to save his country after collapse of communism in Europe. Castro also took it one step further and allowed private sector to take its share of tourism money. Cubans are now able to rent out rooms in their private houses (casa particular) to tourists. Whatever our American friends think, Fidel Castro was hands down the best country leader of the 20th century.

Major Change Still Due

Most of Cuba remains unchanged. It’s still the same it has been since the revolution in 1959. Varadero is so touristy you wouldn’t be able to tell it from any other world class resort but other than that, Cuba is the same. No McDonald’s or any other recognizable fast food chains, no Walmarts or any other multi billion dollar corporations destroying small business, no drugs, no organized crime – aka, it’s still the same old Cuba that makes it so unique and so awesome. But that real and significant change is in the air. It’s inevitable. And when that change comes, it will be it.

New US presidents are likely to introduce more relaxed approach towards Cuba and when the embargo is dropped, the island will get flooded with tourists to the point that it’ll change the country’s topography. Investors will start pouring in, ultimately putting an end to most traditional ways of business. Cuba will change and it will be significant.

That’s why it’s important to visit Cuba as soon as one can because it is bound to change soon. Once changed, old buildings will be replaced with new ones, old cars replaced with new ones, old ways replaced with new ones. The charm of the island will be gone. A trip to Cuba will be no different from a trip to Mexico. You’ll miss out if you don’t go before it changes.

To Varadero Or Not To Varadero?

The answer is simple – NOT. As I had mentioned above, Varadero has been turned into a tourist resort, the type you will find in Dominican Republic, Virgin Islands, Curacao or whichever other tropical resort you can think of. To experience real Cuba and get the most out of its culture and history, go straight to Havana. Stay in Havana for at least three days. Havana has way more to offer and three days will hardly do it any justice, but it’ll give you more than 10 days in Varadero.

Havana

Havana has the best hospitals and schools in the Caribbean. The colonial architecture will remind you of Spaniards who conquered the island. The mass tourism has not affected Cuba’s capital much. Old hotels built in the 30′s are still in operation. Most give funky smell, but from their windows you can see it all – national monuments, street performers, incredibly beautiful Cuban girls, coco-taxis, old men sitting in the street smoking cigars, little traffic mostly consisting of those old two tonne saloon cars and palm trees.

Havana is Cuba the way it’s supposed to be. Go and enjoy it while it’s got its original charm. Don’t wait for the inevitable change to affect it.

What Search Terms Got People Here:

  • varadero
  • saloon car

Victorian Christmas Without the Rose-Colored Specs

Every year around Christmas something which I find puzzling starts to happen to the otherwise urbane and unemotional people around me. They start to honor, mimic and well- nigh worship all things Victorian. But the Victorian England that they seek to recreate never existed. It is a product of their own imagination about how people acted in the last half of the nineteenth century. It is the result of some of the most maudlin of Dickens’ writings, of early Hollywood interpretations of those writings, and of the human tendency to yearn for an idealized past. The yearning is genuine, and it is perfectly true that Victorian society loved Christmas. But the idea that 19th century Londoners set unattainable standards for proper Yuletide behavior is not supported by the facts.

Victorian Christmas Card with Flower Design - Photo by Black Country Museums, Flickr

Victorian Christmas Card with Flower Design - Photo by Black Country Museums, Flickr

When Victoria became Queen in 1837, the celebration of Christmas in London was barely noticeable, and was mainly enjoyed by the victorious Captains of the Industrial Revolution. Everyday folks were too busy trying to eke out a living. There was no provision for the factory workers to have time off in order to celebrate the event. Christmas was largely ignored.

It took Queen Victoria many years to introduce many of the activities which we now think of as essential parts of the Festive Season. Gradually, with the introduction of Christmas trees, cards, gifts, carols and obligatory family gorge-fests, regular English people joined in with the popular new Christmas activities. They have repeated them ever since, adding to them and inventing more. So we tend to think that if we could be transported in time back to those merry times, our enjoyment would reach new heights. I have a different view, however.

If a person were to be transported from 2008 in North America to Victorian England between 1837 and 1901 (Victoria’s reign,) he would immediately become disillusioned about the pretty Christmas scenes that we so admire today. His senses and sensibilities would be offended by the unsanitary, disease-ridden people around him, and he would soon realize that his rose tinted glasses had obscured the truth about the lives of London’s inhabitants. The 21st century visitor would be assaulted by the information gathered immediately from his 5 senses.

He would see people with all manner of physical deformities and infectious diseases. The sights would include the war veterans who were missing limbs, the survivors of industrial accidents, children barely clinging to life because of poverty, starvation and lack. Also visible would be the prostitutes and other desperate beings, clinging to life by any means, enduring the cold shoulder of their more fortunate city dwelling contemporaries. But closing his eyes would not deliver him from his uncomfortable sensory experience.

He would still be able to hear the roar of the city, which ceased only for a few overnight hours. The roar would be partly caused by the shouts of carriage-drivers as they made their way through the muddy ruts and around jaywalkers and street vendors. The distant hum of factories and mills would add to the aural tapestry. Dogs and horses would add their voices to the uproar, protesting their place at the bottom of London’s food chain. Housemaids would be screeching at the street urchins who tried to hang around the well-to-do Londoners’ back doors.

The sounds would assault the visitor’s ears, and he may dive into a pub for some quiet. Yes, the sounds are more muted in here, except for the two old sailors in the corner who are arguing some point over a shared pint. As he sits in a corner, Mr. 2008 would become aware of the unpleasant odors around him. Although almost empty, the pub holds the left-over funk of the many unwashed bodies which have sheltered there from the dampness and noise over the last two hundred years. The sawdust on the floor is filthy enough to have been sprinkled on the floor on opening day! The traveler may feel his stomach heave, and taste the gall in his throat. He may rush outside where the noise, the sights and the smells would assail him anew. So much for those romantic Christmas cards showing snowy London streets where smiling ladies in fancy bonnets hurry up and down the row of shops, serenaded by carolers. They’d have needed earplugs. Oh! Maybe THAT explains ear-muffs!

In a final attempt to experience the wonder of a Victorian Christmas, the traveler may insert himself into a family Christmas dinner in progress. He probably would sense what seems like a vague decomposition taste in the turkey meat. This is because he cannot forget that it has hung in the butcher’s window, unrefrigerated, for a week. He finds a fingernail in his soup and an unidentified crusty spot on his wine glass. Oh, will this experience never end?

He would no doubt try to leave this cesspool of unidentified toxins but be obligated to shake the hands of all the gentlemen in the room. He feels that all of his handshaking has ensured that his palm is now crawling with bacteria, germs and general crud. How he would long to be back in his own time, away from the unsanitary Victorian environment. How he would crave the simple predictability of eating properly refrigerated foods off dishes fresh from the dishwasher.

Fearing that he’s about to have an all too personal an experience of Victorian funereal customs, he would wish himself back to the twenty-first century. Never again would he crave old London’s unsanitary, disgusting Christmas torture! Hurrah for our low- class, redneck Christmas ways. Beer and pork-rinds, coming right up!