photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Bill Klipp | profile | all galleries >> Cuba Photo Gallery >> "Cuban Chugs" tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

Havana Cuba | "Cuban Chugs" | Linda's Cuba | Historic Trinidad Cuba | Cuba the Easten Loop | The Sights of Cuba | Cuba's Classic Cars | The Cuban People | Cuban Wildlife -- A Sense of Nature | Matanzas Pharmacy Museum ---- Botica La Francesa | Cubano Rodeo | Cuba Beyond the Bars -- Our Book

"Cuban Chugs"

Cuban Refugee Boats - Chugs, Escape to America
Under the cloak of darkness along the northern coast of Cuba small groups of men, women and children climb into their makeshift homemade Cuban refugee boats, called Cuban Chugs as friends and family wish them luck and shove them off to sea. Their journey will be dangerous and unpredictable as their crude vessel chugs along trying to make the 90 mile trip across the treacherous Florida Straits. Their hope is first to survive and second to make land in Florida Keys, for if they are intercepted on the waters (“Wet Foot”) between the two countries they will be deported back to Cuba. But if they are lucky enough to make it ashore (“Dry Foot”) in the United States the US Policy called “Wet Foot, Dry Foot” will provide them with asylum and qualify them for expedited legal permanent resident status and eventually US Citizenship. This treatment is unique to Cuban Refugees and not available to any other migrants. This Policy was ended on Jan 12, 2017 by President Barack Obama.

Visit my Cuban Chug Blog: http://billklipp.zenfolio.com/blog/2016/3/cuban-chugs-escape-to-america

The Chugs come in all shapes and sizes and are truly makeshift vessels using car engines, small diesel motors even lawnmower engines. Some are made from scrap wooden pallets wrapped with tarps, duct tape and injected with foam, others may be made from metal or may even utilize automobile bodies. They are a testament to Cuban ingenuity and creativity, but reflect great desperation as the journey comes with great risk to life. They are primitive and crude at best and far from seaworthy. Stuffed between the desperate bodies are small bags or backpacks containing their only possessions, sacks of water bottles, small amounts of food, fuel and some spare parts. When they land they will be picked up by the US Coast Guard or US Customs and transported for processing and a new life in Miami. While the numbers are not readily available between Oct 2015 and Feb 2016 there were over 2,500 Cubans who have attempted this trip.
Traveling with little to no navigation skills the Chugs take wildly various journeys some landing on the tourist beaches of Key West while many others end up on one of the many uninhabited remote mangrove islands that dot the Florida Keys. When they are picked up by US Authorities they are required to leave all possessions behind, sometimes the Coast Guard burns the boats but in any case the result is piles of liter and garbage on these pristine remote islands.

My Cuban Chug photo gallery has images of all types of Chugs as well as some of the contents abandoned by these brave desperate travelers trying to escape what had to feel like a hopeless situation. In 2016 US relations with Cuba started to become more normalized and its people treated more like our other Caribbean neighbors until and the recent ending of the "Wet Foot, Dry Foot" Policy should save many Cuban lives from the perils of crossing the Florida Straits in such non seaworthy vessels.

Video of Cuban Chug Salvage Operation: https://youtu.be/PVz1Xd8PTy0

"Cuba Beyond the Bars" a new Cuban photo book by Bill Klipp, Linda Klipp & "Dink" Bruce: http://www.cubaphotos.net/BeyondBars

See Havana Times article at: http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=109042
Check out our new "Classic Cuba" photo slide show: http://www.wkimages.net/ClassicCuba
previous pagepages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ALL next page
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  20
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 20
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants  1
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants 1
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants  3
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants 3
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants  4
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants 4
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants  5
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants 5
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants  6
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants 6
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants  7
US Coast Guard picking up Cuban Migrants 7
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  29b
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 29b
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  29c
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 29c
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  29d
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 29d
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  29e
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 29e
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  31
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 31
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  30b
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 30b
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach  30c
Cuban Chug, Smathers Beach 30c
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  21a
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 21a
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  21b
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 21b
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  21d
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 21d
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  21e
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 21e
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  21f
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 21f
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys  21g
Cuban Chugs, Marquesas Keys 21g
previous pagepages 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ALL next page