What goods can be had are often out of reach for average Cubans. A small 48-centimetre flat-screen TV can cost well over $2,000 in the few stores that supply them. That's far more than the cost of bringing one in from the States, even with the $270 import duty levied on electronics and the extra overweight charges. Ten-year-old Daniela Lezcano of West Palm Beach, Florida, flew in alone for a three-week visit with her aunt, uncle, grandfather and other relatives in Pinar del Rio carrying clothing, food, medicine and toys, including a red model of a 1960 Corvette. Her family planned a Christmas feast of roasted pork, homemade sweetened cassava and a typical rice and bean dish known as "congri." "We are very, very, very happy to see other family members more often" since the travel restrictions were changed, said her uncle, Juan Miguel Guerra Pereira. (AP)