Tuesday, 11 December 2007

Sunny Santorini... not quite :(

With the second stage of our travels completed, we only had one major stage to go, the Middle East. But thankfully we had decided to take a week off and relax on the Greek island of Santorini before we started it. Santorini was a destination we very much wanted to visit but missed out on during our travels to Greece the year before. One of the best things about leaving Europe however was catching a flight that wasn't run by either Ryanair or Easyjet! This means lots of things, allow me to list them here for you:
  1. When flying a "real" airline you are given an assigned seat (first time in 2 years). This means that during boarding people don't physically push you or try to sneak aboard ahead of their boarding call. They don't try and sprint past you on the tarmac or use their over sized hand luggage as an obstacle gauntlet (think along the lines of a Hollywood police chase; They are the criminal, I'm the cop and their over sized luggage is an innocent but precariously balanced wagon laden with fruits that are likely to explode spectacularly i.e. watermelons).

  2. You are given free lollies before take off, to help you equalise the pressure in your ears.

  3. You are then provided with a choice of beverages, FOR FREE, then served a meal also FOR FREE then provided with more drinks which are still FOR FREE!! Magic!

During the October months the high season of the island is very much over, some of the areas we visited like the black sand beaches on the east coast were so closed down they looked practically abandoned. This suited us though as accommodation was a bit cheaper and there are less tourists to get in the way! We really spent most of our time just wandering the streets and taking dozens of photographs as we rounded every corner, I think we were just delighted to see buildings and views that looked nothing like Eastern Europe!

View of Fira, the capital of the island

Around Fira

Around Fira

Around Fira

Around Fira

Red Sand Beach

We took a 3 hour walk up to the town of 'Oi' to watch the sunset (but it was too cloudy). We visited the red & black sand beaches and did our best to find the perfect shot of the Caldera. We ate some really good Gyros, some of the best I've had in Greece! Unfortunately we had to drink some rather unpleasant wines as we couldn't afford to buy the good stuff which sells for about 50 Euros per little bottle... It's only wine people! Get over it!

On the walk from Fira to Oi

On the walk from Fira to Oi

On the walk from Fira to Oi

On the walk from Fira to Oi

View down towards Oi

Oi at sunset

All in all it was a really relaxing week and Dina and George running the hostel were really friendly and helpful. It was the perfect relaxation before beginning our journey into a really foreign culture!

The Rest of Romania

Hello again avid blog readers!

You may think that just because we've already arrived home you no longer need to come and read this blog any longer! WRONG!!! We still have nearly 7 weeks of unaccounted travels that we'd like to share with you :)

The story continues...

So we left Brasov for Sigisoara, this was probably one of my favourite places in Romania and Transylvania. The Lonely Planet guidebook (a.k.a. The Book of Lies) tells travellers to only bother coming to Sigisoara for a day as everything in town can be seen in as little as 3 hours. This may be the case if you only bother with the town centre, but if you are anything like us then you're going to need the better part of a day getting lost looking for 800 year old oak trees! Thankfully we did manage to find them, after a small scare about how deep into the Transylvanian forest you had to go before you came across a bear or a wolf. They were pretty impressive for trees and the forest walk back gave us a good opportunity to take some pictures of cool looking mushrooms... I wonder how many of them were magic?

How far before we come across bears...?

HUGE 800 year old oak trees.

Mushrooms!! - All mushrooms are edible, some only once! (We decided not to try!)

The centre of the old town was quite picturesque but gives you an odd feeling as apparently it is one of the last residentially inhabited citadels left in Europe, but they did have a rather cool and spooky graveyard, which satisfied my morbid desire to see Transylvania far better than Dracula's Castle! Down in the modern city was a great little restaurant that we went to on both of the nights we were there. The only trick is to make sure you request the smoking section so that you get to sit in the restaurant with everyone else. If you choose non-smoking then you are directed to a single table that has been placed right at the entrance of the restaurant and has been enclosed in glass walls (smoke-proof glass walls to be sure). This basically means that everyone who enters the restaurant gets a free freak-show! "Please do not tap on the glass, non-smokers may become agitated"


Sigisoara

Graveyard in Sigisoara

Our next destination in Transylvania was Sibiu, European cultural capital 2007, hooray! Not really sure why they received this particular honour, probably just because they joined the EU this year, though they did have quite a few pieces of installation art around the brand-spanking new town square. Including an enormous jelly fish that announces in a voice far to loud in relation to your proximity that you should come back when it's dark... creepy. Oh and I ate deep fried brains at one of the restaurants :S

Sibiu

Now we were at the end of our time in Romania and Eastern Europe and had to get to Bucharest to catch our flight to Athens. We didn't really leave any time to see Bucharest as many travellers had advised us not to bother and we were rather over European capitals by this stage. But it was still an interesting place, by interesting I mean bizarre!


12 hours of weirdness in Bucharest:
  • There are apparently between 100 000 and 200 000 stray dogs in Bucharest, we saw a woman on the 4th floor of a building throwing chicken carcasses onto the main road for them, she didn't seem too concerned about what she hit in the process. (We later met a friend in Egypt who was chased by a pack of dogs in Bucharest and had to climb up onto a van to escape them, if only he'd dropped his hot dog, no pun intended)

  • Our Hostel was above a strip club (nothing wrong there I know).
  • We had to escort 3 Swedes, one of which was drunk, to restaurant that was about 10 mins walk from the hostel and that they insisted they needed to catch a taxi to reach (I think they didn't want to scuff their new shoes, or maybe they were worried about the dogs).

  • We met a crazy, possibly possessed, hobo at the airport bus stop, who kept trying to tell me about Australia in 3 languages (one of which I think was English backwards) then he showed me a series of homoerotic images of Jean-Claude Van Damme until the bus came. When it did arrive he gave us a very friendly farewell where he stuck half his body in the bus doors and waved with both hands... then the bus doors closed and he was cut in half!!! Just kidding he wasn't actually cut in half but it definitely would have hurt.

  • We also met a 28 year old guy on the bus who was catching his first plane, so cool, he was really nervous! Such a nice guy, it's a shame he was catching Easyjet :P

Well that's was it for Europe! Now just a quick stop in the Mediterranean before we hit the Middle East!

Tuesday, 9 October 2007

Still going!

Hey Team!

Okay, the last time we left you was in Wien (Vienna) right? Well since then we've really started to step up our pace a bit! Our first stop was Cesky Krumlov in the Czech Republic, we spent a few rainy days here but still managed to get out and enjoy the food and beer. Now that we are in the more-decently-priced East we can finally go to restaurants and buy meat and more than 1 beer... Hooray! Krumlov was awesome and we of course made another handful of friends to take home with us (they were pretty much all Australian) we didn't do much because of the rain but we saw the castle and gardens and the bears that live in the moat, walked around town, had a bad massage and hung out with some cool people, all in all we had a great time!! Next In the Czech Republic was Prague, although it was a great place it was another huge old city that makes us really appreciate the smaller towns we visit. We also went on a day trip to the town of Kutna Hora which is famous for a really old church, where the local priest in the 1870's was given a totally macabre commission. The local mayor had told him to do something useful with the skeletons of forty odd thousand people that had been laying about for centuries (what else do skeletons do). So he built a chandelier, a couple of urns, 4 huge pyramids, the local coat of arms and this weird alter... super creepy stuff (We loved it!!).

Our hostel in Cesky Krumlov

Cesky Krumlov

John Lennon wall in Prague

The Ossuary in Kutna Hora

Now begins the whirlwind part of our trip... first stop Krakow, Poland! Many people have told us how great this city was so we were a little worried that our expectations might be a bit high. But I'm glad to admit that everything they told us was true!! The old town and main square have a nice modern and "in-use" vibe that is generally lost in lots of old towns that are more often than not just filled with tacky souvenir shops. The Castle had an armoury exhibition which is something I try to check out when in a castle (I really like all the old swords and armour). There was also a very atmospheric dragon cave beneath the castle because, as I'm sure you all know, the city of Krakow was founded on the spot where a great dragon was slain. We also went out one morning to Nova Huta the great Communist "workers paradise" all I can say is it was pretty lame, I'm definitely glad I never had to live under communism here in Еastern Europe, the nuclear power plant smoke stacks in the far too near distance are very picturesque.

View down on the main square in Krakow

Next stop: The Slovakian side of the Tatras Mountains! Unfortunately we didn't get to do as much hiking as we wanted due to the fact that it rained for half of the first day and was soooo foggy on the second day we had trouble seeing more than 2 metres in front of ourselves. We still managed to get some nice photos during a short hike to a nearby lake. Whilst up there we found a symbolic graveyard that provides a place of memorial to all the people that have vanished and died in the mountains over the past 150 odd years. There are some very ornately and colourfully decorated crosses that stand about 2 metres high around the graveyard, making it a somewhat surreal experience. Unfortunately the towns around the Tatry mountains are all purpose built for the skiers in Winter, so are rather ugly, and due to the poor weather we were not left with a lot of options... a bit of a shame but it can't be helped.

Tatras Mountains


Tatras Mountains

Symbolic graveyard in the Tatras Mountains

So after 3 days we headed for Budapest, yet another big old city, in another big old country! Although Jo and I really enjoy small towns, Budapest could not be missed and unfortunately due to our very tight schedule these days it was the only place we could visit in Hungary. Given more time we would have liked to visit the wine country around Eger... we like wine! But we had to settle for just drinking it in Budapest and thanks to some friends we met in Slovenia, we had a really good place to do this and also to get some fantastic food! Actually the restaurant scene in Budapest is one of the best I have seen in Europe so far... but maybe that's just me :) Anyway while in Budapest we checked out the usual allotment of old monuments and castles, through in a labyrinth beneath the old castle district and went and visited the old communist statue park where all the hideously ugly statues from Hungary's communist days are kept. But we needed to keep moving, we are running out of time!

Budapest

Budapest

Budapest

Fountain of (bad) wine in the labyrinth beneath the old castle district, Budapest

Memento Park, Budapest

So we took the overnight train to Belgrade in Serbia! After visiting a few different countries in the Balkans (Croatia and Bosnia in particular) it was important for me to see if there was another side to the big story of conflict down here. Unfortunately Serbia let me down, rather than defending themselves or there actions during the recent conflicts, the military museum is more like a trophy room than any sort of emotionally biased account of history (as all the other countries have managed to put together). They have American military uniforms on display that were taken from POW's and weapons that were confiscated from "illegal" Croatian resistance groups. They also have a map that shows a lot of arrows pointing toward Serbia, I guess it is meant to imply how the rest of the world was picking on them! The rest of the city is a bit of a non-event, it is big and ugly and we are glad we were only there for one day as we left that night on yet another night train! this one was coming to Bulgaria!!!

Belgrade

Bulgaria wasn't on our initial itinerary but we have managed to squeeze it in by sacrificing time in other places (see above) and we are certainly glad we did!! Veliko Tarnovo is amazing!! One of our favourite places by far! The first evening we walked up to the old fortified citadel, The restored church up on the top of the hill inside the fortifications has been decorated with some very modern murals, still in the old fashioned theme, but with an almost cubist intention. The same Citadel is apparently lit up with a 20 minute, coloured light show some nights. Unfortunately the night and the time of these events seems to be based on certain cosmological elements of chance, so we didn't get to see it (in the middle of summer though they sometimes show it twice). On our second and third days we went hiking into the forests around Veliko to see some old Orthodox Monasteries, it took us longer than anticipated as Jo kept stopping to take photos of all the butterflies, admittedly there were some very nice ones up there. But Yet another night train beckons us, this time North to Romania, Particularly the region of Transylvania!


Veliko Tarnovo

At the Preobrajenie Monastery, Veliko Tarnovo

Butterflies on the walk to the Preobrajenie Monastery

Dryanovo Monastery

Walking from the Dryanovo Monastery

Walking from the Dryanovo Monastery

Walking from the Dryanovo Monastery

I would also like to add that the hostel where we stayed in Veliko Tarnovo has been probably the BEST hostel of our trip so far! Big thanks to Mariya and Georgi for looking after us so much! If you need a place to stay in Bulgaria we insist on 'Nomad's Hostel'!

But now we have arrived here in Romania, currently hanging about in Brasov, but this afternoon we'll be heading over to Sigisoara the birthplace of Vlad Tepes (the original Dracula). Today we just went out to visit Bran 'Dracula' Castle (closed on Mondays... Damn!) and Rasnov Fortress. Hopefully that brings you all up to speed! Oh, one more interesting observation up here is the habit of a few towns to build massive "Hollywood" style signs announcing the location of a town to everybody within a 40km radius! These things are huge!


Brasov

Rasnov Fortress

Rasnov Fortress

Rasnov Fortress

Signing off.

Sunday, 23 September 2007

The best of the West of the East... think about it!

Hey again!

Just going to write a few brief updates about some of the places we've been before we see too many places and forget all the details.

After our last post we spent a few more days in Croatia, checking the islands and the local cuisine, they even have the vanilla slice here!! Then I headed north from Croatia to Slovenia, while Jo made a brief detour through Venice and met me in Ljubljana... it was a shopping thing.

Sunset in Split

The Island of Vis

The Island of Vis

The Amphitheater in Pula

Rovinj on the Istrian Peninsula

All up we spent about a week in Slovenia and saw the capital, Ljubljana, and the towns of Bled and Bohinj. Lake Bled was amazingly picturesque and the best thing about it is you can actually hire a row boat and row out to the old monastery that is on an island in the middle of the lake! Very amusing as neither of us have really ever done any rowing before, serious or otherwise! We spent another day hiring bikes and cycling up to a huge natural gorge which was fun though Jo did seem to have trouble sitting the next day thanks to her re-acquaintance with bike seats. The town of Bohinj was an odd little town made even odder by what had drawn us there in the first place... The Alpine Dairy Museum! Maybe it's just because I've had my fill of history and art museums that my mind literally buzzes with excitement at the prospect of going to something as obscure as a museum related to the dairy practices of the Julian Alps... unfortunately it was closed. Though my need to see something different and unique was thankfully satisfied when we came across a small country fair where they were roasting an entire cow on a rotisserie... that's it I have now seen everything! Slovenia was fantastic! Honestly out of all the countries I've been to so far this would be my perfect choice of country to live in! It's small, It has great food, it has great wine, it has Alpine mountains and plenty of hiking and it is about 85% covered in forest, the country also has a thing for dragons, what more could you want?

Dragon Bridge in Ljubljana

Skateboard shop in Ljubljana

Rowing out on Lake Bled

The Island in Lake Bled

Slovenian festival at Lake Bohinj

Slovenian festival at Lake Bohinj

Lake Bohinj

Bike riding to Vintgar Gorge, Bled

Vintgar Gorge

From Slovenia we caught a train into Austria, to a little place in the Alps called Bad Gastein, Funny name, I agree. Thankfully the town didn't smell, though it did rain for the entire first day so we had a rest-day with our books, which we really needed. We attempted some hiking but then abandoned that in light of a chair lift (it was going there anyway) for some cloudy views of the Austrian Alps, but made up for it later by relaxing in the towns thermal spas (I better clarify that we were making up for the cloudy views not our laziness). Next it was on to Salzberg which was nice, but nothing special, and have now spent the last few days here in Vienna. We've spent a lot of time here just walking around trying to soak in all the grandeur of the buildings and the city. Last night we went to the State Opera theater and saw the famous opera "The barber of Seville" you know the one "Figaro, Figaro, Figaro... etc" rather funny actually. The tickets were only 3.5 EUROS, which is good. But you have to stand for the entire performance, which is bad. but you get subtitles for the opera so you know what is being said, which is good. but you have to stand for the entire performance, which is bad. funnily enough these weren't even the cheapest tickets you could buy, but they were the cheapest tickets if you actually wanted to see what was happening on stage. And although you do have to stand for the entire performance, which is bad, at least when it is over and you start clapping you are already giving a standing ovation!

Bad Gastein

View above Bad Gastein

Salzburg

Vienna

Well that is all, you can go now. Next we are off to the Czech Republic!

Bye :D