Filed under: Croatia
Day 43, Tuesday 30th September 2008 (Al)
Today we decided to travel differently. We hired a car at Zadar airport and drove to our destination! Cathy handled the Opel Astra (not Holden) on the way there, me on the way back. It was a lot of fun driving again, despite having to get used to positioning yourself on the wrong side of the road (after a few close calls with road side reflectors).

Plitvice National Park is beautiful. It´s a series of azure-coloured lakes (travertine pools for you budding geologists out there) joined by cascades and waterfalls, set amidst rocky mountains and autumnal trees. Not much more to say really, might just let the photos do the talking:
















Days 40 – 42, Saturday 27th – Monday 29th September 2008 (Al)
Today we made our way from Sighet to Cluj Napoca (also in Romania), arriving late. Straight to our nearby hostel to freshen up and sleep, `fore a 6:30am train to Budapest. We didn`t have breakfast and had few snacks, so hungry were we in Hungary – pun most definitely intended!
Budapest´s large and often ornate train station was a welcome change, although we did see a fist fight between two middle-aged men which gave it an edge. That edge was taken off with donuts from a bakery. There were long lines at the ticket office from where we would purchase tickets to Zagreb, and we swapped our queue ticket with an Austrian woman who would otherwise have missed her train to Vienna.
The train went by giant Lake Balaton (Hungary´s `seaside´), but the journey was otherwise uneventful. Arrived in Zagreb at night and got a taxi straight to hostel. Woke up starving, and expected to find only a McDonalds or something for breakfast on the way to the station. Instead, we found a gourmet health food store which was heavenly after the snacky foods that had sustained us for what seemed like a week, but was actually only 2-3 days. Vege lasagne, chicken salad, fruit yoghurt and vitamin juice (and brownie) were great…
There are plenty of buses to Zadar, on Croatia`s coast so we weren´t in a huge rush (luckily, as we spent most of the morning on the phone with a really annoying Australian car leasing agent, organising our upcoming time in Belgium and France). The bus ride was smooth, just read and watched the on-board movie. I think it was “The Skeleton Key” with Kate Hudson – boring movie with a lame ending, 1 star.
Zadar does not get mentioned as often as Split and Dubrovnik, but its old town is charming and was the beginning of my desire to one day live in an old town such as this. We went for a walk along the foreshore at sunset which was beautiful – great to be back on the coast again:

In the above photo, Cath is sitting above the “Sea Organ”. It´s a series of pipes built into the steps, that connect to the sea. As the waves come in, they push air through the pipes and play a random and soothing melody. Beautiful.
Next to this is what seemed like just a giant ring of light, that changed colours. It turns out the largest circle represents the sun, then there are others representing the other planets, with their sizes and distances to scale. Pluto has been left out – so I guess according to the artist it really does not count as a planet (or maybe it was just so far away we didn`t find it on our walk).


On the way back to the place we were staying in the old town, we had another magical musical moment – we turned a corner near an old church to find a group of about seven men and women standing facing each other in a circle, singing in beautiful harmony. They finished to a round of applause from the older men sitting in the laneway cafes and bars, and from us and the other wanderers in the street.

Filed under: Romania
Days 39 & 40, Friday 26th & Saturday 27th September 2008 (Cath)
With our bikes safely home, we chose some transport that didn`t rely on our bodies (a taxi) to take us to the nearby town of Sapanta, to see what is known as the Merry Cemetery.
It started off just like I imagine any other churchyard cemetery does, but in about 1930 a local carpenter, Stan Ion Patras, began carving wooden crosses as headstones. He painted them in primary colours and carved on them pictures depicting the person doing things they loved, and sometimes even the way they died. The inscriptions are rhyming, anecdotal, and written as if by the person themselves, often with a touch of humour. These folk art crosses became more and more popular in the village over time, so that we only saw three or four more conventional headstones in the cemetery. After the original carpenter`s death, his apprentices (and probably their apprentices) have kept up the tradition.


I wish we could read Romanian and therefore appreciate all of the inscriptions, but we were lucky enough to hear a guide translating snippets of some of them. Memorable and moving depictions were of a young farmer hit by lightning (which is apparently a relatively common cause of accidental death here, because people working in the fields with scythes are usually the highest conducting point in the area), a little girl being hit by a car, a Communist Party member sitting proudly with his hammer-and-sickle banner beside him, and an alcoholic still clutching his last drink while meeting the Grim Reaper.
Young man who loved his car, and was fatally hit by lightning (note God issuing the fork of lightning), just when `I was ready to be married´:


Proud Comrade:

Three year old girl:

The most common portraits depicted moments defining local everyday life: women weaving or spinning cotton, men on tractors or herding animals, people praying, and families sitting together at meal tables.
It really is a place that celebrates life.


On the outskirts of Sapanta, we visited the tallest wooden church in Europe, still partially under construction (and built on a stone base, so there has apparently been some controversy over its claim to being a true wooden church), but nevertheless impressive.

To get ourselves back to Sighet, we took the plunge and hitch hiked. The driver delivered us there safely for about half the taxi fare and in about half the time, but we did have to put up with his frantic electro-folk music CD the whole way.
At the start of the road we had taken our bikes along into the valley, there is an open air Village Museum, which we visited on our last day in Sighet. Our main aim was to take pictures of the wooden gates, wooden houses and other wooden structures we had neglected to photograph out in the real villages – I think we were distracted by crazy whims telling us to find food and shelter at the time. The Romanian sense of humour shone through in the tiny sign at the entrance to the collection of about fifty wooden houses and other things made entirely of wood:

`No Smoking`
(actually this was probably a really necessary sign and likely disobeyed in this country)
It only took an hour for us to feel we`d seen everything at the museum, whereas the Lonely Planet suggests you should allow half a day, so maybe that was a good sign and we had actually absorbed more of the rural cultural scenery than we thought we had on our bike adventure.


Before leaving Sighet and Romania for good, we visited an excellent museum in town, the Memorial to Victims of Communism. It was a very sobering and informative experience. The museum is housed in what used to be a high security prison, where many Romanian leaders and intellectuals were held or died as political prisoners during the communist years. Exhibits in old cells detailed some of their lives and achievements, as well as the path to power of the communists in Romania after World War II, and then how they were finally overthrown here and in other Eastern European countries.

Filed under: Romania
Days 38 & 39, Thursday 25th – Friday 26th September 2008 (Cath)
(Happy Birthday Mum!)
We arrived in Sighetu Marmatiei, the main town in Maramures, on the overnight train from Sighisoara. Our very comfortable, clean and modern couchette cabin was shared with only one Romanian man, who kindly stepped outside to smoke. So we were feeling bright eyed and bushy tailed and ready to be convinced to head straight out to explore the valley’s villages on some rented bikes.

It was beautiful riding through the countryside, overtaking buggies drawn by horses and oxen along the way. We stopped for a little picnic of peanuts and a packet of chips (and a Sound of Music moment) in a field full of haystacks with a view of the valley.


(Sighet is between those two hills)










Filed under: Romania
Days 35-37, Monday 22nd – Wednesday 24th September 2008 (Cath)
Now we’re as far into deepest, darkest Transylvania as we will go. While the old town in Brasov was charming and medieval, its feel was much more familiarly European than we had expected from Romania. Sighisoara is also a modern, obviously European town, but its old town is an elevated citadel – where Vlad the Impaler was born, no less – and at night its quiet, dark, loosely cobblestoned streets have a unique atmosphere, which could get quite spooky if you let it. I let it. It was enough for me to feel that if vampires were real, they probably could live quite comfortably in these parts. There was plenty of red wine and red meat, anyway.



Arriving at our B&B, in a 400 year old house in the citadel, we were met with a warm welcome from the mother of the household, who became even more effusive and gave me a hug when she found out where we were from – “Australian people!” – as it turned out her daughter had married an Australian and had been living in Darwin. We later met her daughter, son-in-law and new grandson, as they were renovating a nearby house, and trying to work out a way to comfortably live half a year in Romania and half a year in Darwin – not the easiest climates and economic conditions to balance. They were very interested to hear what rental prices were like in Melbourne.

Our room (above) and street leading to the house (below)

Exploring Sighisoara itself was interesting, but we had also heard it was a good base for visiting Saxon villages in the surrounding countryside, where cars were still rarely seen. The man who usually ran these trips unfortunately had an illness in the family and so was unable to, but Simon from Darwin stepped in and took us to see Biertan, one of the larger Saxon towns, with a unique fortified church and a door with a really impressive lock:

(First prize at the 1900 Paris World Expo, apparently)

Although charming, Biertan was still not as ‘untouched by time’ as we had expected. Most of its Saxon residents (who were originally asked to move here by the King of Hungary in the twelfth century, to shore up Hungary’s south-eastern defences) left around the time of the revolution of 1989, as they were offered amnesty by Germany. From 900 families, their numbers are now down to about 50, with the rest of the residents being ethnically Romanian. As we stood looking out from the church grounds, we even heard a tractor in the distance! Simon was actually shocked by that, as it had been a few years since he had last visited. It seems that since Romania joined the EU in January 2007, change is the state of things.

On the way back to Sighisoara, we stopped to get our fill of natural mineral spring water (running through the pipe, not the trough where the horse is drinking). We shared the spot with several people doing the same, as well as a lady who had popped down to wash some carrots, and this horse-drawn buggy pulled over for a rest break just as we left.

(We didn’t get sick)
Our original plan was to head straight back to Bucharest and on to Sarajevo via Belgrade. However, we felt that since we had come all this way, we wanted to do Romania justice and step outside Transylvania. The Maramures region, up north, intrigued us with more promises of ‘living history’, so we spent an afternoon researching and changing our planned route. We have now decided to head to Maramures, then straight to Croatia (because we are keen to feel some coastal warmth as soon as possible again) on the train via Budapest. Bosnia will be our last destination before heading to Belgium to meet Hamish and Jen.
Climbing the gothic clock tower in Sighisoara gave us close-up views of the citadel, but we also walked up the hill at the edge of the lower town to see if we could find a panorama.

We did find good views, as well as some puppies in a pile of hay, and a jolly local man on a motorbike who pulled over when he saw us and managed to convey in a mixture of Romanian, Hungarian, Russian and German (unfortunately his four languages and our one didn’t coincide!) that he thought Al looked like ‘English football America’. When Al eventually figured it out and said ‘David Beckham?!’, he slapped his thigh, nodded excitedly, and gave Al his helmet to pose for a photo!


(He does have his eyes closed in the photo, but despite what you might expect, they were actually open when he made the ‘David Beckham’ comparison)