Friday, March 30, 2012

Three Countries Six Border Checks

Hi Everyone, just checking in with you!

Durres, Albania

Driving through Montenegro
We have been a little busy the past few days. We drove from Dubrovnik, Croatia through Montenegro and into Albania. Don's post will describe the details of driving in Albania (which is fair since he does ALL of the driving--that was our deal after all). We spent less than 24 hours in Albania, but we drove to the former capital city--Durres (on the coast), and it was quite a push--about eight hours in the car.

The Hotel Nais was decent, but the highlight for me was walking along their boardwalk and taking shots of the sunset from the point.
A monument on the waterfront in Durres
Sunset over Durres

We then decided to spring for a decent seafood dinner and went to the restaurant recommended by the hotel--The Piazza. They had an menu in English, we ordered our main fish courses and a bottle of wine--and then the waiters just took care of us. They brought us a little appetizer, mussels, and after the main course, dessert. We were rather tense from the drive, so it just felt good to relax. The meal was reasonable--about $40 US, and we left a big tip. It was just nice to have someone bring stuff to us where we didn't have to figure out the menu and the prices, etc. The service was excellent, and the wine glasses and carafe were sparkling. It wasn't much money to tip a little more in a country where people don't tip as much as they do in the US, but it made them feel good, and we wanted to show our appreciation. They understood that we weren't rich people who didn't understand how much money we spent, but that we really appreciated their hospitality and service. Lots of shaking hands on the way out,

Albanian Countryside
We followed this train all the way through eastern Albania
The white blossoms are Almond trees. We loved the haystacks!
Albania, for me, was a real study in contrasts. Driving in we went through some incredible mountain scenery (okay I probably appreciated this in retrospect because I kept putting my heart back into my mouth and clenching the door handles as yet another crazy Albanian driver did something unpredictable-these Albanians make New York drivers look like wusses). We drove past women in scarves who looked like pictures from the 1930s, men driving donkey carts (with big trucks passing them), and cities that looked like bombed out Beirut. Gas stations appear to be a business that people think will take off--and there are huge gas stations every few miles. Much of the county appears to be very backward, and yet you get the feeling that it is on the move.

Our hotel tariff included breakfast. When Don and I went down the next morning, we had our suspicions confirmed--we were the only guests in the hotel that night. The charming young girl had a huge feast laid out for us and wanted to make sure we tried the local specialties--there was so much food. Well satiated with food and the hotel staff's gentle hospitality, we felt much better about making our way into Macedonia.

Ohrid and Skopje--Macedonia

The walk up to our hotel
This church was located on the best property in Ohrid on a point overlooking the lake on one side and a fishing village on the other.
Don declaiming (hamming it up) on the stage of the ancient Roman amphitheater.
We spent two days in Ohrid--which is an old cobblestoned city on Lake Ohrid (one of the largest lakes in Europe). The weather has been sunny and in the sixties--perfect for sightseeing. We booked a four-star small hotel that had a veranda overlooking the lake. We had to park the car a good ten minutes away, get our luggage up a high-incline cobblestone street, and then go three floors to our room. It was a bit of a hike, but it was worth it.
Another small church with incredible icons

The 900-year old Plane Tree, a community treasure
The most vicious peacock at Sveti Naum Monastery--seriously the guy collecting church entrance fees told us that he attacked a child who tried to pat its tail. Apparently peacocks don't bother adults because they are too big...
Sveti Naum Monastery
This spiritual place contains lots of old churches: it's very tourist friendly, so we followed a map and just visited the churches and the town gate, and a roman amphitheater. It was all cobblestones (no cars allowed and very steep). We then drove 30 kilometers to the Sveti Naum Monastery, a Byzantine structure that houses the tomb of Sveti (St.) Naum. If you put your ear to the ground you are supposed to hear his heart beating; I must admit that I tried that but didn't hear him :(  The Monastery is on a cliff and the most amazing thing to me is that there are peacocks running wild in the monastery and in the gardens. They are the most beautiful birds; I couldn't get one with his tail open, but I took several pictures once I got over my fear that they might chase me or something (I find birds a little scary sometimes and these guys were pretty big and ran fast). We'll make sure we post a picture with one of the peacocks. We're traveling at the right time--apparently you can't walk the streets in Ohrid in the summertime without being crushed--so we are able to enjoy everything without the crowds.

The definitive (so far) cappuccino - doesn't it just make your mouth water....
The city had many of these tourist-friendly walkways--and they needed them because it was a lot of up and down!
The view from our terrace of beautiful Lake Ohrid. I don't think we'll ever get tired of these views!


And now for tonight--we are in Skopje, the capital of Macedonia. We drove about three hours to get here--and it actually rained a little while when we were driving. Again, we climbed up mountains, and the vistas were stunning. The trusty GPS hasn't been too reliable in Albania and Macedonia for some reason; we couldn't get it to register on the coordinates. We rented a one-bedroom apartment on booking.com, but we had a bit of a time finding it. I'll just say that people have been very kind when we ask them for help. Our directions were to park in a Holiday Inn, find a pizza joint, and then the manager of said pizza joint would take us to the apartment. We got a bit switched around, but I stayed with the car and Don found the pizza joint--he is nothing if not persistent. It worked out just fine--and we had kebabs at the local joint--Destans (in business since 1913) which was recommended by our Lonely Planet guide and walked around the old city. Coffee and dessert in the main square's Trendy Cafe watching the huge fountain in the square's light show (one block from our apartment) finished off another nice night. Once we load the pictures from Skopje, we'll post them.

Before I log off, I'm going to bow to a friend of mine who encouraged me to write some travel tips, so I'm going to give just two:

1.  Get a vest with pockets that zip on the inside and outside. I threw my L.L.  Bean vest into the suitcase at the last minute, and as you can see from the pictures, I'm wearing it almost everyday. I'm not carrying a pocketbook--everything I need fits into the vest.

2.  We are away for 12 weeks. I have a 26-inch checked bag as well as a small carry on. I thought I was packing light (especially since I left the small bag with friends in Slovakia). I'm pretty much wearing the three pairs of jeans and two turtlenecks I bought before the trip - so the lesson is, even when you think you are packing conservatively, you are most likely not.

That's all for now. Tomorrow we head to Sofia, Bulgaria for at least two nights. I apologize for any typos. I'm just banging this one out because I want you to know where we've been. We still haven't mastered posting the pictures quickly, so I'm going to stop now. We miss you all, and we are having a great trip so far.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Pat and Don "Do" Dubrovnik

Monday, March 26, 2012

View from the top of Dubrovnik and the suburbs to the North
We had a very full day touring Dubrovnik. Our apartment is very conveniently located: we have a supermarket, the bus stop, and the cable car stop about 300 meters from our apartment (after we climb about 50 steps to get up to the street level). This morning we rode the cable car to the top of the mountain which overlooks Dubrovnik. We got lucky with the weather for our second cable car experience. Don will post some of the pictures from the ride and the view from the top. Today was a beautifully sunny day and the ocean water just sparkled; you can even see it sparkle in the pictures.

Poster announcing the exibition
What we didn't expect was the Imperial Fort tucked around the corner from the spanking new cable car building. It was a museum dedicated to telling the story of the attack on Dubrovnik during the "Homeland War 1991-1995." It was a very touching exhibition of what happened to the town and its people as well as a description of the defense and destruction of Dubrovnik We spent a good hour in there reading the not-objective-at-all accounts of the war.

After that moving experience, we walked the 4 kilometers of walls surrounding the city. They were heavily damaged during the war, so what we walked was largely, I suspect, a reconstruction.

A view down one of the "streets"

The Libertus Flag flying above "Fort Minceta"

The prettiest view on the city wall tour

Looking through one of the battlement openings


Looking back up to one of the Round Towers
There were lots of steps and special spaces to take pictures, so we spent another hour-and-a-half doing just that. Apparently you can rent an audio tour tape, but that must be during the high season as we didn't see any place to rent one when we walked the wall--one of the drawbacks of being in the off-season--but of course, we had the wall mostly to ourselves this afternoon--a few Japanese tourists and a person here or there.

Between the two of us we took over 150 pictures today. Digital cameras really make this possible.

Years ago when travelling, we had to carry the 35 mm film around (besides the expense it took up a lot of room), and then you had to pay to get the pictures developed after you got home. About 25 years ago when we and I walked the Wall in China, the photo developer lost the roll of when we walked that wall--never again!

Don's Commentary....
Dubrovnik is a city of ups and downs for me - that's physical, emotional, and psychological ups and downs.

The physical part is the most obvious. The city is built in a kind of bowl-shaped hollow between the sea and the mountains that run along the coast. When one stands at the north gate one is at least 75 meters above the main street of Dubrovnik - the Stradun - so entering the walled city means walking down flight after flight of marble steps - all rather uneven and a little slippery. Leaving Dubrovnik means climbing back up those steps - no mean task even for one with two new artificial knees. Hiking the walls involves literally hundreds of steps, so one moves cautiously always aware of forthcoming ups and downs....

Emotionally, the ups and downs come from the juxtaposition of Dubrovnik, the city of arts and culture (there's an art gallery everywhere you look and posters on every wall announce forthcoming musical events) and our growing outrage about what happened to this beautiful city during the War of the Homeland. On one wall, just inside the North Gate a map of the city marks every spot  where a shell made an impact on the pavement, a roof burned, or a whole building went up in smoke. Despite the efforts to rebuild, pock marks identify where bullets and shrapnel ricocheted around the stone walls. A memorial just inside a church at the East end of the town keeps the victims of the war, a whole generation of the youth and vitality of the community tragically lost, on everyone's minds. And for what? The siege of Dubrovnik lasted 13 months. Our preliminary research finds that defeating Dubrovnik was largely a symbolic act for the Yugoslav Army and the Montenegrin Army more than a strategic or even a tactical military action. It's hard not to feel great sympathy for the residents of Dubrovnik who had their psyches so damaged. And yet the beauty and the spirit of the city are eminently tangible.

The psychological ups and downs for me result from having been here in 1977. They are familiar to anyone who has lived through visiting a place that seemed innocent and accessible and now seem almost overwhelmed with commercialism and opportunism. I loved the old Dubrovnik, maybe not more than this Dubrovnik, but certainly in a different way. I told Pat one of my cherished memories of my visit back then was walking the wall (when it did not cost 70 Kuna - about 12 dollars) and happening upon a pickup, after-school soccer game between about twenty teenage boys and girls in a field littered with broken stones and goals identified by tipped-over chairs. They played with great intensity and even greater joy and abandon. Today, as far as I could determine, the athletic fields are paved with astroturf, the game is basketball, and it is played by older kids with little abandon or, as far as I could see, joy. But we did see groups of preteens kicking soccer balls around as soon as adults seemed to stop needing the streets - something we saw in Split as well. So, maybe things are not as changed as I think they are. At least we didn't see Croatian children with their heads in their mobile phones....

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Croatia's Walled City

We made it to Dubrovnik after a rather long day of travel. It started with our early morning realization that daylight savings time started in Croatia today--who knew? My I-Phone knew! So we were already an hour behind, but that didn't matter because we were up early anyway! The drive from Hvar to Sucuraj at the eastern end of the island is an adventure in bad roads. The surface is really uneven. And at times - always when the views so temptingly drew my attention away from the next hairpin curve - the road dropped to one lane with no shoulder--always when another car is coming...

We got to the ferry in plenty of time and had breakfast at the local-ham and cheese omelet for me and cappuccino for Pat! As we sat there, half the male population of Sucuraj arrived and started pounding beers and glasses of wine and talking rather loudly; I guess it was the breakfast club! Time for the ferry to go, An uneventful crossing except this time we could see the craggy mountains of the mainland. Then for the beautiful Croatian Adriatic Coast drive. And this is a beautiful drive rivaling the California Big Sur and the Oregon coast and the Maine coast! Wow! We couldn't take pictures while driving because there WERE some others on the road, but we'll just have to keep those vistas in our memory.

The highway goes through about 10 kilometers of Bosnia, and we had to stop and show our passports - no stamps though. We noticed in Bosnia the clocks were an hour slow - no daylight savings time in Bosnia. The approach to Dubrovnik is breathtaking, and the town has grown so much since I was here in 1977. Our quarters are on the south side overlooking the old town with its lit up city walls and its impossibly steep roadways and drivers tearing along the narrow one-way streets. (Pat here--I feel like Lucy Honeychurch in "Room with a View" because we are suckers for a terrace with a view--and although this place is a bit quirky, it has its charms. The terrace gives us a view of the Old City and the famous Dubrovnik walls with the sea and all the boats nestling beneath them.)

We walked to the old town, found a lovely Bosnian restaurant and had local food, some of the best we have had yet. The Bosnians sneer at the Croatian seafood restaurants and say they all offer the same menu--while their restaurant features MEAT! At present we have hiked up the hundreds of steps, settled in on our balcony, noticed the sliver of a moon, failed to conquer the satellite TV and are thinking of an early night. More tomorrow with pictures.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Happy in Hvar postscript

Ahhhh.... the feeling of premonition...

Pat and I agree the one mistake we will make on this journey is leaving Hvar and our wonderful third-floor walk-up with the amazing balcony and night after night of sunsets.... But life goes on.We are caught up on laundry, repacking yet one more time, the ferry back to the mainland leaves at 12:15 and we know we have an hour and forty-five minute drive over amazing but torturous roads to get to it so we're gettin' out of Dodge.

We go to Dubrovnik for two nights of living in a walled city and marveling at marble-paved roads; then a night in Durres, Albania (our last on the Adriatic coast); followed by two nights in Ohrid, Macedonia - in what we hope to be an amazing apartment and an equally amazing adventure. Then we head into Bulgaria. I'm negotiating for an overnight at a Bulgarian spa/ski center but am meeting opposition because it is at the end of another one of those faded yellow lines on the map. Then to Sofia and by the end of the week, the Black Sea. Romania, Bucharest, Transylvania and the trek back to Hungary await.

Stay tuned.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Happy in Hvar


Wednesday, March 21 and Thursday, March 22, 2012
After a rather unsettling day in Split on Tuesday, March 20, we decided to head to Hvar Island, the sunny jewel of the Croatian islands on the Adriatic, but I’m going to digress and tell you about Split first.
After our visit to Plitvice Lakes National Park, we headed down the Dalmation Coast to Split—a medieval town that’s home to Diocletian’s Palace. We learned a lesson on why you should not just drive a car into a city and try and find a place to stay—and also about preconceived notions. I thought Split was going to be a small town on the coast despite having read in the Lonely Planet guidebook that’s it’s the second largest city in Croatia. It’s akin to driving into Philly or DC and figuring that you can find a free place to park when you don’t know what you are doing.
Room with a view but little else!
Long story short, we found a place to park for the night (after sitting in the car for nearly two hours) and took a room above what turned out to be one of the main squares with buses stopping every 5 minutes, but we made the best of it by having the most enjoyable meal we’ve had in the past two weeks in a wonderful restaurant in the Old City and walking around Diocletian’s Palace which turns out to be the coolest place to shop I’ve ever experienced! We wandered around the streets, and I took some pictures, but it was getting dark and I didn’t get much. The influence of the Italians was evident; the waterfront reminded us of the Doge’s Palace in Venice.
Split monument
I had a Fawlty Towers experience. I walked into a hotel’s reception area and told the guy behind the bar right next to the reception desk that I had a question about parking and could he get the person for reception? He walked through a door between the bar and reception area, assumed a mischevious grin, and said, “Can I help you?” and we both laughed—and then he did help me.
Waiting in Drvenik for the ferry
We woke up early to the garbage trucks doing their thing, and decided to head to the ferry port of Drvenik some two hours down the coast and pick up the ferry to Hvar Island. We could have taken the ferry right from Split (and most people do), but it was a lot more expensive as well as a longer ferry ride to leave from there. The Drvenik ferry was cheaper, we could get more driving along the coast in, and then we’d have to drive 77 kilometers through the island because the Drvenik ferry drops you at the other end.
Remind you of Lomnica Stit?
After a 30-minute ferry ride with no visibility in front of us because of the mists rolling over the mountains, I took a picture and asked Don if going into the unknown was the theme of our travels! Somehow the picture I took of the ferry heading into the unknown looked exactly like the picture we took of the cable car in Slovakia when we ascended the Lomnica Stit!
A quick shot whilst driving the 77 k to our apartment
Here's the dining room and kitchen

View from the large balcony--I don't think we are going to want to leave here!

Right after sunset from the balcony
Having the internet and the international GPS on this trip is a godsend. We found a place in Hvar using the internet and found the place physically using the GPS. I don’t know if we could have found where we are staying without the GPS. Those of you who know Don, know that he’s always up for an adventure, and I thought we were driving through people’s backyards to get here—but the GPS was right and got us to the Apartmani Marinka Viskovic on Ivana Bozitkovica in Hvar.
Don has found his favorite room in the apartment!
Roughing it for the last few days, we decided that we wanted to kick back and spend a few days at the next destination. We could not have found a better place. We rented a third-floor apartment that overlooks the Adriatic and provides an unrivaled view of the sunset. Don keeps saying that he doesn’t think he’ll ever leave the tiled deck which is as big as some of the rooms we’ve had the past few days! Don will be posting those pictures as well as some of the pictures from our drive up to Hvar Town—where we are told it’s always sunny—kind of like Philadelphia right?
Don spoke about shopping in the grocery store in an earlier entry. Ignoring the fact that I really don’t like grocery shopping period (it always takes me too long as I ponder what to buy), I find it really difficult to figure things out. I’m trying to see if they have Half and Half, am finally convinced that I’ve found it—and then Don tells me that it’s goat’s milk—which I think is pretty funny because now I see where it IS goat’s milk—I guess it’s just wistful thinking on my part.
We've seen lots of dramatic sunsets, but this one is one of the best! We'll see if we can get a better one tonight
As stated previously, we have to be careful about technology. While it can make our travels and arrangements easier, we need to be sure that we don’t get taken over by it and spend too much time mediating life through the computer instead of going out and seeing it firsthand—which is what I am going to do right now...

Nacionalni park Plitvička jezera


Nacionalni park Plitvička jezera
...or as we know it Plitvice Lakes National Park
The lakes that make up the park – all 16 of them – and their natualistic, cultural and historic significance are fully described on Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plitvice_Lakes_National_Park) and  I urge you, if your curiosity is aroused by our experiences, to visit this and other sites about the park. All I can do in this post is try to capture our experience visiting the park.
Other than some passing mention somewhere, neither Pat nor I had ever heard of Plitvice Lakes – which is not surprising. I am sure there are many travelling Croatians who have never heard of Yellowstone or Yosemite. That is not an inaccurate comparison because Plitvice is the best-known park in Croatia with visitors at the 1.2 million level every year. In fact, as we came to find out, it was the site of the first armed conflict between the Croats and the Serbs in March, 1991.
When our friend from Rowan, Connie Rosenberger, suggested (strongly) we visit the park, we gave it some thought. As we were planning the next phase of our adventure after Ljubljana, a glance at the map said Plitvice could be a side stop on our way to the Dalmatian coast. We identified and booked a B&B 3.5 km outside the park entrance – mind you, we are thinking American parks here with clearly marked entrances, rangers, and shops – and plotted a route.
As we were leaving Slovenia, our trusty GPS suggested we leave the European equivalent of the interstate and drive over the mountains. It looked like it would save us about 60 km. And even though the line on the map was, at times, a faded yellow track (meaning cow path as we came to find out), we followed its advice and headed south. But our trusty GPS kept changing its mind about the best route, and the shortcut ended up adding more than an hour onto what should have been a simple drive. Gradually this visit to the park seemed like more of an effort than we anticipated. Thank the good Lord we persisted.
 We did manage to go through a wonderful sleepy border crossing from the invisible borders of the EU countries (like Slovenia) into a non EU country – Croatia. But the driving adventure wasn't over. We left the safety of the A1 (think super highway) for a faded grey line on our map – Route 42 – think goat path. Our destination was a mere 48 km away, and it took us most of an hour and a half as we negotiated switch-backing one-lane roads. 
Our B&B

The sign we happened to see
When we got to the B&B (which we found almost by accident and which was located in a village cluster of maybe three buildings) and our room, the largest of the three available, barely had space for the bed and the shower was literally 2x2, the park was seeming less than a good idea.
Don capturing the big falls
Big falls (Slap) from in the gorge
At the suggestion of our host, Mario, a strapping Croat who hefted both our suitcases up to the 2nd floor with ease, we took a short drive to what we would learn was the west rim of the canyon that makes up the park. It was nice – we saw the high waterfall from the top – but not  quite up to anticipation. It reminded me more of Letchworth Park in the western tier of New York State. We returned to Mario and his mom who made us a platter of mixed grilled meat and sausage, soup, salad, and even a cake for desert, slept fitfully – the wood burning boiler seemed to have gone cold during the night – and awoke to a typical Croatian breakfast of sliced processed lunchmeats and nescafe coffee. We were ready for this park and it had better be good.
View from a side canyon
Boy, was it ever good. In fact it was amazing. And, we discovered (again) that our brain plays tricks on us. We experience the unfamiliar, that which departs from our experience and expectations, as unsettling. I was nervous about all the walking and climbing the park seemed to demand and confused because I could not make sense of the (unfamiliar) directions to view the park. There was no one at the information areas and no clues as to what to do or where to start. Of course, we are here in March and while the park is open, it is not really geared up for an onslaught of visitors. Part of the park was not even accessible. But it took us a while to figure this out as our anticipations gave way to the reality of this experience.
The wooden walkways
The people who designed the experience park visitors have really got it right. The 16 lakes that make up the park are in a canyon which, at its deepest point, is about 250 meters. Because we visited in spring when the snow is melting, there was a lot of water running through the canyon, cascading from lake to lake.
Bottom of the gorge
We started at the bottom of the cascades, heading down a switch-backing trail to the canyon floor. The park designers have built a series of wooden walkways that took us back and forth across the floor of the canyon, walking on the surface of the water (or so it seemed), and slowly climbing up the canyon. 

We were almost walking on the water.
The walkways kept us from walking on the delicate travertine, the build up of silt and biomass that separated each lake from those above and below, allowing us to view the cascading water upclose and personal.
Interplay of the walkways with the water
Travertine is what makes Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone and the springs in Pamukkali, Turkey. And, the walkways protect the delicate material that makes this all possible. The sound of falling water is omnipresent, and the colors of the water vary through the full range of blues and cyans as the sun plays across the surface and various minerals interact with the plantlife. Further, the colors are always changing.
The emerging flora
After climbing up through the four or five lower lakes, we headed to the second trail which involved taking a ferry across a short strait in one of the lakes. This walk - it took about an hour to complete - really brought the magic of Plitvica to light. The three lakes the walk circled were relatively small and the cascades between the lakes were dramatic to say the least.
A view looking back
The pictures capture some of this but the interplay of the sounds of flowing water, bird cries, changing colors, and yet more breathtaking vistas around each bend create an experience that is indeed indescribable--and when you turned your back to look at what you've just seen--you were treated to another breathtaking vista from a different vantage point.
We left the park after meeting a Venezuelian teacher who currently is teaching high school Spanish in Kansas and was travelling with his Spanish-only speaking sister during his spring break, and who shared his wonderment at the experience of the park with us. We all noted how the experience of the park we had, with very few other visitors and lots and lots of water, made this the best of all times to visit – unless we had waited a few weeks until the abundant fauna would be in full bloom. But we got a lot and the inconvenience of the drive and the discomfort of having our expectations vary from what we experienced faded very quickly. All I can say is Wow! And a shout out to Connie for turning us on to this place and this experience.
The adventure continues.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Pictures of Ljubljana....

 We thought you might like to see what we see as we walk around Ljubljana. So, here's a selection of our photographic efforts.

One of the dragons on Dragon Bridge

A statue on the newly built (2010) Butcher's Bridge
 Actually there are three statues on this bridge, one of Adam and Eve being expelled from the Garden of Eden, one of Prometheus and this one - we don't know who he/she is or what is going on but the raised arm suggests a greeting to those who are following our blog - so, feel greeted!
Padlocks signifying eternal love on the railings of Butcher's bridge

A seating area built into the bank of the river.
Vista down a street in the Old City section











We are told it did not take long after this bridge was built for lovers to place a padlock on one of the wire cables that make up the railings on both sides of the bridge and throw the key into the river below - declaring their love for each other. Some locks are  large, some are small but we did not see any "combination" locks which might then be retrieved if the eternal love turned out to be more temporal than was thought.... We want to buy a lock to add to the bridge, but I refer you to my previous post about shopping in Slavic countries.
Relief sculpture on the doors to a cathedral
Looking over a square
The center area of Old City - where people gather to listen to buskers