An Autumnal Journey through Eastern Europe 2014
or
Nostalgia is What it Used to Be!
Barry and Margaret Williamson November
2014
 | Map of the Autumn Motorhome Journey to Greece and Maps of the 1980's Cycle Ride |
For the full Travel Log of the whole Journey, click: http://www.magbaztravels.com/content/view/1607/369 Table of Distances: 5,000 miles (8000 km) from Brownhills of Newark to Finikounda in the Greek Peloponnese
No | Month | Place | Country | Trip | Total | Average |
| | | | Distance | Distance | Distance |
| | | | (miles) | (miles) | (miles) |
1 | Aug | Newark | Eng | | | |
2 | | Blackpool | | 148 | 148 | 148 |
3 | | Cheltenham | | 184 | 332 | 166 |
4 | | Newark | | 124 | 456 | 152 |
5 | | Fangfoss | | 79 | 535 | 134 |
6 | | Slingsby | | 60 | 595 | 119 |
7 | | Newton | | 20 | 615 | 103 |
8 | | Scotch Corner | | 62 | 677 | 97 |
9 | | Moffat | Sco | 109 | 786 | 98 |
10 | | Loch Lomond | | 83 | 869 | 97 |
11 | | Balloch | | 14 | 883 | 88 |
12 | | Dunbar | | 110 | 993 | 90 |
13 | | Ferry to Amsterdam | Sea | 100 | 1093 | 91 |
14 | | Apeldoorn | NL | 70 | 1163 | 89 |
15 | | Otterlo | | 50 | 1213 | 87 |
16 | Sep | Xanten | D | 98 | 1311 | 87 |
17 | | Lahnstein | | 137 | 1448 | 91 |
18 | | Weilburg | | 51 | 1499 | 88 |
19 | | Erden | | 119 | 1618 | 90 |
20 | | Sweich | | 25 | 1643 | 86 |
21 | | Grevenmacher | | 21 | 1664 | 83 |
22 | Oct | Marburg | | 172 | 1836 | 87 |
23 | | Knickhagen | | 121 | 1957 | 89 |
24 | | Dresden | | 211 | 2168 | 94 |
25 | | Bautzen | | 130 | 2298 | 96 |
26 | | Jelenia Gora | PL | 72 | 2370 | 95 |
27 | | Polanica Zdrij | | 69 | 2439 | 94 |
28 | | Hutisko-Solanec | CZ | 140 | 2579 | 96 |
29 | | Martin | SK | 56 | 2635 | 94 |
30 | | Liptovsky Sielnica | | 40 | 2675 | 92 |
31 | | Podlesok | | 77 | 2752 | 92 |
32 | | Satoraljaujhely | H | 118 | 2870 | 93 |
33 | | Debrecen | | 93 | 2963 | 93 |
34 | | Baillie Felix | RO | 53 | 3016 | 91 |
35 | | Simeria nr Deva | | 119 | 3135 | 92 |
36 | | Baile Herculane | | 112 | 3247 | 93 |
37 | | Vidin Fanti TIR | BG | 106 | 3353 | 93 |
38 | Nov | Sofia TIR | | 151 | 3504 | 95 |
39 | | Biser Sakar Hills | | 168 | 3672 | 97 |
40 | | Alexandrouplois | GR | 117 | 3789 | 97 |
41 | | Porto Lagos SP | | 73 | 3862 | 97 |
42 | | Orfani Beach SP | | 97 | 3959 | 97 |
43 | | Thessaloniki SP | | 83 | 4042 | 96 |
44 | | Vergina SP | | 69 | 4111 | 96 |
45 | | Kastraki | | 106 | 4217 | 96 |
46 | | Moucha SP | | 109 | 4326 | 96 |
47 | | Domnista SP | | 94 | 4420 | 96 |
48 | | Killini Harbour SP | | 138 | 4558 | 97 |
49 | | Ionion Beach, Glyfa | | 11 | 4569 | 95 |
50 | Dec | Panapoulos SP | | 53 | 4622 | 94 |
51 | | Dimitsana SP | | 66 | 4688 | 94 |
52 | | Sparta | | 120 | 4808 | 94 |
53 | | Gythion SP | | 32 | 4840 | 93 |
54 | | Areopoli SP | | 26 | 4866 | 92 |
55 | | Gerolimenas SP | | 29 | 4895 | 91 |
56 | | Neo Itilo SP | | 20 | 4915 | 89 |
57 | | Ag Nikolaos SP | | 17 | 4932 | 88 |
58 | | Petalidi | | 47 | 4979 | 87 |
59 | | Finikounda | | 23 | 5002 | 86 |
Here, we compare this journey through Eastern Europe with parallel cycle routes in the days of the Iron Curtain. For the full Travel Log of the whole Journey in the Autumn of 2014, click: http://www.magbaztravels.com/content/view/1607/369 In our twentieth year on the road with what is now our fourth motorhome and
second pair of touring bicycles, the challenge within Europe is to find new
routes and new roads with new places and new faces. Too often, fond memories
have been destroyed by contemporary realities. A once quiet place to park for
the night has been replaced with fences and barriers to be opened with credit
cards; roads we once cycled with impunity are now clogged with traffic; a
remote Mediterranean beach has been 'discovered'; cycle routes we once pioneered
now have guide books, signposts and throngs of people on so-called mountain bikes
and electric shoppers; many old friends settled in the Bulgarian hills have
moved or passed on; and borders that once had queues, searches, a no-man's-land
and an atmosphere of uncertainty and abrupt change have simply disappeared!
However, this autumnal journey through Eastern Europe (shown in yellow on the
map) did lead to further insights into the changes that have or have not
occurred since the Iron Curtain was dismantled after 1990. Our route was interwoven
with two long cycle rides we made behind that closed curtain in the late
1980's. Gorbachev had spoken and was acting, pressure was building outside the
Berlin wall and change was in the air.
How it was then
During the summer holiday of 1988, we rode some 2,200 miles (3500 km) from Rotterdam to the far end of
the former Czechoslovakia (shown black on the map), touching the border of what
was then the USSR (now the Ukraine). Turning south and west, we joined the
Danube in Budapest and followed it as far as Vienna for a flight home. Just as
the new term began.
The next summer, shortly before the Berlin Wall came down, we cycled 2,500 miles (4000 km) to
Istanbul (shown brown on the map). Our aim was to ride through every Iron
Curtain country, except East Germany where independent travel by bicycle was forbidden.
So the route took us from the Harwich-Hamburg ferry (sadly no longer running) via
West Germany, Denmark and Sweden, then behind the Iron Curtain through Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia (as was) and Bulgaria, emerging
into Greece and so into Turkey. We still claim to be the only cyclists to ride from
England to Turkey by first heading north into Sweden!
In those days, even behind the Iron Curtain, every border was double-protected
with a 5-mile deep cordon sanitaire
with check-points, watch-towers, Kalashnikov-wielding military, electric fences,
searches, dogs and a no-man's-land; every exit and entry needed a visa
(obtained in advance) and every country had its own closely-guarded currency.
There were no signposts, maps were vague and hard to come by, but the roads
were empty and the state-controlled hotels were both compulsory for foreigners and
exceedingly inexpensive!
And now
Following an overnight voyage from Newcastle to Ijmuiden, near Amsterdam, this
autumn's journey by motorhome (mixed initially with about a thousand kilometres
of cycling in the Netherlands and Germany) took us through Poland, the Czech
Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and so into Northern Greece. Now
arrived at a favourite campsite in the Peloponnese, though not quite at our winter destination
at the southern end of the Messinian Peninsula, we have driven 3,476
fascinating miles since Ijmuiden, staying in 34 different places.
In just over a quarter of a century, there have of course been many changes to
the countries of Eastern Europe. But they are still clearly defined by the
former Iron Curtain, the line along which the Americans held the advance of the
Russians in those critical early months of 1945. It is still chilling to see
how near the Russians came to the edge of the North Sea, and now they are on
the march again.
Eastern Germany is still strongly differentiated from the Western version;
Poland and the Czech Republic are making great progress in the transition to
their idea of Western Globalised Capitalism. Eastern Slovakia still has many
pockets untouched by development whereas Hungary, always the most forward-looking
of these backward countries in the old days, is now reverting to a 1930's
version of Fascism.
In places, Romania and Bulgaria are sadly still recovering from World War Two.
Frozen by the dead hand of Soviet hegemony, they are embroiled in the shock of
change and the news is mainly of corrupt bureaucracy and mafia-like political activity.
Too much land remains untended, its former owners untraceable.
Yugoslavia, still not settled after splintering into 6 or 7 parts plus Albania,
is only slowly opening up to visitors, let alone development. Slovenia and
Croatia are now in the European Union, the former looking the part, the latter
less so. But it is still an uphill struggle for Serbia, while the borders of
Kosovo and the Serb-dominated half of Bosnia remain disputed.
The two highlights on our already well-lit journey were the continuing contrasts
between then and now, followed by the traverse of the mountains of northern
Greece. We thought we knew the country from many years of cycling, motorcycling
and motorhoming the length and breadth of the land, but the precipitous journey
from Kalampaka to Nafpaktos was entirely new to us.
Kalampaka (aka Kalambaka – the 'mp' combination gives rise to much confusion in
the transliteration of Greek to English, eg 'Olympia/Olymbia' can also be
'Olybia) is the location of the Meteora Monasteries on their thousand-foot high
rocky pinnacles. Now on a major coach-tourist route and thronged with the
peoples of the world (particularly East Asia), they were once a lonely outcrop
of near-empty monasteries visited by intrepid cyclists!
Nafpaktos, 262 miles south of Kalampaka by our route, is a busy port on the
northern edge of the Gulf of Corinth, east of the new bridge across to Patras.
The journey took nearly three days, averaging between 12 and 15 mph with the
motorhome mainly in second gear. If there was a gear change, it was mostly into
first! Nothing wrong with the motorhome, it coped admirably, and nothing wrong
with the road surface except for occasional land slipping down from above or
sliding away below.
Travelling across the grain of the land, the straight line distance of 87 miles
was tripled by roads regularly plummeting down serpentine bends and then hairpinning
skywards again. We parked for two nights on the road, each at over 3,300 ft
(the height of Snowden). A typical pass was at the height of Ben Nevis (4,300
ft) with the highest point at 5,000 ft. Our road was literally empty and the few
mountain villages were built along straggling steep hillsides and narrow
twisting roads. This is wonderful country, a different kind of Greece, its
beauty enhanced by the colours of Autumn, the blue sky and the brilliant white
clouds often seen from above. One could travel through such country for ever!
Click: Some Images of the Journey
A final tale to illustrate the contrast between the basic values of traditional
semi-feudal societies, and those perverted by the temptations of capitalism and
easy tourist money. In the remote village of Kedros in the mountains of Central
Greece, the shopkeeper refused to sell Margaret a loaf. They were not fresh! A
fellow shopper, also speaking no English, led Margaret through the village to
the baker who was busy at his wood-fired oven, supplying warm bread and pies.
Well accustomed to tourists, the village of Vergina in Northern Greece is the
site of the magnificent well-preserved Macedonian Tombs of Alexander the
Great's father (Philip II) and other members of the royal dynasty. At the
bakery there, Margaret was charged €1.20 for 6 (none too fresh) bread rolls,
only later discovering a receipt in the bag for the correct price of €0.80.
General opinion was that she was lucky to be given a receipt at all!
![1[1][2][3][4].jpg 1[1][2][3][4].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/1[1][2][3][4].jpg) | An Autumnal Ride on the River Spree Cycle Path in East Germany
| ![2[1][2][3].jpg 2[1][2][3].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/2[1][2][3].jpg) | Echoes of the Past in Biser, SE Bulgaria: Trabant against a Mud Brick Wall
| ![3[1][2][3].jpg 3[1][2][3].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/3[1][2][3].jpg) | Images of the Present in Biser, SE Bulgaria: Washday at Camping Sakar Hills
| ![4[1][2][3].jpg 4[1][2][3].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/4[1][2][3].jpg) | Margaret in the Mountains of Central Greece
| ![5[1][2].jpg 5[1][2].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/5[1][2].jpg) | On the Road at 3,230 ft in the Mountains of Central Greece
| ![6[1][2][3].jpg 6[1][2][3].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/6[1][2][3].jpg) | Morning Light at Camping Ionion Beach in the Greek Peloponnese
| ![7[1][2][3].jpg 7[1][2][3].jpg](http://www.magbaztravels.com/images/stories/Autumn Journey 2014/7[1][2][3].jpg) | Sunset over the Island of Zakinthos, 10 miles away across the Ionian Sea
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