Through the Baltic Republics to Greece: Autumn 2017
Motorhoming from Finland through Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Serbia and Bulgaria to Greece
Margaret Williamson
(continued from: A Journey to Scandinavia in the Summer of 2017)
Introduction
After travelling in Spain and Portugal in the winter of 2016/17, we returned to England in the spring via France, the Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland and Scotland. Much of June and into July passed in the East and West Ridings of Yorkshire, before we were able to recommence travelling and the writing of this travel log.
During the remainder of the summer, we motorhomed in the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Finland. The Tallink ferry Star took 2 hours to sail the 50 Baltic miles from Helsinki to Tallinn for the beginning of our long journey south through Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Serbia and Bulgaria, keeping to the east all the way until we reached Greece in early November.
Settling for a while at our favourite campsite of Ionion Beach (first visited in 1995), we will catch up with cleaning and writing of every kind - including the completion of this travel log. OCTOBER 2017
At the end of our motorhome tour of Scandinavia, we spent the last night on a Finnish campsite (the finish!) near Lahti, 60 miles north of Helsinki
Lahti to Tallink-Silja
Ferry Terminal, West Harbour, Helsinki – 79 miles (sea level!) The harbour is poorly
signed 'Västra Hamnen'. The terminal check-in is at N 60.148626 E 24.913754. Timetable and Bookings on www.tallinksilja.com/en/web/int/tallink-shuttle-tallinn-tips
FERRY FROM FINLAND TO
ESTONIA
Note that:
1. Estonia is an EU member; currency is the Euro
(currently €1.13 = £1).
2. Estonia is in the same time zone as Finland
(2 hrs ahead of the UK).
3. There are no motorway or road tolls.
4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at all times
(even in summer).
5.
Tallink-Silja Line shuttle between Helsinki (West Harbour/Västra Hamnen)
and Tallinn takes 2 hours, crossing several times a day, on 2 large modern
ferries: 'Star' and 'Superstar': www.tallinksilja.com. Alternatives, with
fewer crossings, are Eckerö (www.eckero.fi) or Viking Lines (www.vikinglines.co.uk).
6.
Diesel currently costs €1.16
(about £1) per litre.
IN ESTONIA
Tallinn Ferry Port to Lahemaa Kohvikann Restaurant & Camping,
Palmse, Lahemaa National Park, Lääne-Viru County, Estonia – 50 miles
Camping open 15
Apr-15 Oct. www.kohvikann.ee €15 inc 16 amp
elec, new WC/showers, wash-up sink, free WiFi. Excellent restaurant/café (open
all year, noon-9 pm, closed Mondays). N 59.506783 E 25.9608949
Our ferry arrives promptly at 3.30 pm in the port
of Tallinn, Estonia's busy capital city. Tallinn City Camping is already closed
(22 May-15 Sept) but our aim is eastwards along the coast. We find the ill-signed
way onto rd 1/E20, a bumpy dual carriageway which leads to the Russian border
and St Petersburg. The traffic gradually thins out as city gives way to forest,
with Elk warning signs.
After 46 miles we turn off left onto rd 176 for
Palmse and the Lahemaa (= Land of Bays) National Park. The Lahemaa Kohvikann (=
Coffee Pot) restaurant/camperstop is on the left of the road, just before
Palmse Manor. This is our third visit to a delightful site, providing a small
camping area and excellent
food cooked and served by the friendly and professional owners, Dieter (a German master-chef) and his wife
Julia (from St Petersburg). It is very convenient for exploring the Lahemaa National Park, ideal for cycling.
Julia welcomes us, proudly showing the new camping
facilities. The shower rooms even have heated mirrors to prevent condensation. We
settle in alongside a lone Dutch camper before going over for a meal in the
modern restaurant. Dieter's home-baked brown bread & herb butter makes an
ample starter before salmon for M, pork for B, one apple pie & ice cream
and one decadent chocolate mousse. We've been looking forward to this!
At Lahemaa Kohvikann Restaurant & Camping, Palmse
Over the next 4 days the weather turns wintry and
wet, so we abandon plans to cycle around Lahemaa, which was a highlight of
previous visits. A full moon and clear night sky means brilliant stars but very
cold days. The WiFi works well, enabling writing, correspondence and forward
planning. We also make full use of the restaurant, especially enjoying Dieter's
'Hamburg Fish Pot' - a delicious dish of fish, prawns, bacon and roast potatoes
– followed by 'Grandma's Christmas Pancakes' with cherry sauce and ice cream.
Between rain showers we go for a brisk walk to the National Park Information Centre, next to Palmse Manor, which has extensive
exhibitions on the flora, fauna, history and geology of this forested coastal
area and a free film-show, as well as selling a detailed map of walking and
cycling paths. The little Pood (village shop), opposite the Information
Centre, is open although the building is crumbling away. In fact the stork's
nest on its chimney looks more secure! Outside the shop a woman in a
traditional long striped woollen skirt, topped by a modern fleece jacket, has a
stall selling hand-knitted hats and gloves to a few passengers from the coach party
visiting Palmse Manor, one of several 17thC Baroque manor houses in the area.
In the 19thC they were renovated in classical style with landscaped parks. See www.palmse.ee/en
On our last day the weather is dry after lunch. With
no intention of paying €7 each to view the interior of the restored Palmse
Manor, we take the camera for a walk behind the grand house in the woods, where
there are three marked trails: the Lords' Walk (blue 2.5 km), the Ladies' Walk
(red 1.5 km) and the Young Ladies Walk' (yellow 1 km). Our walk (yellow arrows)
takes us alongside the incredibly still mirror-like water of a small ornamental
lake and past a remarkable group of giant erratic boulders, brought with
Continental Ice from present-day Finland. Lahemaa is the area most densely
strewn with erratics in Northern Europe, some of them millions of years old.
Above all, it's good to talk at length with our
hosts, who both have fluent English. Dieter shows us his new wood-pellet fired
furnace, which efficiently heats the house and restaurant. We learn much about
life and business in Estonia, a leader in technology compared with the UK.
There is free fast WiFi in all public places (including buses) and voting in
local or national elections is done on-line from home, indeed it was the first
country to allow this, in 2007. And Skype was originally developed by Estonian programmers
in Tallinn!
Click: magbazpictures.com/palmse-restaurant--camping
Palmse to Saka Cliff Hotel & Camping, Saka Manor, Ida-Viru County –
54 miles
Camping open 1 May-31
Oct. www.saka.ee/en/camping-caravan/ €15 inc elec, hot
showers, free WiFi. No kitchen or laundry.
N 59.438889 E 27.191667
It's time to leave as Julia and Dieter are
preparing to close for a well-earned holiday in Crete. There are hugs all round
as they present us with a freshly baked loaf and a box of chocolates 'for the
road'.
Back on rd 1/E20 we continue east through the rain,
turning off at 14 miles on rd 23 for Rakvere, the capital of Lääne-Viru County.
At the large shopping mall we pass, the car park is occupied by a circus
complete with big top and caravans! We manage to stop in a side road to shop at
Remi, a large store with everything we need from a plump roast chicken to some
new underwear!
In the centre of Rakvere at 20 miles we park near the
hilltop Linnus (castle) built by the Danes in the 14thC and much
restored in 2004: www.rakverelinnus.ee/en. It's next to a
massive sculpture of a bull, or rather an aurochs (an extinct long-horned wild
ox), erected in 2002 to commemorate the city's 700th anniversary. We linger
over lunch, hoping to walk up to the castle, but the downpour continues and we
decide to drive on, rejoining rd 1/E20 eastwards.
We turn off 32 miles later on a very narrow road
for a final 2 miles past Aa village to Saka Manor, an estate perched high on
the limestone cliffs of the coast known as the Baltic Glint. There is a large
empty grass area for camping in front of the Saka Cliff Hotel and Spa, where a
coach party is just arrived. Pushing my way through the crowd and climbing over
wheeled suitcases to get to the Reception desk, I check in and pay €5 deposit
for the key to the camping facilities in a wooden cabin, clean and modern
though unheated.
The new arrivals gather outside the hotel to raise
a flag on one of the three tall poles. I learn that it's a weekend conference
for a new organisation to help children in need. Behind the Saka Cliff Hotel
and Spa is a more luxurious hotel and banqueting hall, Saka Manor House. The
cliff top is dominated by a Soviet-era watchtower, with an outside spiral staircase
for visitors who don't suffer from vertigo.
We settle in to a roast chicken dinner, followed by
'Midsomer Murders' in English on the local TV! Little do we know that the
Children in Needers plan a late night party in the watchtower's ground floor Seminar
Room, with music until 3 am. Boom boom …
At Saka Cliff Hotel & Camping, Saka Manor
Next morning, noticing that the door to the watchtower
is ajar, we venture in, hoping to climb the inside stairs. They are blocked off
but the debris of last night's party is strewn all over the Seminar Room: glasses,
plates, empty bottles and beer cans, as well as unopened bags of crisps and
nibbles and a 3-litre box of red wine. We admit to giving some of this a good
home! Earlier we saw a vagrant looking in the campsite rubbish bins but he has
gone, unaware of the bounty in the watchtower!
We brave the cold wind to explore the extensive grounds of Saka Manor. A path along the cliff top is signed 0.5 km to a
'waterfall' with steps down to the beach. In fact the waterfall proves to be a
trickle and the extremely steep wooden steps look worn and dangerous. Returning
on different paths we come across a geological display of errant boulders and
an area called Bunker Hill, with two small German bunkers from WW2. Between
1950 and 1992 the Manor was a Russian border post and the stone monument that
stood at the entrance is still there, its red star and Soviet map removed.
Near the watchtower we find safer access to the
small beach below the cliffs, thanks to an award-winning metal staircase and
boardwalk built in 2007. We have time to count the 234 steps on the way back
up!
Click: magbazpictures.com/saka-cliff-manor
Saka to Kure Turismitalu Guesthouse & Camperstop, Tartu, Tartu
County – 97 miles
Open all year.
www.kuretalu.ee Overnight parking €18 inc elec, WC, good free WiFi. Shower
€2. No kitchen. Laundry wash & dry €8.
N 58.40606 E 26.61278
On
a wet, cold, windy Sunday morning we accept that it's time to migrate south for
the winter. After driving 3 miles via Saka village, we meet rd 1/E20 with a
lovely view of the shale oil mine and slag heaps and continue southeast towards
Johvi for 5 miles before turning south on rd 93.
Following
signs for rd 3 to Tartu, the landscape is one of flat fields grazed by cattle,
the crops already harvested, the stork nests empty. As we bypass Johvi we are
stopped at a police breathalyser check for all traffic, including trucks - and
it's not yet 11 am! Teetotal Barry passes easily.
At
Rannapungerja the road turns west along the shore of Lake Peipsi, the fifth
largest in Europe, straddling the Russian border. We pass a couple of kiosks
selling fresh or smoked fish from the vast grey lake, glimpsed through the
trees when we park in a layby for lunch. An aged market gardener sits in the
rain, his stall laden with potatoes, onions and pumpkins.
Rd
3 leaves the lake at Raja and continues south to Tartu, Estonia's second city, a
religious and spiritual centre with the country's best university. After
crossing the Emajogi River in Tartu at about 90 miles, we take rd 2, signed for
Tallinn. The entrance drive to the guesthouse/camperstop is 5 miles along on
the left.
Arriving
in heavy rain at 3 pm, we park on one of the 4 overpriced places on a
camperstop in the immaculate garden of the guesthouse. A hook-up and use of a
toilet is included (showers extra, no kitchen). The Russian woman in charge
does allow me to use the laundry in her basement for a concession, provided
that I remove my shoes and don a pair of her slippers while she guards the
place, following me round. Quite unnerving! No other guests arrive.
The
local TV news shows the police checkpoint we went through earlier – part of a
national campaign against drunk driving. We also watch 'France 24', which has
world news in English, and later we find Midsomer Murders and Doc Martin (both
in English) for light entertainment!
INTO LATVIA Note that: 1. Latvia is an EU member and the currency is now
the Euro (at the time €1.12 = £1). 2. Latvia is in the same time zone as
Finland/Estonia (2 hrs ahead of the UK). 3. There are no motorway or road tolls for
vehicles up to 3.5 tons. Since July 2014, drivers of vehicles over 3.5 tons and
designed to carry goods by road need to buy an electronic vignette. This
applies to commercial vehicles and not to motorhomes. www.lvvignette.eu/ 4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at all times
(even in summer). 5. Diesel €1.094 (under £1) per
litre at the time. Tartu, Estonia to Caravanpark/Camperstop Rukisi, Rugaji, Latgale,
Latvia – 143 miles Open all year. www.rugaji.lv/pages/rukisi.html Overnight parking
€15 inc elec, WC. No hot water in low season. No kitchen. No internet. N 56.991235
E 27.130193 It's still pouring down as we drive south from
Tartu on the extremely busy rd 2/E263, with many roundabouts before we are
clear of Estonia's second city. After 49 miles rd 2 bypasses east of the centre
of Vöru, then continues south on its quiet way through the forest, at a height
of 190 m/630 ft. To our right, hidden in the distant Haanja National Park, lies
the highest point in the three Baltic States: Suur Munamägi (Great Egg
Hill) at an unimpressive 318 m or 1,050 ft. At 69 miles we reach the junction with rd 7/E77, near
the point where Estonia, Latvia and Russia meet. Turning east for 2 miles to
see the Russian frontier, we reach the large customs holding park for trucks,
beyond which there are serious barriers. The only way is to return west along
rd 7/E77, entering Latvia at 84 miles with no formalities. We thank the EU and
the Eurozone for making this journey so much easier. The first time we drove
through the three Baltic Republics in 1999, each of the borders took at least two hours to negotiate with exit and entry stations each with their own procedures, separated by a no-mans-land. IN LATVIA The E77 goes to Riga but, having visited that
capital more than once, we turn off after 25 bumpy Latvian miles onto the minor road
P39 to Alüksne. With nowhere to park in the town, we continue south on P43,
which is equally rough. The roads are lined by autumnal trees, cow pastures and
humble dwellings: Latvia clearly remains less prosperous than Estonia. At 124
miles we park in a muddy layby for lunch, then on through Balvi to the village
of Rugaji, where we fill up with diesel. A mile later we turn left along a 1-km
unpaved pot-holed road to the signed 'Caravanpark', listed in the Bordatlas.
It's a gravel parking area with about 10 places and hook-ups outside a locked
wooden hostelry and holiday cabins. The place looks abandoned but a young man from a
nearby house soon comes across through the rain to turn on the water, unlock
the WC and take an excessive €15. Out of season there are very few facilities
for a motorhome and no hot water. We
are by one of a series of small fishing lakes with children's play areas and
picnic tables, obviously popular in the summer when the hostelry is open. Now
it is all cold, grey and marshy but it's been a long wet day and we are glad to
have found a safe place for the night. INTO LITHUANIA Note that: 1. Lithuania is an EU member and the currency is
now the Euro (at the time €1.11 = £1). 2. Lithuania is in the same time zone as
Finland/Estonia/Latvia (2 hrs ahead of the UK). 3. There are no motorway or road tolls for
vehicles up to 3.5 tons. The vignette for vehicles over 3.5 tons applies only
to buses, coaches and trucks – not motorhomes. 4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at all times
(even in summer). 5. Diesel cost €1.049 (under £1) per
litre. Rugaji, Latvia to Camping Degesa,
Salakas, NE Lithuania – 131 miles Open all year. www.degesa.lt Overnight parking
€10 inc elec, WC, hot shower. No kitchen. No internet. N 55.572298
E 26.156058 Next morning is still cold and grey but at
least it isn't raining as we return along the pot-holed lane to Rugaji, south
on rd P45 for 4 miles, then left onto the smoother rd P36 to Rezekne. The
forest is cleared in places for arable and cattle farming, a scene of flooded
fields and empty stork nests. On the north side of Rezekne we cross railway
tracks and pass derelict factories and grim Soviet block housing. In the town's
central square, at 38 miles, stands a statue that was twice destroyed by the Russians
in the 1940s, restored in 1992. The inscription means 'United Latvia'.
Continuing past a pleasant area of park land, we soon join the A13/E262 and
continue south for Daugavpils, parking for lunch in a layby at 72 miles. 20 miles further we reach Daugavpils (=
Castle on the Daugava), Latvia's second city famed for its prison and busy with
trams and traffic. We manage to slip off the A3 dual carriageway that runs
through the centre to park at a large Rimi store for supplies. Then, after
crossing a bridge over the Daugava (a wide river linking Riga with Russia), we
take the wrong exit from a roundabout and fail to join A13 for the Lithuanian
border! Blame the SatNav (exit 1 or 2 would be good, but not the recommended
exit 3). Finding no way through, we eventually return to the roundabout and
(counter-intuitively) go north, signed Riga, to get onto the A13 running
southwest to Lithuania. It is signed 'Meduni', a tiny village that is the last
in Latvia! By now it's raining again and the highway is busy with trucks and
road works. We do not have good memories of Daugavpils – and not just because
of the crumbling grey housing. IN
LITHUANIA We cross the border from Latvia to Lithuania
at 116 miles, again without a pause, on the A13, now designated A6/E262.
Zarasai, the large lakeside border town, has a campsite that had closed at the
end of September. Eight miles later we turn left onto rd 179 for 5 miles to the tiny
village of Salakas, then another 2 miles to the obscure entrance of a holiday
complex by Lake Luodis. Once again, as we arrive at a seemingly
deserted site in the pouring rain, a man appears to show us where to park and
plug in, indicating that we have the use of a WC/shower in the cold basement of
the closed hotel. The only English he knows is 'Ten Euros', repeated several
times before we produce a note and he disappears. Amazingly, the site is listed
by ACSI as Open All Year! I do not bother to review it; there is no internet
and it's been another long hard day.
INTO
POLAND Note that 1. Poland is an EU member and the
currency is the Zloty (PLN). Current exchange rate is approx 5 PLN=£1, or 4 PLN=€1.
Some businesses accept cash in Euros, some don't, but card payment is widely
available. 2. Poland is in the Central European Time
zone (so 1 hr ahead of the UK). Put clocks back an hour if arriving from
Lithuania. 3. Vehicles up to 3.5 tons pay tolls at
toll booths along some major roads and motorways (in Euros, Zloty or by bank
card). For vehicles over 3.5 tons, including motorhomes or car+caravan above
this weight, there is an electronic ViaToll system (similar to Austria's
'Go Box'). See www.tolls.eu/poland 4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at
all times (even in summer). 5. Diesel
costs around 4.5 PLN (under £1) a litre. Salakas, Lithuania to Zajazd
'Private' Camping, Suwalki, Poland – 190 miles Fully open 1 May-30 Oct (Parking + elec only off-season,
without water.) www.private.firmy.suwalki.pl PLN 60 inc elec
and WC/shower. Good free internet. Fill of water PLN 10; chemical toilet
emptying PLN 5, even for paying campers!!
N 54.092994 E 22.937053 It is still raining, though a touch warmer, as we return through Salakas
on rd 179 to rejoin the A6/E262, which will take us southwest through to Kaunas,
Lithuania's second city and the interwar capital during the years that Vilnius (60
miles or so to the east) was in Polish hands. Autumn is
keeping up with us, gilding the landscape as we go. After 25 miles in Utena we
pass a shiny new Lidl store but can't easily turn in. The German chain has
recently reached the larger towns of Lithuania and advertises on the local TV. At
the next town, Ukmerge, the A6 ring road bypasses the centre and we continue,
pausing in a café layby for a break at Silai, shortly before Kaunas. We also hope to avoid the centre of this sprawling historic university
city but the entrance to the A1 motorway/ring road is blocked off for road works.
Nothing for it but to drive through the traffic of the badly signed city centre
and across the Nemunas River until, with relief, we eventually join the A5/E67
dual carriageway signed for Marijampole and the Polish border. But the A5 soon
reverts to a 2-lane road, quite inadequate for the amount of traffic and trucks
of all nations. This is the 'Via Baltica', the only main road linking Poland
and Lithuania (and thence Latvia and Estonia) without traversing Russian
territory. The highway does at least bypass the large town of Marijampole (25 miles
before the border). After the last Lithuanian town, Kalvarija (named after the
17thC Catholic shrine there), the road is lined with countless fuel stations
and TIR-parks for trucks, stretching to the Polish frontier. IN POLAND We enter Poland at 173 miles, through the double-border checkpoint at
Budzisko, without even stopping! Putting our watches back one hour, it's only 3
pm, the sun is out and the rain has stopped. Feeling happier, we continue south
on E67 (Polish rd 8) for 13 miles to the Swiss Bar restaurant/truck stop, an
old favourite for food and shelter. A tasty substantial meal of pork schnitzel
with mushroom or cheese sauce, salad, chips and a soft drink each costs a total
of 49 PLN (about €12), paid by card as we have no Zloty. Sadly, they have run
out of apple pie! We have on occasion parked here overnight for a small charge
(WC and shower available) but it does get very noisy and we are ready for a
good rest after three long days of driving from Estonia. Just another 5 miles into the first town, Suwalki, where the excellent
new Osir-Eurocamping site we found 2 years ago has already closed for winter. The
alternative is the Private (very private) guesthouse with basic camping and gloomy
cabins in its garden. Even with a SatNav it proves difficult to find, just off
rd 655 to the west of the main road in a narrow one-way street. Although we had already telephoned from the Swiss Bar to check that the
site was open, we arrive at a high security electric gate. Nobody answers the
intercom and we are about to return to the truck stop when the gate slides open.
The strange owner, a short-tempered woman called Jan with an abrupt use of a
little English, comes out to indicate exactly where we may park in the empty
garden. There is a WC/shower in a cold draughty shed and an outdoor washing-up
sink. She points to a price list, with dumping or water-filling an extra (!),
and says her son will come tomorrow morning to turn all water off as it might
freeze. We dutifully use the hot shower at once, as instructed. At Zajazd 'Private' Camping,
Suwalki Next morning it is not freezing, Jan is not around and her son does not
appear! At least the WiFi works well, so we catch up with correspondence and
listen to BBC Radio 4. Taking an afternoon walk into the town, we find an ATM
for Polish currency, then spend some of it on eggs and bread at 'Biedronka' (=
Ladybird), a Polish supermarket chain with a ladybird emblem. There is also a
Lidl in Suwalki but it's further away and our walk is curtailed when it starts
to rain. Back at our Private Stalag, both the pedestrian and vehicle
gates are firmly locked. Jan eventually answers the intercom and lets us in,
muttering that she didn't know we were out. We didn't know we needed a permit. In the evening we enjoy a DVD film 'Almost Famous' (2000) about a
fictitious rock group, Stillwater, touring the USA. It's so believable that we
have to check on-line whether they really exist! On our next (and final) day it is much colder, windy, wet and grey.
Jan, who spends most of the day gardening in the rain, still insists that her
son is coming to turn the water off. It doesn't happen! We spend time planning
and phone the next four campsites along our route, using a mixture of English
and German. I do learn that the Polish for No is Nie, while Yes is Tak
(confusing, as that word means Thank You in Danish, Swedish and Norwegian,
with which I'm more familiar!) When I go to pay for 3 nights, Jan wants to know how many times we have
emptied the chemical toilet (honest answer: one) and whether we filled our
water tank (no). She then adds 8 PLN to the total, until I take her outside to
look at the price list stating 5 PLN per WC emptying! She grumbles that her
husband (who is gone) must have changed it and reluctantly alters the bill. The
site is not in ACSI (no surprise there) but I am so annoyed that I take the
unusual step of reviewing it on Google: 'Camping for motorhome with electric and
WiFi. So securely locked in, it was difficult to get out and return (even on
foot). Only one shower/WC for each gender, in a cold cabin. Extra cost for filling with water (PLN 10)
and for emptying chemical toilet (PLN 5). Owner tried to overcharge at the end
until I pointed to price list displayed. Not at all friendly, but convenient
for Suwalki at times when the much better Euro-Camp is closed.' I
calm down in the evening, over a plate of home-made spag bol with a glug of red
wine from the Estonian Saka Manor, followed by some excellent cake from the Rimi
store in Latvian Daugavpils. International cuisine!
Suwalki to Camping U-Michala, Bialowieza
National Park – 140 miles Fully open 1 May-1 Oct (Parking + elec only off-season,
without water.) Bialowieza Forest PLN 60 (cash) inc elec and WC/shower. No internet. N 52.69395
E 23.83088 Still raining as we drive 4 miles through Suwalki to join rd 8/E67,
then onto S61, a new dual carriageway lasting for 7 miles until it rejoins rd 8
before Augustow. Continuing south through dripping forest, there are warning
signs – Uwaga – for deer and elk. We find the many lorries a bigger
hazard. At 80 miles we hit Bialystok, a large city with far too many
roundabouts, traffic lights, buses and trucks. The E67 turns southwest for
Warsaw but we follow rd 19 south, signed Lublin. As we leave the city, we take
a break on the parking area of a large cemetery, where the flower stalls are
doing good business on this Saturday morning. Poland is strongly Roman
Catholic, with many roadside crucifixes and well-tended graveyards, but as we
continue down the eastern flank we begin to see Orthodox churches as well. In Bielski Podlaski at 108 miles the Lidl shop,
directly on rd 19, is a good place to park for lunch. There are already Christmas
goodies in-store (in mid-October) but we don't turn down a Stollen cake! After
another couple of miles we take the minor rd 689, east towards the border with
Belarus. After the small town of Hajnowka, with a big new Orthodox church, the
road narrows and goes through the Bialowieski National Park (established 1932).
The entrance is marked by a statue of a Zubr or European Bison (as seen
on Zubrowka Vodka). Stately
golden-leaved trees frame the road. The National Park is part of Bialowieza Forest, a UNESCO Biosphere
Reserve straddling the Belarusian border: one of the last and largest remnants
of the immense primeval forest that once stretched across the European Plain. The
extensive forest is now home to 800 European bison, Europe's heaviest land
animal, their numbers having recovered since being hunted to the verge of extinction
during the First World War. See Guardian article for more on these magnificent beasts. A rough lane to the
left leads 1 km to the Bison Reserve, where we have previously seen Zubr among many other protected forest
species. Today our aim is a delightful little
campsite, two miles further on the right, a mile before the border village of
Bialowieza. We remember the friendly old owners who live on-site from our stay
7 years ago (where did the years go?) but now the woman is left alone. She is
out when we arrive but has left the gate and the toilets open for us; her two
cats sleep peacefully in a box on the porch. The camping lawn looks soft after so
much rain but with nobody else in residence we park on the concrete path. After
a dinner of home-made burgers, we eat the last of a memorable 600g box of
small assorted cakes from Rimi in Daugavpils, made by www.sweethouse.eu back in Latvia. The box says 'Be Our
Guest – Sweethouse – We create sweets against sadness'! It works: we feel
happy! At Camping U-Michala,
Bialowieza National Park Next morning I have a long chat with our gentle host, who speaks
German. She explains that yesterday her daughter took her to the doctor in Hajnowka and then home for tea. Despite the
campsite being 'closed', she switches the water on for hot showers. Luckily
it's not freezing yet, or all water would be turned off. In fact it is sunny
today but sadly the washing machine in the garage is not working. She tells me
how she and her husband came here after the Second World War when folk were
being encouraged to re-settle the border zone. They planted the trees and built
the guesthouse and camping from scratch. After lunch we walk into Bialowieza village, over
the foot-bridge and up to Palace Park, observing the extent to which tourism
has developed since we came here in 2010. In addition to the Nature and Forest Museum,
there is a new hotel and restaurant on the site of the 19thC Russian Tsar's
hunting lodge. The Museum looks busy with a school party and is soon to close
(at 4 pm), so we don't buy a ticket. A glorious sunset is a good portent of a
change in the weather. Cycling 25 km: The following day is indeed fine for cycling and, with the loan of a detailed local map in English,
we set off in the autumn sunshine. First we ride 4 km to the Bison Reserve but
find it closed (Monday), desp ite being 'Open Every Day' (the photograph on the right was taken when we visited in 2010). A big new information
centre/ticket office/café is under construction and a workman tells us the
Reserve will be open tomorrow. The muddy pot-holed lane from the main road also
needs attention if they are to attract coach parties!
A car arrives with another
two would-be visitors and we have a fascinating talk with Adam & Heather
from Suffolk, who are staying in the village. Adam's father came from this area
but, unable to return to Soviet Poland after serving in the Free Polish Navy in
WW2, he settled and married in England. Adam's grandfather had worked on the
reintroduction of the Bison to the forest, after the last one was hunted down
in 1919! They now plan to return tomorrow to visit the Reserve, which we cycled
round in 2010.
Riding nort hwards from the Reserve along boggy
forest tracks, we eventually meet the back road via Pogorzelce village to
Bialowieza. Along the way stands a new wooden bird-watching tower overlooking
the territory of the Lesser Spotted Eagle but the birds have already flown,
perhaps to Turkey. Pausing to climb the tower, we meet a Dutch family on
holiday with two small boys, armed with camera and binoculars. The Dad, a
naturalist, points out a large colourful butterfly (English name unknown) and a
multitude of ladybirds.
In Bialowieza we cycle past the foot-bridge and
on to
the renovated railway station, dating from 1903 when the Tsar's hunting party
would come by train. A little further on, in the heart of the village, there
are both Catholic and Orthodox churches, a Sicilian pizza café and the '1929
Restaurant' which is closed. Feeling hungry, we return past the foot-bridge and
call at the Pokusa Restaurant, as recommended by our host, opposite the Zubrowka
Hotel (formerly a Best Western). With the bicycles safely stowed in the garden,
the charming Pokusa proves an excellent choice for a late lunch, serving
specialities like boar, venison – and bison!
.JPG)
Conservative (though only where
food is concerned), we order chicken breasts with vegetable-stuffed pancakes,
followed by orange cheesecake and blackcurrant sauce. Magic, at a very
reasonable price.
Before returning to camp, we ride a final 5 km each
way on the lonely road to Grucki village and the Belarusian frontier, where we
must turn back, though in summer it may be possible to cross with a pre-booked
guided tour on a day-visa. What an interesting day! I am happy to recommend
the site on ACSI:
'Very helpful German-speaking owner. She lent
us a map of the village and the forest that was useful for cycling around the
area. Peaceful little campsite behind her house, with clean WC and showers and
hot water for washing up. No internet. Very convenient to visit Bison Reserve (4 km)
or the Bialowieza Forest Centre in the park in the village. Excellent meal at
Pokusa Restaurant, a short walk away. Beautiful area for walking or cycling'.
Click: magbazpictures.com/bialowieza-forest
Bialowieza to Hotel & Camping Wodnik, Firlej – 133 miles Open Easter-31 Oct
& over Christmas/New Year. www.wodnikfirlej.pl PLN 50 inc elec, WC/shower in hotel. Free
WiFi throughout. No kitchen. N 51.54852 E 22.51523
A return drive through the Bialowieza National Park for 11 miles to
Hajnowka, where we park at Biedronka supermarket to use the Polski Bank ATM
over the road. Then on to Bielski
Podlaski and a visit to Lidl before driving south on rd 19. The autumnal forest
is cleared in places, replaced by flat misty fields. There is considerable
controversy over logging in the area beyond the National Park boundary. At 61
miles, making lunch in a layby beyond Siemiatycze at 2.30 pm, it is a warm
sunny 20°C outside.
As we continue south we cross the River Bug, which
rises in the Ukraine and flows for some 500 miles to its confluence with the River
Narew, and thence the Vistula/Wisla (Poland's longest river, on which Krakow
and Warsaw are sited). Since 1945, about 125 miles of the Bug mark the border
between Poland to the west, and Ukraine and Belarus to the east. It remains
notorious for the three extermination camps that the Germans located along the
Polish River Bug under 'Operation Reinhard': Sobibor, Belzec and Treblinka. We
have visited them all and the very name 'Bug' on the bridge makes us shiver.
Further down rd 19 we pass Radzyn Podlaski (where we
once spent a night on a good TIR truck park) and continue, past Kock on a short
new bypass , then to Firlej. It's easy to miss the entrance to the Wodnik Hotel
and camping field, hidden among trees on the left soon after passing the small
town, but we've been here before on our way to Lublin.
The helpful young manager in the Hotel Reception welcomes
us to the adjacent empty camping field. It's an unkempt relic of the Soviet
era, with tiny huts, crumbling facilities and very few electric hook-ups, but
in a lovely position alongside the lake. Now in private family ownership, the campsite
facilities are closed for renovation but Martin hands over the key to a hotel
room to use the shower. We get on well with him: his fiancée is called Margaret
and he is keen to practise his English. The campsite is being gradually
refurbished with a promise of modern facilities. The hotel does look much
better than on our previous two visits, clean and cared for, with new carpets
and paintwork. It has a sauna/solarium, conference room, billiards,
restaurant/dance floor (all open weekends only off-season) and new WiFi, which
also works across the campsite.
Once settled in, with a long lead to the
electricity, we have a quick Lidl pizza for supper.
At Hotel & Camping Wodnik,
Firlej
Next morning it's another beautiful autumn day,
ideal for a ride round Lake Firlej. The foot/cycle path around the perimeter is
only 3 km, so we complete it 3 times (twice anti-clockwise, once clockwise for
variety!) On the last circuit we have a look at the village of Firlej, with its
shop, church, cemetery, doctor, pharmacy and fire station. The fire brigade are
busy using their ladder for repair work on the roof of an old building. The
lake is very quiet, just a lone fisherman on the shore and a single sailing
boat on the water, while the cafés, children's playgrounds, boat hire and windsailing
school are all closed. We assume Firlej is a popular destination in summer,
with the city of Lublin less than 30 miles south down the main road.
Later, checking over the motorhome, we notice a
large chip in the cover of one rear light cluster. Barry's temporary fix, with
superglue and a piece of red plastic cut from a cycle reflector, works well.
We do enjoy the luxury of hot showers in a warm
hotel room, while Martin expresses more regret that the camp facilities are
closed. Absolutely no need for apologies: it is in fact a bonus, as described
in my Google review:
'Campsite next to
hotel is very insecure, with few electric points and no facilities. On the
positive side, the WiFi works well and the helpful English-speaking manager
gave us a key to use the shower and WC in a hotel room. Restaurant only open
weekends off-season. Lovely position by the lake, ideal for walking or cycling
round. A useful stop-over on the road to or from Lublin.'
Firlej
via Sobibor to Karczma (= Inn) u Jedrka, Wlodawa – 85 miles
Open
all year 9 am-9 pm. Jedrka Free overnight parking at Inn. Good restaurant
(see link to Jedrka). WC inside. No internet. N 51.55582 E 23.52687
We
can't see Lake Firlej through the mist as we set off south down rd 19 on a very
still morning. With no wish to revisit Lublin and its Majdanek Concentration
Camp, after bypassing Lubartow we turn off on the quiet rd 829 to Leczna. It
follows the River Wieprz through a series of tiny villages, each with a church
and large graveyard from a time of greater rural population. In Spiczyn a
couple of market stalls sell clothes, shoes and flowers. At Leczna, a small bustling
town with Tesco and Lidl stores, we join rd 82 east to Cycow, where the road
turns northeast on its lonely way to Wlodawa.
This
city on the banks of the River Bug (where it forms the Polish border with
Belarus, and the Ukraine immediately to the south) has an inescapable and
palpable history. Placed as it was between the German and Russian fronts, with
a sizeable Jewish population, it is only 10 miles from the Sobibor extermination
camp.
On
the way into Wlodawa there is a generous car park at Lidl, by the roundabout at
the junction of rds 82 and 812, across from a modern Catholic church. Here, at
63 miles, we break for lunch and shopping before turning south on rd 812. After
a mile or so, and a fill of diesel, we enter the open gates of Camping Astur on
the left by the small Lake Okuninka. Though listed by ACSI as open to 31
October, it was closed when we came two years ago, so we've taken the
precaution of phoning ahead: 'Yes, open'. A couple of workmen, speaking only
Polish or Russian, are no help at all; the electric boxes are wrapped up for
winter; the facilities locked and nobody else to be found!
Giving
up, we continue down rd 812, looking out for the left turn (5 miles south of
the Lidl roundabout) onto the very minor rd 816. It leads for 5 bumpy miles through
Sobiborski Forest via the tiny settlement of Duzy Slobek to the Sobibor Camp
Memorial Site, hard against the railway tracks at Sobibor station. A memorial
wall stands on the right, opposite the siding where prisoners were unloaded
from the cattle trucks under the pretence that they were in transit to the
Ukraine. This purpose-built extermination camp saw the mass murder of 250,000
men, women and children (mainly Polish and Dutch Jews) who were asphyxiated
with carbon monoxide between May 1942 and Oct 1943.
The
Memorial Site is officially closed at present, as a new museum and car park are being built (due to open 2020). We talk to a group of young archaeologists
working on a long roadside excavation outside the main gates and their foreman
gives us permission for a quick visit. We know our way, having spent a night right
here in October 2010 and revisited in 2015. We follow the Lane of Remembrance
through the woods - the route along which tens of thousands of victims were
herded, straight from the railway sidings to the gas chambers (disguised as
'disinfection baths'), now marked by a Soviet-era monument. The Germans had
named this path Himmelfahrtstrasse (Ascension to Heaven Street). The
'gas' was simply the exhaust from a fixed diesel engine, which took at least 20
minutes to complete its deadly task. Beyond the site of the gas chambers stands
a huge tumulus, a symbolic mound of ashes on the mass grave site, now covered
in fresh white stones. There was no crematorium here; the corpses were buried
in mass graves or burnt in the open, the ashes dumped in holes in the forest.
.JPG) In
October 1943 an uprising took place, with a mass escape of up to 300 prisoners,
though less than 50 survived the War, including Thomas Toivi Blatt. This
incident led to the immediate liquidation of the camp, in an attempt to hide
the evidence. On the 60th anniversary of the revolt in 2003 the Dutch
Government sponsored renovation work at the Sobibor site, including the Lane of
Remembrance. Dutch Jews had formed the second largest contingent brought here
to be killed, along with others from Czechoslovakia, Germany, Austria, France,
the Soviet Union, Belgium, Romania, Hungary – the whole of occupied Europe. The
Lane is lined with boulders, each recalling the names and details of a family
murdered here, with a personal inscription from relatives, mainly from the
Netherlands. The wife and family of Leon Feldhendler, one of the leaders of the
uprising who escaped, are commemorated on one such stone. After
walking along the fateful railway line to the tiny station (still apparently serving
two trains a day between Wlodawa and Chelm), we photograph the statue which has
been temporarily moved from the Camp Memorial Site entrance. A man emerges from
the building works office to see what we are up to, introduces himself as Head
of Security and has a long interesting talk with us. We are certainly in
agreement about the miracle of the European Union.
Click: magbazpictures.com/sobibor-extermination-camp
Then
we return to Wlodawa, hoping that the 'Karczma u Jedrka' inn which we found two
years ago (on rd 812 one mile northwest of the Lidl roundabout) is still open.
The road is in a terrible state but, to our relief, we are once again welcome
to park overnight. After a hearty meal of Chicken Kiev followed by apple pie or
cheesecake with ice cream, we are joined on the lorry park by 3 logging trucks.
When we wake early next morning, they are already gone. My Google review:
'A cosy inn serving good food, nicely
presented. Convenient for visiting Wlodawa. It also has a large free car park
where we were welcome to spend the night in our motorhome - a real bonus.'
Wlodawa
to Camping Duet, Zamosc – 67 miles
Open
all year. Camp
Duet PLN 74 inc elec and very basic
facilities. No kitchen. Good free WiFi. N
50.71919 E 23.23908
Leavi ng
the motorhome parked at Lidl, we walk into and around Wlodawa, still promoted
as the 'City of Three Cultures' (Jewish, Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox).
The slender towers of its Baroque RC church stand proud above the river, near
the onion domes of the imposing Orthodox temple. The Synagogue, however, no
longer has a Kahal (the community that dated back to 1525). In
spasmodic bursts, the Germans transported the entire Jewish population of the
city, together with its last Rabbi, to the death camps of Sobibor and Belzec,
further down the River Bug. Wlodawa was then proudly declared the first city in
Poland to be completely Judenrein (cleansed of Jews). The Synagogue
buildings (their treasures, furnishings and cemetery destroyed) were then used
as German military storehouses.
Just
off the Rynek (main square, with the usual heroic Communist-era concrete
statue) stand the two18th century Synagogue buildings that are now part of the Leczynsko-Wlodawskie Lakeland Museum. As
we arrive at the 10 am opening time, a very helpful custodian appears from the
administration building with a bunch of keys. She opens the two doors to the
Big Synagogue, puts the lights on and takes 12 PLN each for entry tickets. Photography is
allowed and she particularly points out the Baroque altar-piece in the main
sanctuary, one of the finest in Poland, which contains the Aron ha-Kodesh (Ark) where the Torah was kept. She has no English, we have no words.
The
photo graphs on display fill us with overwhelming sadness. There are many black
& white images of the city and its substantial Jewish population in the
1930's and it is heart-breaking to realise that all these smiling children and
worthy adults were soon to die. The Great Synagogue has been beautifully
restored (completed in 1990), with all the cult objects and holy books of this
ancient and pious religion on display. Meticulously carved wooden figures
inhabit the religious schoolroom. The upper women's prayer rooms contain a
display of art, among which the wry wooden figures of Jewish elders, carved by
modern local sculptor, Jan Pawloski, are particularly haunting.
Our
friendly guide leads us on to the adjacent Small Synagogue. The meeting room
downs tairs preserves faded Hebrew texts on the walls, while the upper floors
house art exhibitions, a section devoted to the long history of the city and
the region, and an ethnographic museum with local costumes, weaving looms,
fishing nets and traps, a boat made from a tree trunk etc, all beautifully
displayed. The only visitors, we are left alone there for as long as we wish.
There
are several publications on sale in different languages. On our previous visit
we purchased 'From the Ashes of Sobibor', a book by Thomas Toivi Blatt. This
memoir of a survivor of Sobibor (where Thomas was taken at age 15 along with
his family, who all perished there) was finally published by
the Wlodawa Museum in 2008, with the support of the Chancellery
of the President of Poland. It makes grimly informed reading. Today we buy an
excellent illustrated booklet in English, 'The Complex of Synagogue Buildings
in Wlodawa', price 8 PLN. We will be haunted by its translation of six verses
written by Jakow Rozenblat in Tel Aviv in 1945. Here is an excerpt:
“My Little Town Wlodawa rooted by the Bug
River …
Serenity disappeared, silence and peace.
Ghetto supported with wires, Signs of agony
of last Jews …
Sobibor spread ashes, dust. Elders, mothers and children
Burned at stake, my little town plundered …”
Click: magbazpictures.com/wlodawa-synagogue
From
the Synagogues we walk down to the bank of the infamous River Bug, where there
is no longer a ferry or bridge, no crossing point to Belarus or the
Ukraine. Life in Wlodawa does continue but no Jews have returned.
Back
in the motorhome, we drive south down rd 812 past the turning for Sobibor and
on through the forest. A couple of mushroom sellers sit by the roadside, the
fungi laid out on the bonnet of their car. Reaching the larger town of Chelm we
are suddenly returned to the 21st century, with signs for McDonalds and KFC. Rd
812 takes us southwest, with a lunch break at 44 miles in a car park at
Siennica Nadolna. At Krasnystaw we join
the busier rd 17/E372 (from Lublin) and head south in a grey drizzle, outside
temperature a chilly 12°C.
As
we pass Izbica railway station we recall Thomas Toivi Blatt's lines: “I was
born in Izbica in 1927 and spent my childhood there … For me it was the centre
of the world.” It was a shtetl or small Jewish town, many of whose
population made their last journey on the trains to Sobibor. Now it's a quiet
village of sad memories.
Approaching
Zamosc some 10 miles later, we turn right onto rd 74. Duet Camping is 3 miles
along, on the right of the highway next to an unappealing Chinese Restaurant. The over-priced and privately owned site is
old and worn, with the most basic of facilities, but at least it provides a
safe place for the night with electricity and WiFi. I add the only ACSI Review
in English:
'Stayed on this campsite 10 years ago.
Returning 7 years later, I found the place has deteriorated. The only
improvement is the addition of free WiFi which worked.
It's a grim, run-down site with primitive facilities and an unfriendly
reception. There is no kitchen, just one filthy outside sink with cold water
for washing up. The antiquated showers have no privacy whatsoever. The site is
on a busy dual carriageway, next to an uninviting Chinese restaurant.
Camping price is very expensive for what there is - basically, just parking
with a hook-up. It is exploiting the fact that it's the only site near Zamosc
and it is open all year.'
On
that previous stay we walked through the park into the old city, UNESCO-listed
for its 16th century Renaissance centre. More recent history saw the Zamosc Uprising –
the largest action of the Polish Resistance, from 1942-44, against the
forced expulsion of Poles from the region, under the Nazi German
colonization policy for Eastern Poland.
Zamosc via Belzec to 'Centre
of Remembrance & Reconciliation' at Brzeznica, Nr Debica – 145 miles Open all year (Museum closed Mondays). Free parking by an
educational museum at Pustkow Forced
Labour Camp/Mount of Death. N 50.10015 E 21.51941 On a misty Sunday morning we return to rd 17/E372 to bypass the centre
of Zamosc and continue south through quiet villages to Krynice. Outside the
large cemetery here, the stalls sell flowers and candle-lanterns to decorate
family graves for All Souls' and All Saints' Days. Lidl stores are currently selling
potted plants and candle-lanterns in readiness, as well as the usual costumes
and stuff for 'Halloween' (All Hallows Eve) – the American commercialisation of
the same celebration. Pick your own ritual. In Tomaszow Lubelski at 28 miles we buy bread at the Intermarche
supermarket, which bears no resemblance to its French counterpart (nor do the
croissants!) Lidl is also open (no Sunday closing in Catholic Poland) but has
an awkward entrance. Fiv e miles later in
the village of Belzec we cross the railway line and follow it to the station,
beyond which there is a large car park on the left: the Museum and Memorial
Site of the Belzec extermination camp. From here it is less than 10 miles along
rd 17 to Hrebbene at the Ukrainian border. Entry to both the site and the new
museum, funded by the American Jewish Foundation and the Polish Government, is
free of charge. Open 9 am-5 pm (4 pm in winter), closed Mondays and public
holidays. www.belzec.eu Belzec was the first
death camp that the Germans set up within the genocidal operation 'Aktion
Reinhardt'. Between March and December 1942 almost 500,000 people were
exterminated in its gas chambers, the majority of them Polish Jews, but also
victims from Czechoslovakia, Germany and Austria. By June 1943, with all the bodies burnt and
the buildings dismantled, nearly all traces of the camp were erased and the
area was planted with trees. The two coaches on
the car park have brought a large group of young Israelis who are carrying
their national flag round the circuit of the symbolic graveyard surrounding the
site of the gas chambers. Before walking this path ourselves in a cold drizzle,
we spend an hour inside the excellent museum. Opened in 2004, it houses
permanent exhibitions documenting the history of the camp, photos, maps, artefacts
that belonged to those murdered and personal testaments of the few survivors.
One particular recollection will remain with us. One of the very few Jewish men
to survive Belzec by working round the camp overheard a child entering the gas
chamber: 'Mommy, haven't I been good? It's dark in here.' At first, he said, such
cries broke his heart until he could feel no more. Chilled by the whole
experience, we lunch in the motorhome before returning to Belzec village. Here
we take rd 865 southwest through woodland and tidy villages to Oleszyce, a
smart little town with parks, shops and fuel at 60 miles. After Jaroslaw, 20
miles later, we turn west on the new toll-free 4-lane E40/rd 4, which links
Krakow with the Ukrainian border (and thence to Lviv). The E40 bypasses Przeworsk, where we camped at Pastewnik restaurant/hotel
two years ago; no matter, as we learnt from a phone call that the campsite is
now closed. We pass parking areas with toilets along the motorway, though no
services or fuel have been installed yet. The next known
campsite is at Tarnow but we've found an earlier alternative 5 miles off the
motorway, listed by www.campercontact.com. It is the museum car park on the site
of a former German Labour Camp that operated from 1940-44, at Pustkow near
Brzeznica www.ecpip.pl. At 140 miles we take the Debica-Wischod
exit from E40, then turn north on rd 985 towards Mielec. Soon we turn right
over a railway crossing, then follow the SatNav and signposts to the
reconstructed forced labour camp. The gates are closed for the night but we
settle on the quiet parking area. Across the road, a flight
of steps leads up through the woods to Gora
Smierci – the Mount of Death. Walking round in the dusk, we read the
memorial inscriptions and learn that this was the site where the bodies of
prisoners who died, due to the harshest of work conditions, were burnt: a total
of 7,500 Jews, 5,000 Soviet PoW's and 2,500 Poles. This is not a casualty list,
it is slaughter. We are not disturbed,
except by yet another manifestation of mass murder in German-occupied Poland.
Brzeznica to Camping Harenda, Zakopane – 141 miles (alt 750 m/2,500 ft) Open all year. http://campingharenda.pl/
PLN 74 inc elec, WC/shower and tourist tax.
Free (unreliable) WiFi. No kitchen. N 49.324128 E 19.984686 Next morning in pouring rain we find the
museum gates still locked (though on the phone I was told 'open every day'). A
very kind caretaker appears and finds us a booklet in English: 'Historical and
Didactic Exhibition near the Death Mountain'. He regrets that the site is
closed on Mondays, as do we! The emphasis of the booklet is on remembrance,
reconciliation and education, rather than the history of the Forced Labour
Camps and the Military Training Ground 'Waffen SS Truppenübungsplatz
Heidelager' under the command of SS Rottenführer Hans Harmann in Pustkow. We
would have learnt more from the exhibitions, documents, photographs and film
inside. It's 5 wet miles back to join A4/E40 at the
Debica Wischod junction, then continue west. This brand new section of motorway,
linking the Ukraine with Germany, is toll-free as far as Krakow where we will
be turning south. The next rest area, 12 miles along, has generous parking
space, picnic tables and modern toilets (no fuel or café yet). While we're
there, a cleaner comes along on her bicycle to sweep, disinfect, replenish the
paper and polish the mirrors! At 60 miles, past Tarnow, we have a quick bite at
a good service area with BP fuel, a Wild Bean Café and McDonalds. Near Krakow we take exit 420 for Lagiewniki,
aiming for a camper stop listed in the Bordatlas at the APIS Guesthouse in Krakow-Swoszowice. Again, I had
phoned ahead to check and we are 'most welcome'. We follow the SatNav to the
street address (Podgorki Ul) but the extremely narrow lane does not go through
to the Guesthouse, we can see no other way to access it, and it is still
pouring down. Barry extricates the motorhome with difficulty and we return to
the A4. At the next exit we leave the motorway, which
continues to Wroclaw, and take rd 7/E77 south. It's a busy dual carriageway as
far as Tenczyn, then the old 2-lane road with road works and delays. A new
highway all the way to Zakopane is due for completion in 2020. As we climb gradually into the foothills of
the Tatras, at 116 miles the road divides at Panskie. Rd7/E77 turns southwest for
Chyzne and the Slovak border, while we continue south on rd 47 to Zakopane, a
popular mountain resort. A panoramic rest area with an old wooden chapel, 5
miles later, stands at 650 m/2,145 ft though there's not much of a view through
the rain. Three miles before the centre of Zakopane, we
turn right by McDonalds onto Ustup Road, pass Camping Ustup (closed from end
September), then turn right for Camping Harenda. At the top of a steep
crumbling drive is an empty waterlogged campsite, surrounded by misty
mountains. Happily, the young woman in Reception speaks good English, having
worked there for a few months. There is a single WC/hot shower in 'the small
bathroom' and the WiFi works on-and-off. For laundry I must ask the
'white-haired woman owner' who lives at the adjacent house, speaks only Polish
and is not at home.
At Camping Harenda, Zakopane Next day, dry at last,
we can appreciate the view. I approach the owner (and her noisy dog) about
laundry but eventually understand that the city water is turned off until 4 pm.
It's more fun talking to the friendly Receptionist when she comes in. Her
vocabulary is wonderful, as she explains where to empty the 'WC-Chemistry' and
the 'Gravy Water'. She worked in a fish & chip shop in Peterborough – 'a
big village' – and can't understand why the English like fish & chips. She
found the taste 'very strange' but did like the vinegar! There is a bus
service from the main road into Zakopane but we explored it on a previous visit
8 years ago; also today is extremely cold! After lunch we wrap up for a short
walk to the supermarket for bread, then warm up in McDonalds over an excellent
drink of hot chocolate each, topped with a dollop of cream and dusted with
cinnamon and cocoa. It's a modern hi-tec place, where the school kids who come
in off the bus order and pay at a screen on the wall! Back
at the campsite, I manage to negotiate one load of laundry (wash & dry 30
PLN), under the close supervision of the owner. A lone German motorhome arrives
later but the couple don't speak to us – or to each other. My ACSI Review: 'Small grass campsite with little
hard-standing for vans. Convenient for short ride into mountain tourist town,
with a bus stop nearby outside McDonalds.
The main facilities were closed - just one (unheated) bathroom open, with a
single WC, basin and shower for all. Luckily, only one other motorhome on site.
Free WiFi OK most of the time. A friendly English-speaking girl worked in
Reception part of the day, helping the owners who live on site but are
difficult to find! A wash/dry laundry service was available for a price, though
a sock was lost in the process! The camping fee was too high, given the lack of
facilities, but the mountain scenery is splendid and the other campsite was
closed.' With
a better weather forecast for tomorrow, we hope to cross the Tatras into
Slovakia.
Click: magbazpictures.com/zakopane
INTO SLOVAKIA
Note that
1. Slovakia is an EU member and the currency is the Euro, currently €1.12
= £1.
2. Slovakia is in the Central European Time zone (so 1 hr ahead of the
UK).
3. Vehicles
up to 3.5 tons need to register for an e-vignette only if driving on motorways
(road numbers beginning D) and expressways (road numbers beginning R). Buy it
at major border crossings or petrol stations - the minimum (10 days) cost €10
in 2017 and was well worth it! For vehicles over 3.5 tons, including motorhomes,
there is an electronic toll collection system (as in Austria and Poland).
Good luck with that! See www.tolls.eu/slovakia and www.highwaymaps.eu/slovakia
4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at all times (even in summer).
5. Diesel costs about €1.12 a litre (around £1).
Zakopane, Poland to Camping Podlesok, Slovensky Raj National Park, Hrabusice,
Slovakia – 69 miles (alt 535 m/1,765 ft)
Officially open 1
Apr-31 Oct (but closed and barred when arrived on 25 Oct). Parked overnight
free of charge by the side gate. www.podlesok.sk Free WiFi. N 48.96444
E 20.38500
It's a fine sunny morning with a clear view of the snow-capped peaks
all around, though s till cold (6°C by 11 am). Returning a few miles on rd 47 to
Poronin we find our intended rd 961 towards the Slovak border is closed for
road works, so have to continue north towards Nowy Targ. At 9 miles we turn
right in Szaflary on a very minor road through Bor village to join the better
rd 49 three miles later, so avoiding Nowy Targ.
Rd 49 runs south directly to Slovakia but we turn off 6 miles later at
the roundabout in Bryjow Potok onto rd 960 (7-ton limit) for a more exciting and
exacting route. We pass 2 working horse-drawn carts as we leave the mountain
village, then climb easily from 730 m/2,400 ft to 1017 m/3,355 ft, passing the
other end of rd 961 before a hairpin descent to the frontier at 955 m/3,150 ft.
IN SLOVAKIA
From the large car park on the Slovak side, 26 miles scenic miles from
Zakopane, we walk back to the bridge over the river that defines the border. On
both sides the abandoned guard and customs posts are eerily deserted. Back at
the car park, a young man is opening up the little souvenir shop selling hats and
soft-toy sheep. To our surprise, he asks us to move on as a coach is due to
arrive.
After 7 miles along rd 67, following the northern edge of Slovakia's
Tatransky National Park, we pause for lunch on the empty car park of a ski
centre at 1,000 m/3,300 ft. Lifts on both sides of the road and newly built
accommodation in the nearby village await the snow season. Another 7 miles to Tatranska
Kotlina, where we turn right on rd 537 for 5 miles to the popular mountain
resort of Tatranska Lomnica.
Here are hotels, a railway station, cable car, tourists – and the shock
of a pay & display car park! The campsite is long closed down, though there
is an unfriendly 4-place paying camper stop behind a restaurant listed in the Bordatlas.
Having paid €1.20 to park for one hour, we look for the bank previously used
to change remaining Polish currency into Euros. As it appears to have moved, I
ask at the Tourist Office and learn that there are no banks in the area, just
an ATM. And no, they don't offer currency exchange, the nearest being at the
railway station in Stary Smokovec, 4 miles west along rd 537. So on we go, to
another pay & display car park: this time for the minimum €0.60 for 30
minutes. I do eventually find the souvenir shop on the station that offers
exchange at a miserly rate (for example £1 = €1) and change our Polish Zloty,
wondering if it was worth the effort!
A few Euros richer, we head south on rd 534 for 10 miles to the city of
Poprad, where we meet the major rd 18 and turn into the car park of a large
Tesco. Restocked (including a lovely chocolate gateau), we continue east on rd
18 for a few miles to the exit for Kisovce village, then follow the SatNav
along country lanes to Podlesok.
At the entrance to
the Slovensky Raj National Park - a lovely area for hiking or climbing – we know a spacious campsite with very
basic facilities at a low price.
However, it has a new barrier with locked gates and the Reception/café is closed.
A notice in the window 'Open 8 am-2 pm' also gives a phone number for late
arrivals and the code for the WiFi, which is working! We phone the displayed
number, as well as two other numbers given on the campsite's website, but get
no reply except a message in Slovakian. Defeated, we park overnight round the
side by the padlocked rear gate, with a WiFi signal! If Reception opens
tomorrow morning, we'll stay another night on-site.
It's very quiet apart from an occasional old car passing us along a
rough track. Our guess that it leads to a Romany village is confirmed when a
beautifully turned out cart jingles past at dusk, drawn by a fine pair of
horses with red pom-poms on their bridles. The day ends with a peaceful dinner
of shepherd's pie and chocolate cake.
Hrabusice to Aqua Maria Hotel
& Camping, Velaty – 100 miles (alt 165 m/555 ft) Open all year (camping seasonal). www.penzionaquamaria.sk Suite
for two (with bathroom, fridge, kettle, TV) €59 total including choice of
breakfast. Free WiFi. One hour free use of Wellness Centre! Good
restaurant. N 48.504974 E
21.653311 Next day, a fine morning, Camping Podlesok
remains closed, its phone still unanswered. Disappointed we leave, driving
northeast via Hrabusice village to meet rd 18 at Spissky Stvrtok. A newly
finished motorway D1 speeds the journey east from here to Presov, bypassing
Levoca. There is a convenient fuel station before the junction, where we buy
the required e-vignette for vehicles up to 3.5 tons: €10 for the 10-day
minimum. The D1/E50 is excellent, a smooth dual
carriageway with a couple of short tunnels. At 19 miles we pass Spissky Hrad Castle on its imposing hilltop, a site we've
visited previously. We take a break at 40 miles on a good service area, then
continue to Presov and turn south. At Budmir we leave D1 (which goes on to
Kosice), turning left on a minor road to Kosicke Olsany, where we meet rd 50
and head east. The motorway eastwards past Michalovce to the Ukrainian border
is still under construction. In the summer of 1988 when the Iron Curtain was
still firmly drawn, we cycled from the UK to the Ukrainian border and then to
Budapest and Vienna for a flight back to the UK and so back to work. A misty and atmospheric stop for lunch at 75
miles is on the Dargov Pass, up at 465 m/1,535 ft. A sign records the Battle of
Dargov Pass, Dec 1944-Jan 1945, a time when Germany held the area on the Gisela Stellung defence line all the way
to the Hungarian border. The Red Army of Soviet and Ukrainian forces attacked
the Germans on both sides of the Pass. After a week of fierce fighting in the
surrounding forest, the Russians took Dargov, followed by Kosice and Presov,
eventually forcing the Germans back into Poland. The site is marked by a pair
of light Soviet tanks on plinths, as well as a monument that is currently
covered by scaffolding and sheeting. Click: magbazpictures.com/dargov-pass
Impressed
by yet another recollection of WW2, we hairpin down in a swirling mist to the town of Sevoce and on to Hriadky. Here we turn south on rd 79 past Trebisov. We
are looking forward to a last night in Slovakia at a motel we discovered two
years ago, just 5 miles before the Hungarian
border. The modern 'Penzion Aqua Maria' hotel and camping (formerly Motorest
Maria) is on the right a mile or so after the village of Velaty. The small campsite and cabins are closed but we are
happy to park and take a two-room Suite in the freshly refurbished hotel, which
now has an indoor 'wellness centre', restaurant/bar, outdoor pool and tennis
courts. Standard en-suite rooms are also available for a few less Euros. We
have a good dinner by the log fire in the restaurant (Chicken Cordon Bleu or
Pork Medallions), hot showers and a long sleep – luxury indeed. At Aqua Maria Hotel & Camping, Velaty In no hurry to leave, we choose a substantial breakfast of coffee, ham & (3) eggs, served
with delicious
home-baked brown bread and mini-baguettes. A lazy morning follows, using the
house WiFi to check campsites in Hungary. Most of the sites along our planned
route are already closed (Sarospatak, Tokaj, Debrecen) but we find an all-year
Thermal Camping at Hajduszoboszlo. In the afternoon
we descend to the basement to see what a 'Wellness Centre' is, since we have
one hour's free use (after which it's €3 per person per hour). The ultra-modern
dimly-lit facility is stiflingly hot with weird music. There is a small pool
with seats in the bubbling water, a pair of heated stone loungers, sauna, showers,
changing room, lockers … and no other guests. Totally unfamiliar with custom
and practice in such a spa, I splash in the pool for 10 minutes, swimming its
length in 5 strokes, while Barry watches nervously. Deciding it's not
for us, we go back to the sanctuary of our Suite for more relaxing showers,
followed by another excellent evening meal of salmon.
Click: magbazpictures.com/hotel-aqua-maria INTO HUNGARY
Note that
1. Hungary is an EU member and the currency is the Forint
(HUF). Current exchange rate is approx 350 HUF=£1 or 310 HUF=€1. Some
businesses accept cash in Euros, some do not, but card payment is widely
available.
2. Hungary is in the Central European Time zone (so 1 hr ahead of
the UK).
3. All
vehicles need a vignette (matricia) to drive on motorways and
expressways. Buy it at petrol stations near the border; payment taken in cash
(HUF or Euros) or by card. There is no windscreen sticker; the vehicle
registration number and nationality are recorded onto a computer at point of sale.
The minimum (10 days) cost 5,950 HUF (c €20) for vans and campers up to 3.5
tons. Vehicles weighing between 3.5 and 5 tons (classed as a Bus) cost more,
and over 5 tons (Big Bus!) even more. See www.tolls.eu/hungary and www.highwaymaps.eu/hungary
4. Dipped
headlights are compulsory at all times (even in summer).
5. Diesel costs about 370 HUF a
litre (just over £1).
Velaty, Slovakia to Thermal Camping, Hajduszoboszlo, Hungary – 136
miles
Open all year. www.hungarospa.hu/en 7,290 HUF (or €24) inc 12-amp elec, hot showers, cooking
facilities and free WiFi. Good laundry. Free entry to indoor swimming pool and
medicinal bath. N 47.45756 E 21.39396
At 10 am on a dull grey Saturday morning (last
weekend of October), after another cooked breakfast at the Aqua Maria Hotel, we
drive 5 miles south to the abandoned border post and enter Hungary with no
formalities at all. A mile along rd 37 lies the busy border town of
Satoraljaujhely. Here we get a fill of diesel and a 10-day Matricia (e-vignette) at the petrol station, look in the large
Tesco store (depressing) and buy a few things at Lidl (somewhat better). Card
payments avoid the need to obtain Forints.
Heading southwest on rd 37 we pass Sarospatak
and its castle. To our right the south-facing Zemplen Hills are clad in vineyards,
to our left flows the River Bodrog until it turns off to join the Tisza at the
famous wine-town of Tokaj. This northeast corner of Hungary is a favourite
area, where we would linger at a warmer time of year. In Szerencs at 44 miles
we have a lunch break parked at a large shopping complex, then continue until
we join the M30/E71 motorway, a smooth new 4-lane highway, on the east side of
Miskolc.
This leads us south to meet the M3/E79: turn
right (west) for Budapest or, as we do, left for Debrecen. The Rendorseg (Police) are lurking at the
junction, with its low 50 kph speed limit. Driving east, we cross the broad
River Tisza near Polgar. At junction 187, after the Gorbehazi services, the M3
continues northeast past Nyiregyhaza and on towards the Ukrainian border, while
we take the M35 southeast to its terminus on the west side of the city of
Debrecen.
Here we join rd 4/E573 southwest for the last
few miles to the spa town of Hajduszoboszlo. Turning off towards the centre, we
follow the SatNav past Hajdu Camping (open 1 May-30 Sept) to the larger Thermal
Camping, where the German-speaking receptionist is extremely helpful and
professional. With only one other (Hungarian) motorhome on site, we can park on
a good pitch and it's no problem to pay with a bank card when we leave, adding
any charge for laundry onto the bill. She apologises for the facilities, due
for renovation, but they are a big improvement on our last visit here and much
better than any we saw in Poland!
After a long day, we relax over Bacon &
Onion Flammkuche (it was French Week
in Lidl) and the very last of the delicious chocolate gateau from Tesco in
Poprad. Tonight the clocks go back an hour at the end of summertime, giving an
extra hour in bed!
At Thermal Camping, Hajduszoboszlo
Winter arrives,
with a cold morning of heavy rain. I make good use of the laundry, with one
washer and one drier at 500 HUF (under €2) each, as well as a spin drier and
drying room. The facilities are all cleaned early on this Sunday morning by a
cheerful woman, seen later sweeping up autumn leaves on the paths. The water is
piping hot and the WiFi works well. Amazed, I review the site for ACSI:
'The spacious site is now fantastic compared
with my previous visit 7 years ago. It has been taken over by staff who care!
The German-speaking receptionist went out of her way to explain what was
included for campers (the medicinal bath and indoor swimming pool) and what
cost extra. She pointed us to a good level pitch, where the free WiFi worked
well.
There is plentiful hot water at all sinks,
basins and showers, thanks to the thermal source. The facilities are dated, but
clean and warm. The laundry room/kitchen
has washing and drying machines for a small price, as well as free use of a
microwave, hot plates and a clothes drying rack.
The outdoor pools, restaurants etc were
closed off-season but the indoor baths remain open.'
In
the afternoon it turns bright and dry, so we wrap up against the cold wind to
take a surprisingly long walk round the grounds and gardens of the huge thermal
spa, which is still being expanded. The healing waters serve what is claimed to
be the biggest bathing complex in Europe, with indoor medicinal bath and
thermal pools; open air baths with 'Mediterranean Beach'; Aqua-Palace Closed
Leisure Spa; Aquapark with slides etc; a range of therapy packages, wellness
and fitness services; a boating lake with a former Soviet watch-tower that has
been turned into a 'lighthouse'; even a naturist sun-bathing island in one of
the small lakes! The massive car parks indicate the spa's popularity in the
summer months in this land-locked country. Click: magbazpictures.com/thermal-camping-hajduszoboszlo
INTO ROMANIA
Note that 1. Romania is an EU member and the
currency is the Romanian Lei (RON). Current exchange rate is approx 5 RON=£1 or
4.5 RON=€1. Some businesses accept cash in Euros, some do not, but card payment
is widely available. 2. Romania is in the Eastern European Time
zone (so 2 hrs ahead of the UK and 1 hr ahead of Hungary). 3. All vehicles need a vignette to drive
on any Romanian road. Buy one at petrol stations or kiosks at the
border; payment taken in cash (RON or Euros). There is no windscreen sticker;
the vehicle registration number and nationality are recorded onto a computer at
point of sale. The minimum (7 days) costs €5 for vans up to 3.5 tons (other
options are one month or one year). Vehicles up to 7.5 tons cost more. See www.highwaymaps.eu/romania. 4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at
all times (even in summer). 5. Diesel
costs about 5.66 RON a litre (just over £1). Hajduszoboszlo, Hungary to
Denta, Romania – 201 miles Open all year. Free parking by children's playground in village, 9
miles before Serbian border at Moravita. N 45.357921 E 21.248659 We leave Hajduszoboszlo on a cold bright
morning, the last day of October, southwest along rd 4/E573. Turning left at
Kaba onto a very minor bumpy road (a short cut to avoid Püspokladany) is a
mistake and at 17 miles in Földes it's a relief to join the better rd 42/E60. Then
it's east for 30 miles to the Romanian frontier between the villages of Artand
and Bors. The border is very busy with international
trucks and a heavy police presence. A guard checks our passports, looks inside
the motorhome and waves us through to buy a 7-day vignette (€5: paid in Euros,
change given in Euros). After a fill of Romanian diesel (paid by bank card), we
put our watches on one hour and continue on rd 1/E60 for 8 miles to Oradea. The
long queue of lorries waiting to enter Hungary stretches for 4 of those 8
miles, undergoing thorough inspection for migrants, and we do feel sympathy for
the truckers. Click: magbazpictures.com/hungarian---romanian-border
Working our way through the traffic and
roundabouts of Oradea, we eventually find the way onto rd 79/E671 to Arad. It's
a good 2-lane road but the motorway that is being built will be a big
improvement, avoiding Oradea. On the outskirts of that city we are aware of the
poverty, of gipsy hovels, a man pushing an old bicycle loaded with firewood,
prostitutes lurking in laybys. Romania and Bulgaria remain the poor relations
of Eastern Europe, despite EU membership. Heading south on the arrow-straight road through
flat open countryside, parallel with the Hungarian border, we pass through an
occasional village and the small town of Salonta. At Chisineu Cris, where we
first entered Romania from Gyula in the summer of 1989 when it was in the final
throes of Ceasescu's dictatorship, we share memories of that epic cycle ride
from England to Istanbul through a string of Iron Curtain countries. Romania
came as a shock after Hungary, and it still does. Approaching Arad at 126 miles, we see a
little restaurant/motel called CET by a petrol station, at the roundabout where
rd 7 turns west for the border crossing at Nadlac. For a €10 note we get a simple
meal each and a basket of chifli (bread
buns), declining the small amount of change offered in Romanian Lei. To bypass
the centre of Arad, we take rd 7 west for a couple of miles, then turn south on
the new A1 highway towards Timisoara. A motorway west from Arad to Szeged in
Hungary is still under construction. Unfortunately the A1 doesn't reach Timisoara.
We must exit at Giarmata at 158 miles, nearly 10 miles from the city, and make
our way in past shops (Lidl or Kaufland) and hotels, negotiating traffic jams,
avoiding trams and trolley buses. We take the so-called ring road (the city is
in desperate need of one) to the west of the centre, following a single sign
for Moravita: the border town before Serbia. The evening rush hour is gridlock,
there are many turnings without signs and we rely on the SatNav to get us
through and out the other side, onto rd 59/E70 south for Moravita. Timsoara and
its traffic have certainly mushroomed since our previous experiences, cycling
through in 1989 or later visits by motorhome to its seasonal campsite. Continuing south, the road grows quieter as
we leave the city behind. The only TIR truck-park we pass is small and full, we
see no hotels or restaurants where we could park overnight, and it grows dark.
Not wishing to cross into Serbia until morning, we finally stop in the village
of Denta, less than 10 miles before the border. A parking area on the right of
the main road, next to a children's playground and opposite a little shop that
is open, proves a safe place for the night. As we take a short stroll round the village,
we meet a few kids with pumpkin lanterns and realise that tonight is Halloween
but it's too cold for anyone to stay out long and disturb us. NOVEMBER
2017
INTO SERBIA Note that 1. Serbia is not an EU member and the currency is the Serbian Dinar (RSD). Current
exchange rate is approx. 135 RSD=£1 or 120 RSD=€1. Euros or card payments are generally
accepted. 2. Serbia is in the Central European Time zone (so 1 hr ahead of the UK and 1 hr
behind Romania or Bulgaria). 3. British-registered vehicles are now fully
covered by their own insurance in Serbia: just show insurance certificate
papers at border. 4. There is no vignette to buy but there are
regular small tolls on the motorways, payable in Euros or local currency. Carry
plenty of small change. 5. Dipped headlights are compulsory at all
times (even in summer). 6. Diesel costs about 158 RSD a litre (over £1). 7. The Cyrillic alphabet is used on older road
signs though most now have the name in Latin script, which is becoming more
common throughout the country. Denta, Romania to Istanbul
Restaurant/TIR Parking, Aleksinac, Serbia – 182 miles Open all year. €5 overnight guarded parking with WC. Excellent
Turkish restaurant with free WiFi inside. Access from E761 (Belgrade to Nis
toll motorway) southbound. N 43.528885 E 21.707637 After a quiet night parked in Denta, we woke to see
the villagers out and about early: horse-drawn carts, cows driven along the
lane, women with little shopping trolleys and children on their way to school,
all before 8 am. We moved along the main road a short distance to a quieter car
park outside a sports stadium for breakfast, then continued 9 miles south down
rd 59 to the Serbian frontier at Moravita, a well-remembered crossing point
where we cycled into what was Yugoslavia in the summer of 1989. There is just
one truck and one car waiting. IN SERBIA STOP !! Faced with double border checks as we leave
the EU, we have to show passports, vehicle documents and insurance papers.
After some delay, and a minor mishap when the end of the motorhome awning cover
catches the edge of a low parapet, we enter Serbia, put our watches back one
hour and continue 7 miles down rd 1-9 to Vrsac. From here the E70 takes us
southwest towards Belgrade (Beograd), across an open agricultural landscape
dotted with villages that look even poorer than Romania. We recognise shop
signs in the Slav language (хлеб
or Chleb = bread), some still in the Cyrillic alphabet but
mostly not. A few folk brave the cold to sit at the roadside selling cabbages
and other produce; at 10 am (Serbian time) it is only 9°C outside. At 55 miles approaching Pancevo we stop at a remarkably modern fuel station, with a smart café and toilets. Four miles
later we turn off on rd 24, a good road that bypasses the centre of Bavaniste.
Crops of tobacco stand in the fields. Shortly after Kovin we cross the Danube
on a toll-free bridge, after which the road is immediately much bumpier as we
continue south to Smederevo. The morning is now fine and sunny with no wind; smoke
from the factory chimneys goes straight up as we pass through industrial
Radnac. Meeting the motorway from Belgrade, rd 1/E761, at
95 miles, we take a toll ticket and head south on the new 4-lane highway. At
the next services, 13 miles along at Velika Plana, we are ready for a break at
McDonalds (excellent cakes at the McCafé) which accepts bank card payment. We intend to spend the night at the Aleksander
Restaurant & Service Station about 50 miles further south near Pojate. After taking the exit (toll of 610 RSD paid by card) we realise that these
services are only accessible to northbound traffic from the motorway! Back on
the motorway, southbound for Nis, we spot the Istanbul Restaurant/TIR Park on
our side of the carriageway at Aleksinac. The staff, food and customers are
mostly Turkish and very welcoming. Parking is free for up to 6 hours or €5
overnight. Taking a laptop into the little restaurant, we use
the WiFi over cups of coffee until we have to move: not for the truckers
watching a TV football match but for a coachload of young athletes who come in
for a meal. They are a Turkish Wrestling Team on their way home from an
international contest, so we don't argue! INTO BULGARIA Note that: 1. Bulgaria is an EU member and the currency is the Bulgarian
Lev (Lv). Current exchange rate is approx 2.2 Lv=£1 or 2 Lv=€1. Some businesses
accept cash in Euros or payment by card, some do not. In particular, the small
entry charge for places like museums, swimming pools, ancient sites etc will
require local currency. 2. Bulgaria is in the Eastern European Time zone, like Romania
and Greece (so 2 hrs ahead of the UK). 3. All vehicles need a vignette to drive in Bulgaria on any
roads. Buy the simple windscreen sticker at kiosks or petrol stations near the
border; payment taken in cash (Lv or Euros) or by card. The fee is €8 for the
minimum (7 days) or €15 for a month, for vehicles up to 3.5 tons. Those weighing
3.5 to 12 tons can pay €11 for a one-day vignette, or €27 (week) or €54
(month). See www.tolls.eu/bulgaria and www.highwaymaps.eu/bulgaria 4. Dipped headlights are compulsory at all times (even in
summer). 5. Diesel costs about 2 Lv a litre (under £1). 6. Bulgaria uses the Cyrillic script (as in Russia), though major
road signs will also show place names in the Latin alphabet. Aleksinac, Serbia to Camping
Kromidovo, Kromidovo, Bulgaria – 218 miles Open March-Oct (other times by arrangement). www.campingkromidovo.com and www.campingbulgaria.eu/ 30 Lv or €15 inc 16-amp
elec, hot showers and free WiFi.
Chemical toilet emptying forbidden if using blue chemical toilet fluid! Five
eco-friendly dogs loose on-site and welcome to deposit where they will. N 41.454260
E 23.362990 At 7.30 am it's only 3°C as we leave the Truck Park
(height 170 m/560 ft), take the motorway A1/E761 south and climb gradually into the
looming hills. After 17 miles we exit at Nis with a toll of €2.50 (it would
have been €10 all the way from Belgrade). The A4 to the Bulgarian border and on
to Sofia, about 100 miles away, starts as a bumpy dual carriageway but soon
becomes a tight 2-lane road along a scenic ravine, signed as the Wine Route. A
railway and a river follow the same gorge to our right; frost sparkles on the
verges. After passing an old Orthodox monastery we reach
250 m/825 ft and go through a couple of short tunnels before the road
straightens and continues past Bela Palonka, where a section of 4-lane highway
begins, finished as far as Pirot. Road works are under way along the line of a
new road that will go from Nis to the border or beyond. Beyond the frosty
fields there is snow on the distant peaks of hazy blue mountains. At 61 miles, up at 375 m/1,240 ft, we take a coffee
break at one of the many TIR parks with Turkish food, flags and truckers. Then
it's on to the Bulgarian border, partly on the old road and sometimes on the
new highway, with a tunnel at 480 m/1,585 ft that bypasses the last Serbian
town, Dimitrovgrad. IN
BULGARIA There are double passport checks at the border at
81 miles (height 490 m/1,620 ft), where we re-enter the EU, buy a 7-day
Bulgarian vignette (€8 cash), put our watches on one hour and continue on E80
for Sofia: a good road, with the first fuel available at Dragoman (bank card
accepted). In fact E80 is an A class West-to-East
European Route running from Lisbon in Portugal to Gurbulak on Turkey's border
with Iran. At 6102 km (or 3,792 miles) long, it connects 10 countries: at its
eastern end it connects with Asian Highway AH1 which runs all the way to Japan. Now there's an idea for a great journey! We continue climbing towards Sofia, Europe's second
highest capital after Madrid, passing the Route 80 Motel/camping on the left near Bozuriste, though
it's too early to stop. About 5 miles later we meet Sofia's outer ring road,
altitude 700 m/2,310 ft, and turn south at the roundabout to join the E79,
signed to Greece! Still climbing, the smooth dual carriageway reaches
915 m/3,020 ft before a series of short tunnels. At 128 miles (and 800 m/2,640
ft) a good service area provides a McLunch (excellent cakes again!) before we
head ever-south down the Struma valley, now signed for the Bulgarian border
village of Kulata. After Blagoevgrad the E79 highway reverts to a bumpy 2-lane
road, parallel with river and railway. In Kresna, the thoroughfare is lined
with shops and stalls selling all manner of souvenirs such as olives, wine, garden
gnomes and ornaments – a sure sign that a border lies ahead (about 30 miles
away). Further down the Struma valley, at 207 miles, we
turn off to shop at Kaufland supermarket
in Sandanski, a popular tourist and wine-producing town at the foot of the Pirin
Mountains, where we see vineyards. Another 8 miles down E79 we exit for
Katuntsi and turn east, aiming for a new campsite whose owners, Sara and John,
had written when they opened in April 2016 asking us to publicise the site. We
look forward to meeting them and discovering a third British-run Bulgarian
oasis, to join the excellent Sakar Hills and Veliko Tarnovo. After 3 miles of country-bumpkin lanes, we follow
the obscure home-made signs through the seemingly abandoned village of
Kromidovo, crawling round pot holes to an unlikely gate and a scruffy garden
with a tepee. Can this be the 'glamping' site? A young volunteer worker lets us in, while a loose Doberman
defecates on the grass ne arby. Then John appears, asking what the smell is! He explains
they are just minding the dog for someone, so that's OK? 'Nobody else is here,
park where you like' – actually, we don't like but it's getting late. At least
there is electricity and WiFi, although we are not allowed to empty our own WC
since we admit to using Thetford Blue chemicals. John offers no alternative
disposal facility and disappears into the renovated house, the ground floor of
which contains the communal toilets, showers and wash basins. Washing up is at
a grubby outdoor sink. He does not remember emailing us to visit: 'that must
have been Sara', who doesn't appear. At Camping Kromidovo, Kromidovo Next day is cold and wet, so I can't use the
washing machine as there is nowhere to dry laundry except in the garden. At
least the site showers are hot. We feel most uncomfortable in the strange
atmosphere of this 'eco-camp', occupied by the owners, their 3 dogs and 5 cats,
plus 2 extra dogs running loose. There is no sign of our hosts all day. We talk to the two young volunteers on the Workaway Scheme who are painting a fence (he from the Netherlands, she from Canada).
They've been here one week and are leaving next week for Macedonia, where she
has family. A tiny stray ginger/white kitten turns up and I give it some milk,
after which it follows us closely on a walk round what is left of the village,
then vanishes. There is one simple shop (closed till 3 pm) and an open-air pool
and café (both closed). A longer walk would take us to the Orbelus organic
winery, to be seen on the hillside, but that has little appeal and it's
raining. One British motorhome arrives later but they stay
inside, probably as shocked as we are. This isn't culture-shock, we are well
used to Eastern Europe, but shock at the pretentious claims made for this site.
See our article and photographs at: Kamping
Kromidovo Reviewed and magbazpictures.com/kromidovo-camping--town INTO GREECE (with relief after Kromidovo!) Note that: 1. Greece is an EU member and the currency is the Euro, currently
€1.12 = £1. 2. Greece is in the Eastern European Time zone, like Romania
and Bulgaria (so 2 hrs ahead of the UK). 3. There is no vignette to buy but there are regular
small tolls on most of the motorways, as well as on the Rio-Antirio bridge
over the Gulf of Corinth, payable in Euros or by card. 4. Dipped headlights are NOT compulsory during daylight hours. 5. Diesel costs about €1.25 a litre (over £1). 6. Greece naturally uses Greek letters, though most road signs
will also show place names in the Latin alphabet. 7. National museums and ancient
sites are free of charge for EU citizens on the first Sunday of each month
between 1 Nov and 31 March. At other times, there is often a reduced rate for age
65 and over. They are usually closed on Mondays. Kromidovo, Bulgaria to Elodia Taverna, Kerkini, Greek Macedonia – 35
miles Open all year (restaurant closed Mondays). www.elodia.gr Free overnight
parking for customers in grounds of excellent restaurant by Lake Kerkini. Free
WiFi covering car park. WC inside. N 41.211441 E 23.095873
On a fine sunny Saturday morning it's a great joy to leave Kromidovo,
its campsite and its disintegrating road behind, drive 3 miles west along the
lanes and turn south on E79 for Greece, our favourite European country. At the
Kulata border, 6 miles later, there is a double check point as we exit
Bulgaria, even though both countries are EU members. A guard looks inside
before waving us on.
And so ends a journey of 2,300 miles in 34 days from the Finnish-Estonian
border, an average of 127 miles between the 18 places where we stayed along the
route. But there are another thousand miles yet to be enjoyed before we settle
for a while in the southwest corner of the Greek Peloponnese.
Continuing south alongside the Struma River (Greek name: Strymona), the
E79 is now a motorway with a toll of €2.40 on entry. We exit 7 miles later,
turning west to cross the Strymona on a minor road via Neo Petritsi to Livadia,
along the north side of the river's dammed lake. This is Lake Kerkini National Park, a protected area, though there are fewer birds than we remember, just
the odd heron, and the lake is clearly shrinking. In Livadia we turn south to
Kerkini village, where there is a left turn signed Limani (Harbour) for
the final mile to the lakeside.
The Elodia Taverna is a traditional restaurant in its own park -like
grounds, on the left shortly before the lake's western shore. There is plenty
of space for customers to park overnight, with free WiFi and a tap available,
and lunch is being served inside the rustic tavern. Delighted, we sit by a log
fire and enjoy a really outstanding meal. The local speciality is buffalo
steak, sausage or meatballs, though chicken and pork are also on the menu. The
Greek Salad starter, topped with tasty buffalo-milk cheese, includes beetroot
and boiled eggs as well as the usual tomato/cucumber/onion/olives: a meal in
itself with wonderful bread and olive oil. The tender meats are served with
rice, chips and vegetables. It's good to be back in Greece!
In the afternoon we walk along to the lake where a few visitors have
parked their cars, come to take a horse ride through the buffalo pastures or a
boat trip to see the flamingos and pelicans, or to buy souvenirs from the
stalls. We politely decline any of this (Barry can't swim and we only ride
bicycles) but we do climb the new wooden observation tower to look down on the
assorted flying ducks and pygmy cormorants drying their wings. Then we walk
back past the Elodia and sit outside a café in the village square, drinking
coffee in a sheltered corner as the sun goes down.
Click: magbazpictures.com/lake-kerkini
Back in the motorhome, we listen to BBC Radio 4 'Any Questions' and
watch an old Clint Eastwood film – the most relaxing evening for quite a while!
The journey overland from Estonia, following autumn south, has been full of
incident but now our aim is the Greek Peloponnese, our favourite winter base.
(continued at: In Greece: Winter 2017-18)
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