Lost in Transit
  • Home
  • The van
  • 2015 Journey
  • The Route
  • Renault Master camper conversion
  • Resources

Day 38     Easter day-Dubrovnik to Kotor,Montenegro

12/4/2015

 
today's route ( 125 km)
That's Orthodox Easter, recognised in Montenegro today: Croatia ,which I have just left,is largely Catholic so they celebrated it a week ago, like us.

Today I left Dubrovnik ,travelled the 40km south to the tail end of Croatia and crossed into Montenegro. It is Sunday but everything seems very much open, even though it is orthodox Easter Sunday today. My first stop was Kotor. The bay of Kotor is a tortuous fjord-like opening that cuts into Montenegro, and the shortest route to Kotor town is to cross the bay at the narrowest point on a ferry. This is only a 5 minute crossing, and 2 or 3 ferries are at it all the time, leaving every 10 minutes when they’re full. Currency was no problem today, as Montenegro, despite not being in the EU have managed to officially adopt the Euro, and have no currency of their own-running their own banking system would be hard, as the population is no more than that of Bristol.

The roads are good, but there is only one main coast road, and it’s winding. As the shore is built up with one little village running into the next ,effectively it is a 50kpm limit the whole way along so although the distances are short,driving takes a bit longer than expected.






Picture
Ferries across the bay of Kotor
Picture
Lostintransit on the ferry next to its twin,a Fiat Ducato owned by a German also on a 6 month road trip(see text)
Kotor is a mini Dubrovnik,and old walled trading centre,at the head of the fjord, in a spectacular setting with high mountains climbing abruptly behind it.On the immediate crags behind the town is another rampart which climbs almost vertically in places. Like all the cities on this coast it was taken over by the Venetians. It is pretty busy with tourists(who often come on day trips from Dubrovnik), but is smaller and less phrenetic than Dubrovnik,and has a more homely feel.Children are playing in the streets and the house doors are open.Many of the cafes are full of locals enjoying their Easter Sunday.Other than climb the ramparts,which I must confess I opted out of ,there is nothing particularly special to see, other than the quite stunning and unusual town itself which has a maze of some nice winding lanes and alleys paved with alternating coloured shiny smooth stone flags,like those in Dubrovnik,and little squares with small palazzos of the 16th and 17th century Venetian trading families, behind pleasant street cafes.

Picture
Kotor
Picture
Oh No ,not more Venetians......
Picture
Kotor,the 'Sea Gate', which is the main gate, the other being 'the River Gate'
Picture
Kotor
Picture
Kotor
I had lunch in Kotor,and then travelled 10km south to the Adriatic coast proper,via a tunnel through the steep crags that line Kotor’s fjord, to the city of Budva.This is a big bustling place that is a package resort destination for the Bosnians, Serbs, Russians, and Ukrainians, apparently.(what they will all make of each other this summer I don’t know).It has a small pleasant Stari Grad(old town) of its own, beneath the apartment blocks and I was able to park close by, easily enough. Again,it is a little walled place with some nice alleys and tiny squares, containing quiet restaurants. Overlooking it, though, is a huge modern casino, and the super-yacht dock, with some real money tied up in the boats. The coastal strip is quite narrow all along this coast  the mountains rise precipitously, but there are some good sweeping beaches,unlike Croatia,which tends to have rocky or shingly coves only.

Picture
Budva,the walled Old Town,or 'Stari Grad'.......
Picture
.......and the new town
It took half an hour to comprehensively walk around Budva Stari Grad,and as it was 4pm by then my next move was to find my campsite.there aren’t many, but I had rung this one to check it was open. Actually there are many gravel laybys and parking places by beaches which are unrestricted and one could camp “wild” at any of these. I settled ,though,for  Camping Maslina at Bulijarica,a quiet village  further 10km down the coast.It is a 300 metre walk from a big beach, which is almost empty but has just a few Sunday visitors, and a beach restaurant with a nice terrace overlooking the beach. Using sign language I established that they were going to stay open late enough for it to be worth returning for supper.
Picture
Bulijarica beach
Back at the campsite I found two German men, who seem in their 60’s, who each have a small van, and I had been parked next to them on the ferry this morning. Surprisingly they can’t speak English, but I worked out that they too are having a 6 month road trip. They are heading on to Albania too, then Greece, before taking a ferry back to Italy.I couldn’t communicate sufficiently to ask them what they’ve done with their wives. They were sitting in deckchairs having animated conversation and a bottle of wine with the manager of the site, a woman clearly of German extraction.

As it’s Easter day, I had noticed that all the bars in Kotor had a colourful bowl of hard-boiled eggs with dyed shells.It was the same at the beach restaurant tonight, to which I returned to have supper, consisting of a very substantial mixed grill. When I asked about the eggs  I was shown the traditional way to open them ,each take one in your fist with a little bit of egg showing, and then knock  your fists together to crack them ,while saying Happy Easter.As I had just finished quite a big meal, forcing a hard-boiled egg down on top of this once I’d opened it was quite difficult but I felt it was the thing to do !
​
Picture

Day 37    Mostar to Dubrovnik

11/4/2015

 
today's route ( 145 km )
After a chilly night, during which all the local dogs in the farms around kept barking , I awoke to a bright sunny morning again, and wasted no time setting off to find the old bridge in Mostar. Before I left, the owner , hearing that I was planning to travel on to Montenegro, Albania and Macedonia ,went and got me a map guidebook listing about 10 campsites throughout this group of  countries. This was a fantastic gift, as I have fallen now off the map of my two Dutch guidebooks*, until I reach Greece, and my German one , the most reliable, lists just one place in Bosnia(I’m at it) and one in Montenegro, and none in Macedonia nor Albania. My other source is the internet but I’ve also now fallen outside O2’s European traveller zone, which gives cheap mobile internet within the EU only, and an exorbitant rate outside, so I will have to ration that. His only request was that I tell everyone about his place-so you’ve been told ! He says he’s full in May and June, but slightly less so in July and August when most people stick to the coast. With 40 campervans those two toilets must take a fair bit of strain.

(* When reviewing this in December 2015,I have just had an email from the Dutch publishers of my Camperstop Europe guidebook to state that their 2016 edition now features Eastern European and Balkan campsites too)

Having done the  recce of Mostar last night, this morning I quickly spotted the carpark I was directed to last night, and it has  loads of space as it’s the one where the coaches park-and I’ve beaten them all to it as well. As it was a pay on exit car-park with a ticket operated barrier, I was a little anxious that not having Bosnian currency I might get stuck, but  was reassured by someone at the barrier that the café where one paid did accept Euros.

Arriving, after a short walk, at Mostar’s Ottoman-era tiny old town where the bridge is sited I felt a little disappointed. I knew the bridge had been rebuilt with Unesco’s help after the civil war, but the area looks now rather like a mini theme-park;the little streets were lined with stalls selling ottoman–themed souvenirs, and fabrics, and restaurants with Turkish–style food. The stone cobbles were clearly recent, all set in new concrete. However, when I saw a picture on display of the damage after the war, I forgave them everything, because all the buildings anywhere near the bridge ,and indeed in most of Mostar were either totally destroyed, or badly damaged,and the bridge itself gone.Everything has thus been rebuilt, and if it’s their main tourist draw for the whole country they’ve got to make the most of it.The city’s main street just above the old town is in a sad state,most of the buildings still derelict and pockmarked with bullet holes.After restoring the old town,the energy seems to have been put into re-building the suburbs ,which now have all the usual modern stuff, supermarkets, car showrooms, hotels etc. They are obviously getting investment from outside the EU too, as there were some Gazprom petrol stations.

What they can’t take away from the place is its setting, which is very attractive and interesting. I counted the minarets of about a dozen small mosques, but towering over them all is the new concrete Italianate style campanile of the catholic cathedral. This looks like a modern copy of the sort of bell towers one sees in Italy, and presumably like the rest of thetown it must have been rebuilt after the war and replaces an old one. Apparently overall, the population of Bosnia is about 50% Moslem and of the other 50% who are Christian, the majority are Orthodox Christian :they ,however,are largely to the north in the ethic Serbian areas. In Mostar,I read,there is still a sizeable minority of ethic Croats(30%-the highest proportion in any Bosnian city),who are mostly Catholic.



Picture
Picture
The old hammam, (Turkish bath)
Picture
The 'baby ' bridge over a tributary stream
Picture
War damage clearly visible above the souvenir shops
Picture
On the way back down towards Croatia and the coast I followed a main road which runs downstream along the bank of the river, a much better road to that on which I approached Mostar yesterday , and no need this time to try to find the loose end of the unfinished motorway.

At one point I got pulled over at a Police check. I had been watching my speed carefully, but I wondered if I had committed some other infraction. For example, in Croatia you have to have you lights on in the day, but only until the clocks go forward. In Bosnia by contrast they must be on all year round. On such little things hang your fate. They were also looking at a local truck, so I hoped they were just checking goods vehicles routinely. I was asked for my driving licence and insurance green card, which I was able to produce, then I was waved on my way. Afterwards I wondered if I was targeted as I had foreign plates-many tourists must be tempted to pop up to Mostar from Croatia, perhaps some not realising their insurance ,which covers all the EU including Croatia automatically, is not valid here.

On leaving Bosnia,I realised that I was not mistaken yesterday when I thought that Bosnia appeared more down–at heel than its EU neighbour,for the first Croatian town I went through looked smart and affluent in comparison to where I had just left,with shop signs showing all the usual international logos.Down the river valley in Bosnia,vines were the main crop ,but into Croatia ,and down to the river delta where it meets the Adriatic coast, the fields were all citrus groves.I then turned south along the coast road,heading for Dubrovnik past the dreamy views of archipelagos of pine clad islands set in a turquoise sea.

Due to an accident of political geography,the strip of land containing Dubrovnik is not attached to the mainland of Croatia,but is in a  small enclave encircled by Bosnia.To reach it on the coast road you must drive through 10km of Bosnia,the “Neum corridor” which entails going through border controls again at either end.To be fair ,the resort of Neum looked just like the Croatian coastal resort towns.It seems that still no love is lost for the Serbs locally in some quarters,as the Bosnian road signs featuring Latin and Cyrillic versions of the names have had the Cyrillic ones spray-painted out.(Bosnia Herzegovina is actually made up of two states, the semi-autonomous Republiska Srpska-nothing to do with the country of Serbia-which is where the majority of the Bosnian Serb population are ,who are generally orthodox Christians. I have just been in the other part of the country, confusingly called the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina ,whose population is predominantly Bosniak Muslim )

Finally on arrival in Dubrovnik I found my way to the only campsite in the city ,and caught the bus into the old town for a look.Having been here on holiday 20 months ago, I didn’t go mad and walk the walls etc , but just had a wander, and a very late lunch on the harbourside.Three border crossings and being stopped by the Police in a day is enough.
Picture
Dubrovnik
Picture
Placa,Dubrovnik's main street
Picture
Onofrio's fountain,at the end of the main street.

Day 36      Sibenik to Trogir,then Mostar ,Bosnia & Herzegovina

10/4/2015

 
today's route ( 260 km )
The idyll of my beach-side sojourn was terminated at about 0900 by two diggers arriving to finish off grading the little beach, which involved a lot of dust.

I decided to head south following the scenic coast road, about 60km to Trogir, which is just before Split. I have been there before but it’s a small place and easy to reach; yet another Venetian settlement, on a little island, with a core of narrow alleys, and some interesting buildings, but very touristy. The coast road to it was a beautiful drive, often down to the sea itself, but most of the time with a view of the sea and pine-clad islands, the sea looking an inviting shade of turquoise. Dotted along the road are a series of little towns and villages on the coast, most with a marina full of swanky yachts, and boatyards with even more, and everywhere signs for accommodation and camping.

Picture
Trogir
Picture
I had a bit of a think at this stage because I was in two minds whether to spend another night on the coast nearer Dubrovnik, before executing my master plan to drive up to Mostar in Bosnia-Hercegovina, or to go there straight away. After lunch, and deciding it was too hot to battle my way into the large city of Split (I’ve seen the sights there before anyway) I decided to head straight for Bosnia. This involved a 20km inland drive to reach the Croatian A1 motorway again, running south parallel to the sea, and I then drove 160km south on it, an easy drive with hardly any traffic. Rather than forsaking the scenery by leaving the sea, I found some more beautiful landscape, but very different. The motorway runs through the mountains above the sea, through a scenic but very stark rocky, scrub covered landscape, past spectacular mountains with snow.

The motorway comes to an end actually over the border in Bosnia. Having gone through the two sets of passport and customs controls without a problem I set off down the brand new motorway signed “Mostar/Sarajevo” which was so new my satnav didn’t recognise it and took me flying over nothing on the satnav screen. As I reached a toll point after 1km I wondered if I’d made an error as I had no Bosnian currency (although I’d heard unofficially, and confirmed after arrival, that everywhere will take Euros). The toll booth man actually asked for a credit card instead and I paid 2.5 convertible marks (KM), the equivalent of a pound; Lucky there’s no foreign transaction fee on my card!

Disappointingly the partially completed motorway terminated abruptly after just 5 km further, depositing me at a minor road that was badly signposted. Luckily the satnav knew where it was at this point and we ended up on the correct main road after a bit. It’s is only 40km to Mostar: There is a notable difference from the Croatian coastal belt in terms of visible affluence-but I’ve not seen enough of Inland Croatia to say whether that’s similarly tatty to this bit of Bosnia. Certainly my driving guide says that apart from Bosnia and Albania the roads elsewhere in South Eastern Europe are generally good, so seems to imply that I should expect a reduction in road standards. Lack of clear signage, and road markings seemed the main problem. Also  I can tell I’ve changed countries as the road signs that exist are now in both Latin and Cyrillic script(the Bosniaks use Latin, the Serbs Cyrillic).Almost immediately I also encountered signs of the Muslim population, with Muslim cemeteries(tall thin stones, some of the older ones with turbans on top),and I passed some mosques. As I type this tonight I can hear a muezzin calling from a mosque across the fields.

I wanted to find the campsite I was heading for first before heading on into the city: despite the touristy element to Mostar (it’s the main photo on any Bosnia related tourist leaflets) campsites hereabouts are few on the ground, my guide offering two, both about 10km away from Mostar. I went for the most recommended one ‘Camping Mali Wimbledon’: it’s nice, but a world away from Solaris last night, there are spaces marked out in a small orchard next to the owner’s house, but there’s electricity and possibly Wi-Fi if I can get it to work, and a tiny shaded bar area (currently shut), and in the front of the house, two reasonable grass tennis courts (hence the name!)-but yet to be marked out for the season. The drawback seems to be that there’s just one toilet and shower for men, and one for women. But as there’s only two of us here that shouldn’t be a problem. The other is an Austrian man (at least the van has Austrian plates) who seems to be a long-term resident as he has an Alsatian in a wooden kennel next to his campervan and some pallets piled up. He wears combat trousers, and I’ve put him down as a fugitive from justice.

At about 5pm it was still hot and sunny so I thought I’d drive into Mostar to take a look at the bridge. I was given directions from the campsite to a suitable parking place near the bridge but after driving round and round for a while I couldn’t find anywhere. I had thought Mostar was quite a small place, but actually it’s a large town and even has a small airport. Its traffic is very busy at 5pm .I saw the old bridge from 200 yards away 3 times as I crossed and re-crossed the river on another bridge but I just couldn’t find a van-sized space to park, so in the end I gave up, feeling tired after a day’s driving .I’ll try again tomorrow morning .

Day 35            Plitvika to the North Dalmatian coast (Zadar and Sibenik)

9/4/2015

 
today's route ( 215 km)
There was a brief spot of drama soon after I set off on the slow road south in the direction of Split. The road is quite winding and has many long stretches of continuous white line (i.e. no overtaking). As I drove I was aware of a car behind getting impatient, and in a hamlet, with a continuous white line and a 50 kpm limit into the bargain, I spotted ahead a gravel layby so I started to partially pull into it to let him by. At that moment, I saw hidden in the shadows a Police car. The guy behind hadn’t waited for me do this and was overtaking anyway, but I think he suddenly realised the big mistake he’d made as he seemed to stay hidden in my blind spot to my left much longer than he should, and for a brief moment I thought I might run out of layby and run into the police car, as I couldn’t ease back onto the road for a few seconds, not knowing where the overtaker was. It must have looked quite dramatic, as if I was being run off the road. Sure enough, after about 1 km the Police car caught up with us, lights on, and overtook me (driving dangerously himself I thought) and ahead I saw him pull over the miscreant. I couldn’t help a wry smile.

The road improved as I came down into a plain, very beautiful with wide open spaces, with beech woods, the grass still yellow and dormant and ,on all sides ,mountains with snow on the tops. Before long I joined the main A1 motorway and after disappearing down the longest tunnel yet, through the Velebit range, 6km,I arrived at Zadar. In contrast to yesterday, the sun was out here and it was touching 20 degrees.

PictureThe Venetians woz 'ere....winged lion over the gate
Zadar is reportedly an ‘Adriatic success story’, whatever that is. It is a largish city ,with an airport, but has  a compact  old town  on a bent finger of land which partly circles a harbour to the landward side, and the town on the peninsular is enclosed in a rectangle by the 17th century Venetian bastions. I read that Zadar had been bombed more than 60 times by the Allies in WW2,hence some of the buildings are recent, but the old town is pedestrianised, and there are still attractive narrow paved streets.

The Roman forum is an open space overlooking the sea, and to one side is the circular 8th century basilica of St Donatus. I climbed the 15th century campanile, which like all the towers I’ve climbed in Croatia has steel steps of seemingly inadequate strength winding up inside the wall of the fairly open tower. As I climbed, the busker in the forum below was murdering George Harrison’s “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” and the music reverberated strangely up inside the tower. To the seaward side of Zadar is a pleasant lawned boulevard, with great views over to the islands. There is also a modern art installation that has gained much praise, the 'Sea Organ'. Wave action blows pipes under the quay to make ghostly musical sounds which emanate from a series of holes in the quayside.

Picture
Zadar's Roman forum
Picture
The forum from the other side, with the 8th century basilica of St Donatus, and 15th century tower
Picture
Tornado Zadar, the local football team. I'm not sure how good the team are, but their supporters look rather right-wing
Next stop was to be Sibenik (Venetian 'Sebenico') which has a Unesco world heritage site, the Gothic Renaissance cathedral of St James, built by the Italians in the second half of the 14th century. I took the coast road, which was another very scenic 70 km route along the coast. I passed many signs for autocamps, some of them smart, but many seemed to be just in a large garden at the back of someone’s house on the shore. They seemed to vie with one another to have the most tempting names, like Autocamp Oasis, Paradiso, Romantika etc. But to my mind the clear winner in the name stakes was Autocamp Bozo.

Along this road ahead of me I spotted two people in dark clothes holding what I thought might be speed guns, and I checked my speed, thinking of this morning. As I passed, I realised they were each holding a bunch of asparagus out, for sale. I passed several more people doing the same.

PictureSibenik-castle on the top, cathedral far right
Sibenik is, unlike many Croatian sea towns, not built on a promontory, but there is a steep slope behind it crowned by the ruin of the Venetians’ St Michael’s castle. The little cathedral was interesting, but was undergoing heavy restoration inside, no doubt paid for by Unesco. Up to the castle were a maze of alleys and staircases, all very attractive, and there were great views from the castle. Sibenik, though, has quite a large built-up outskirts, with apartment blocks and industrial areas.


Picture
Two views of the cathedral
Picture
PictureView from the van tonight
My final destination was to camp for the night 7km further down the coast at “Solaris beach resort” which includes a large camper park. All attractions are here, hotels ,beach bungalows,waterpark, beaches,spa,5 restaurants, ‘Dalmatian Ethno Village’(for this imagine a restaurant made up of all the huts in Asterix and Obelix’s village, complete with fire blazing in the middle) ,pirate ship excursions, beach bar with tom-tom drumming and its own volcano, and more: in fact it’s just like Disneyland. Despite sounding horrific it was very pleasant, possibly because it’s virtually empty. And actually none of the stuff shows above the pine woods on the shore, it’s all really unobtrusive and doesn’t detract from the natural beauty of the coast. But the resort is almost empty, and tonight I have a great spot, overlooking the islands, with my van doors open, backed down almost to the shore, with a lovely sunny evening. Black squirrels are in residence in the pine trees: they look small with tufty ears like our red squirrels, the difference being, obviously, that they are black. I was the only diner in one of the restaurants, and had a good chat with the waiter: apparently when full in the summer 8000 people are here. I learned a lot more about the importance to the climate of the Bora wind, which I won’t bore you with. The comment of his that I liked most, when discussing Sibenik’s industrial harbour(very much in decline, they are hoping to turn it into a cruise liner dock)was that a lot of rock is still exported annually to Venice to keep it above the water . “In the past they took: now they buy!”. What I also found interesting was that he referred to the resort being in existence before the war; to my ears that sounded like pre 1939-45, but of course he meant the terrible civil war of 1991-95.

Talking of the 1939-45 war in these parts, I would recommend as a good read  Fitzroy Maclean’s fascinating autobiographical account, “Eastern Approaches”-he was Churchill’s personal military envoy to Tito and his partisans.


 Day 34    Rovinj to the Plitvika Lakes national park

8/4/2015

 
today's route ( 290 km )
What a difference a day makes in terms of weather. Yesterday I was getting sunburnt sitting outside a cafe on the waterfront in Rovinj, and today I am wearing all 3 of my coats, in intermittent drizzle, walking through the Plitvicka national park ,where it is a chilly 3 degrees, with occasional patches of snow still on the ground.

The Plitvicka Lakes national park is on many of  the tourist routes, and shows a very different side to Croatia to that of the coast.It is actually quite a small area made up essentially of one gorge through which a river runs over a multitude of waterfalls,the result of travertine building up over millennia to form natural dams.The park site is very geared towards the coach -trip type tourist ,with a series of paths and wooden walkways and a road train of three carriages pulled by a tractor linking all the waterfalls,and small boat rides joining  them all up across several lakes.

To reach it was a fairly long 4 hour drive of 280km,which took me east to within 30km of Zagreb before turning south.I started on the motorway,or really I should say toll road. Initially as I joined it from Rovinj towards Rijecka it was a dual carriageway but soon became just a normal road with one lane each way,still tolled,because it burrowed through the hills on the way to Rijecka,the longest tunnel being 5km.Although it was not quick, as I was stuck behind a lorry some of the way, it was definitely worth the toll as it avoided the old road which has steep climbs over the hills, where there were still patches of snow in places.

Finally I was able to switch from the toll road,which had by then become a proper 2 lane  motorway again, onto the old main road from Zagreb to Split, towards the park. This road is a fairly narrow A road but the condition is good. The landscape is largely deciduous forest and rolling hills, with some farmland, and with spring just beginning: the primroses are out on the verges. Shortly before reaching the park I passed an amazing little village,Slunj Grad,situated on the same river lower down and built all over one of the travertine dams,so that water flows through the village in about 20 places, between and even under the houses.
Picture
water cascading through Slunj (not my photo)
I am parked for the night on a massive but pretty empty campsite "Autokamp Korana" which is well equipped.I shall definitely need my heater tonight, and there is a large restaurant, which makes life much easier.A good meal costs about £10 so its not really worth cooking in the van. After a month of Euros, I'm still getting used to Kuna, which are a factor of 10 less: an easy conversion as £1 = 10 Kuna.But it is still disconcerting when 100 Kuna notes keep slipping through my fingers, and the smallest note is 5 Kuna, which is 50p !
​
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
No overnight parking because of the bears!

Day 33   Trieste to Istria,Croatia(Porec and Rovinj ) via Slovenia

7/4/2015

 
Today's route  ( 120 km )
I spent a quiet night on the quayside in Trieste: when I turned in for the night I was in a row of half a dozen or so other campervans, although when I awoke there were also some additional campers right next to me in the form of a Romanian couple fast asleep in the front of an old Ford Fiesta. They are doing it in style! There was still the strong cold northerly wind known as the Bora blowing down from the Alps (yesterday all the inhabitants of Trieste out for Bank Holiday Monday were wearing their down jackets and woolly hats)The Bora is apparently an example of a katabatic wind(geographers-please explain !) which is really chilly.

I set off south and was soon crossing the border from Italy into Slovenia, which are both in the Schengen group, so there is no border control. I slipped through just 10km of Slovenia before arriving at the Croatian border (sorry Slovenia!), having avoided getting onto the Slovenian motorway for which I would have had to have bought a pass .

It is perhaps 30 years since I made a border crossing by road at which I had to show a passport, so much do we fly everywhere now, so it was with mild excitement that I crossed into Croatia; really it should be no deal at all crossing from one EU country to another, but anyway I felt a frisson of mild adventure. The Slovenian official did look at my passport and asked “Only one?” looking my van over from inside his booth with an air of disbelief. The Croatian guy 5 yards further on just waved me straight through.

PicturePorec,a pleasant place
My first stop was Porec, a small seaside town with a Unesco World Heritage entry in the form of its 6th century cathedral Basilica of St Euphrasius .This had a few minor additions in the 8th century but we’ll ignore those modern intrusions! The 6th century Basilica is wholly intact ,and still in use ,and Unesco describe this as being the most complete early Christian site in the world. Much of the surrounding bishop's palace is very ruined, but excavations show 4th century Roman mosaics on which the 6th century cathedral sits .

The Rough Guide says that the area around Porec is the most heavily developed on the Istrian coast and is now a “package destination”. It does concede that if you visit before May you may not notice this. I didn’t see any signs of this, really : any development along the shores is low rise and doesn’t show above the beachfront tree line. The small old town sits on a tiny peninsular, as so many Croatian coastal towns do. It was very pleasant to walk through, and had a nice harbour-front but other than the Basilica there was nothing of special interest, although there were masses of cafes and restaurants. The Bora wind was still blowing strongly, which made it quite chilly, though it was sunny, and the sea was choppy. Clearly visible across the sea to the north was the snow-capped line of the Alps. I saw one unfortunate tourist, who had stopped to open his case full of expensive looking cameras on a little wall facing the sea, when a sudden wave popped vertically up the wall and dropped down again neatly into  his case.


Picture
Picture
Picture
The 6th century Basilica of St Euphrasius,in Porec.Wow!
For lunch I picked up a big Borek from a bakery.These are a Balkan speciality,rather greasy crescents of filoux pastry containing either cheese or meat best eaten hot. l then rejoined the road  and moved down south 30km to Rovinj, having a chance to try a little section of the Croatian motorway system, which uses a pay as you go ticket system like the Italian one. It is very new, and almost empty, but clearly the way to travel any distance through Croatia. The other roads seem good too, although habits may be different: as I waited at some traffic lights at a roadworks ,the traffic started coming the other way-a couple of cars and a van, then a guy on a motor scooter with his dog on a lead running alongside.

Rovinj is a bit more upmarket than Porec, and is a larger and very attractive old town built on a rocky peninsular which is crowned by an 18th century baroque cathedral. Rovinj was a Venetian city, and it is still also known by its Italian name of Rovigno (the road signs are bilingual). The cathedral was built by a Venetian architect around 1750 ,before the Napoleonic era (when Napoleon abolished the Venetian empire and Istria was under brief French rule).The town has a lot of charm: inside, there is a maze of alleys and steps, but it is a very much a lived-in town, and the main area of restaurants are outside, around the nice harbour on the south side of the town. The wind had dropped and it was really very pleasant to sit outside a café on the harbour-front in hot sun.

I am told that in July and August there are no free campervan pitches on the whole of the coast, but within 10 minutes’ walk of the old town was a nice site, probably about a quarter full(i.e. still much busier than ones I’ve stayed at before Easter). There are a lot of families on holiday, mostly German and Austrian (whose territory this was, of course, between 1815 and 1918)

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Clearly Tuesday is laundry day in Rovinj....
Picture
The Venetians have left their mark-the Winged Lion.......
Picture
...is evident in several places

Day  32   Treviso to Trieste

6/4/2015

 
today's route  (165 km )
I picked up the van from Treviso airport this afternoon, and finding no problems, headed for Trieste.

This was an easy 140km motorway journey, and although I started in mid-afternoon, I had plenty of time in the late afternoon to explore Trieste a little.

On the way the whole range of Alps were close to my left,although where the Dolomites ended and the Julian Alps began I was not sure. The motorway runs through the flat Veneto plain with orchards and vineyards the whole way.I was conscious of a large stream of campervans heading in the opposite direction. Perhaps they know something I don't-although I suspect they are Italians vacating the Istrian coast after their Easter weekend .

I am aware that the countries I have visited so far, being in Western Europe, have been a "safe" aperitif to the journey, useful for getting any issues ironed out.I am fascinated by the countries next to come,for,even though they are all in the EU or applying to join, they  have  a history of huge and multiple changes to their boundaries and their rulers over time.

To this concept,Trieste,while part of Italy since 1918,makes an interesting introduction.Trieste was the major port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and was an "open port",although the main base of the Austro-Hungarian navy was actually in Pula, Istria,now part of Croatia.Trieste was the fourth largest city in the Empire,after Vienna,Prague and Budapest..

Having always had an Italian influence,especially as part of the Venetian Empire, Istria was coveted by the Italians and nationalistic fervour in Italy led to the Italians entering the First World War on the side of the Western Allies particularly to win the provinces of Trento and Trieste from the Austro-Hungarians.At the end of WW2 the Yugoslavians under Tito took back most of Istria but Trieste remained in the West  after a scramble by the British to save it from falling to the the communist bloc. The agreement was that it become a "free territory" and it was ceded formally back to Italy only  in 1955.It is on a little strip of land almost completely surrounded by Slovenia. The romantic image Trieste puts out is that of its heyday as a resort for the Austro -Hungarians and hang-out of poets ,Bohemians, and as a melting pot of Latin, Slavic, and Germanic culture,in the belle epoque,or fin-de siècle period; I was pleased to find in the Victorian-era  aquarium building on the harbour front a photographic exhibition of just those years,1891-1914.

An interesting indicator of the cultural phenomenon was that from about 30km before Trieste ,all the roadsigns,and signs on big buildings like banks,are bilingual in Italian and Serbo-Croatian.

My camper guide led me to a car park  on the main harbourfront, and I am parked up right on the waterside overlooking the yachts. As an extra bonus it is free  as there is no charge on bank holidays. There is the slightest of inclines towards the water so I hope the handbrake holds overnight! .It was a nice sunny evening to stroll along the main seafront parade, and into the main square overlooking the harbour,now called Piazza Unita d'Italia (since 1918).

Picture
Picture
Piazza Unita d'Italia
Picture
Belle Époque exhibition in the old Aquarium building
Picture
Emperor Maximilian of Austro-Hungary
I had wondered how Trieste might compare with Genoa ,but while there were plenty of signs of a busy port(many ships waiting in the Gulf outside the harbour) the city has much more of the air of a resort to it, with a wide open boulevarded harbour-front faced by grand Austro-Hungarian buildings, and attractive hillsides leading down to the city dotted with villas and houses. As I was when I was in Genoa, I was tempted to eat in  a harbour-front seafood restaurant: again a very good meal.

Picture
View of Trieste harbour from the van door tonight

Day 30  Venice to Treviso        (Easter holidays)

29/3/2015

 
todays route  ( 40 km)
​For anyone out there reading this stuff, please be aware that Lostintransit is now spending Easter in Treviso airport carpark and the journey will hopefully resume on 6th April.

I had a slow departure from the Venetian lagoon shore this morning: the clocks going forward didn't help, but with  a little break in the journey now planned I spent some time cleaning, and refurbishing.

I had intended to spend a night in another camper spot in Treviso,but first I  wanted to be certain that my van would actually fit in to the car park at Treviso airport that I had booked for the next day (but  not yet paid for).Having once previously flown into "Venice Treviso" on Ryanair, I knew that Treviso airport is pretty basic and has the facilities of a municipal bus station. I felt that I had better eyeball the parking arrangements today,and a good thing I did because all the three car parks were tiny, the largest probably no bigger than 200 places,with small parking slots and very tight corners and entry and exit routes.I parked up on the road and walked through all of the options. There really was nowhere the van would fit into.Eventually I spotted that one car park extended into a big garage .In the middle of this  were just three extra large bays,each with enough room for the van .The exit bend out of the car park, at 90 degrees round a concrete bollard ,looked tricky,but I paced it out and reckoned the van would just make it. As there was no charge for 10 mins,I gave it a test run-yes I could do it, and by going down a short route stating 'No Entry' I could get into the garage. I then just managed to inch out of the tight car park exit.

Having thought about it for a bit,I decided that,as I didn't know if it would be busier or quieter tomorrow ,I ought to get the van into the car park permanently, now ,while those 3 spaces still were available, as there was absolutely nowhere else to go.

Having done that and parked up,I then toyed with the idea of spending the night in the van,but thought that might be pushing it a bit,especially as as the car park rules were displayed in English forbidding staying in your vehicle any longer than it takes to park it. I am thankful that, although my van is a long wheelbase, it has always seemed significantly the smallest campervan in the parks I've been in. Some of them are absolute monsters, and all of these would have had absolutely no chance getting into this car park.

I find some overnight accommodation did a quick bit of internet research on Booking.com and discovered vacancies at an Agroturismo (Il Cascinale) just a mile away as the crow flies across the fields for  £27 per night, and I booked in. I assumed I might be able to walk over to it ,but a dual carriageway bridge over the river,with no pedestrian access, foiled that Idea and I had to return to the airport and get a taxi. This turned out to be a rip-off, with the airport taxis charging a set rate of 20 euros to anywhere in Treviso, and as my journey took just 5 minutes it was an expensive ride.
Picture
Agroturismo " Il Cascinale "
The accommodation was in contrast extremely good value, in a nice villa which used to be the farmhouse,with conventional modern hotel rooms.The farm has its own vines, and also seems to market garden asparagus,and lettuce of various types(there were pictures up of their various varieties of red radicchio lettuce ,one of which  is ubiquitous in Italy and  known as  'Treviso').
Their farm restaurant is only open at weekends so this being a Sunday I was very lucky to catch it for dinner that evening ,when I treated myself to the 'farm tasting menu'. This consisted of  numerous courses of local food from the cooperative, and with 1/4 litre of the farm's own white wine, and the same of of their red wine thrown in, all for a total of just £16.
​This was quite possibly the biggest meal I have ever eaten: and the portions were not fancy, but solid  farm portions. There were three types of starter, then two different pasta dishes,then the main course was a trio of turkey, chicken, and guinea fowl .I was a little apprehensive as to what I might get as the English menu I was initially  given included a horse steak,and a "colt" dish, but I'm not sure how good the translation was ,because Roast Howl was also on the menu: whether this was fowl or owl I have no idea. After pudding, I was then given a glass of the farm's home made Amaro Raddichio. This is probably the first time I've had a lettuce liquor. If you know Amaro Montenegro, which I love, Amaro Raddichio was rather like that except a bit  more bitter, and very good.
Picture
The following morning I enjoyed a good breakfast, again from local produce(assorted cold meats etc.), and felt duty bound to correct the menu mistranslations which had caused me some amusement the night before. I also was determined to avoid the expensive taxi ride back to the airport and with the help of google maps I plotted a walking route over a small bridge upstream through some leafy suburbs, a walk of about 4 miles. As I was in no rush and just had a small rucksack of overnight stuff to carry this was a pleasant walk.

Day 29    Venice

28/3/2015

 
What a great end to the month !

I crossed over to Venice on the vaporetto on a hot sunny  morning  and quietly lost myself for the day in the maze of alleys and little squares. In contrast to my last visit, when there were at least half a dozen huge cruise ships moored, this time there were none. I don't know whether Venice's ban on them is now total?

Initially I thought that the lack of cruise ships had made it quieter, but that was a deception caused by me being off the beaten track. As soon as I neared St Mark's square it started to get very busy ,as usual.

There's not much I can say about Venice:it's all been said .Apologies ,then, for the obligatory pictures of gondolas, etc .
 
Picture
Some of you  may groan when I say that I had a happy time visiting Venice's Maritime Museum at the Arsenale. I have been before, but it is the type I really enjoy-4 floors of unreconstructed good  old fashioned ship models, cannons, maps etc.

London's Maritime Museum in Greenwich went to the dogs in my opinion when they went all modern and removed most of the models.



Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture




Hey, you're in the way of my view of Venice !


Day 28   Vincenza to Pienza,and Chioggia,then Venice

27/3/2015

 
today's route ( 135 km)
The rain has stopped-just about.

This morning one of the Italian campers in the Vincenza carpark was having trouble with their alarm, which kept going off (luckily, after 8am). I can sympathise as I have had a few problems with my alarm too. I haven’t been bothering to set the van alarm (by clicking the central locking) in campsites, but I have done when I have spent the night in carparks. The cab has an infrared sensor but when I have the curtain pulled between cab and living area, it is safe. What I have had difficulty remembering is that, when I wake up bleary eyed and open the curtains in the morning ,the alarm goes off! What is worse, is that on clicking the key fob to turn it off, it then reactivates itself after 20 seconds, if a door has not been opened, and goes off again. It took me a bit of time to work out that I had to open a door, after deactivating the alarm: some people next to me have had an early alarm call. Another camper today couldn’t start his van, and was fiddling under the bonnet when I left.

PicturePadua ' s botanical garden -the circular wall represents the world
My mission for today was to seek out the university botanical garden in neighbouring Padua. It has World Heritage status as it is the earliest in the world, having been founded in 1545.It is enclosed within a circular wall, representing the world, and the plots are surrounded by a ring of water representing the ocean. It has over 6000 species of plants.As you can see from the picture I was unfortunately way too early in the spring to see it at its best. Nonetheless it was a pleasant stroll round. The sun was out ,and as I wandered, the clocks all around Padua started striking 12 one after another.Like the clocks of Thomas Hardy's Casterbridge, "they were well on their way to the next hour before the whole business of the old one was wound up".

The ticket also gave entry to the university’s little ethnographical museum, which had a particularly striking series of 3D computerised reconstructions of the facial features of the whole sequence of known hominids up to homo sapiens, based in their skulls—a bit random, but it was interesting. There was more to Padua, but I skipped the rest and moved on.

I headed for Chioggia, which is a small port 20 km south of Venice at the bottom end of the lagoon. Having been to Venice a couple of times, I had hesitated to take the 2 hour ferry down to Chioggia as there was always so much else to experience, but I had always wanted to see it. I was aware of “The battle of Chioggia” in 1380 when the Venetians saved their bacon and inflicted a defeat on the Genoan fleet that was besieging the lagoon and strangling the Venetians’ trade.

Picture
An aerial shot of Chioggia: Sottomarina is the beach area in the top right of the picture
Chioggia is called by some “Little Venice” as so many places seem to be, just because they have a canal. It actually has a wide main street down the middle but also three  canals, and a large waterfront area. On the approaches over a causeway across the lagoon there was a busy industrial scene with small ships and boats in various states of repair, renovation and abandonment. It is a no-frills working fishing port, and I walked past the busy fish market. I tried to go in and watch the fish auction-I wasn’t allowed in: presumably I would have interfered with the furious bidding going on round the boxes of fish. Attached to Chioggia is the end of the sand spit linking to the mainland to the south part of the lagoon. This part is called Sottomarina and in the Italian style has a long beachfront made up of concession after concession, each with its own café, children’s play area, swimming pool and beach section. They were all completely shut up.
Picture
Chioggia's one attractive canal....(in the centre of the picture above)
Picture
...Its less attractive one(on the right in the picture above)
I had considered spending the night in a camper spot at the end of the beachfront of Sottomarina, but although populated by half a dozen campers, it didn’t seem very exciting, and still less so was the surrounding area, being all shut up out of season.

​I therefore moved on in the late afternoon to Fusina ,a little way north ,and a point on the lagoon immediately opposite Venice, where there is a grassy camp site ("Camping Fusina")with camping under the pine trees ,its own bar and restaurant, and views across the lagoon. It is adjacent to a landing stage which has an hourly vaporetto service across to Venice (landing at Fondamente delle Zattere) .
Picture
The somewhat uninspiring "Sosta" at Sottomarina,complete with metal palm trees. I spent 2 hours here before deciding to move
Picture
The vaporetto landing stage at Fusina,a couple of hundred yards from my new campsite.(Hourly waterbus to Venice.)
PictureThe view of Venice from the van tonight at Camping Fusina
.

The Alps and Dolomites seem very close; the whole range is visible across the horizon (probably 60 km to the north),with snow glimmering in the sun-yes, the sun has finally reappeared! I would guess that the incessant rain on the lowlands which I have experienced over the last 3 days will have meant a fresh coating of snow on the mountains.


<<Previous
Forward>>

    Author

    Nick McCulloch

    Archives

    February 2021
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Web Hosting by iPage