Balkans trip report — Part 2

My accommodation in the coastal town of Bar was nothing special, and that’s being kind. We had shared toilets. No problem, but where’s the loo paper? Then I realised about a dozen sheets of bog roll had been draped over the side of my bed. He’s staying three nights, so four threes are twelve, yeah, that should do it. The guest house seemed to be in a wind tunnel. It really whistled through.

Thursday morning. I was ravenous. I wolfed down a breakfast, briefly looked round the town that was named after one of the top five things a visitor would want, just to confuse everybody, then I hopped on the bus to Stari Bar, the old town. On the train I’d been warned by the Serbian bloke not to visit the old town because it was “just like the WC”, but off I went to check out the lav. “Lav”, by the way, means “lion” in Serbo-Croat, and is also the name of a common Serbian beer. The English guy who bought a can of Lav on the train thought it was an apt name for the contents. I instead got a can of Jelen, which means “deer”. Anyway, Stari Bar wasn’t anything like this guy suggested, and was very picturesque, even if the steep main street was a little touristy. For two euros I visited the ruins dating back many centuries, where you could wander and climb to your heart’s content, and they weren’t touristy at all. On the main street I wanted to buy some rakija as a present. The lady couldn’t speak English as far as I could tell, so I practised my extremely sketchy Serbian. I wanted to confirm that the price was €6, and the next thing I knew she’d fetched six bottles from around the back, when I only wanted one. I’ve clearly got some work to do. That day was the first day I tasted the quite wonderful figs which were in abundance.

Stari Bar (Old Bar)

The following day was quite stressful. I was up early and got on the first bus to Ulcinj, a town just along the coast, supposedly with a very good beach. I fancied the idea of spending the day lying on the beach, reading a book, not having to do anything. The bus took 40 minutes, and when I arrived, suddenly half the signs were in Albanian, full of weird and wonderful combinations of Qs and Xs and Ës. Right, now where’s the beach? I asked a lady. The big beach or the small one? I didn’t realise there were two. The big one, I guess. Straight on. It had to be at least three kilometres to the beach, perhaps more. The beach went on for miles and miles, and it was lined with hotels that each had their own blocks of sun loungers. I just wanted to lie on a towel somewhere. Now, where can I leave my stuff? After perhaps an hour of searching for somewhere safe-ish, I left my belongings behind a bar and had a swim, but I could never relax. I spent two hours on the beach, got my stuff, tipped the barman, and trekked back to the bus station. I was glad to get away from there. Back in Bar I ate goulash and drank beer at a basic and wild-looking fig-tree-surrounded eatery called Berlin, which you could also stay at. Heaven knows what that would be like.

The beach at Bar. I should have stayed here rather than faffing around at Ulcinj.
I took this on the bus from Ulcinj back to Bar
“Sobe” means “rooms”

On Saturday I checked out of the guest house and got the taxi to the train station. The driver couldn’t speak English; I enjoyed my chance to practise some basic sentences. Or basic words, rather. I’m not at the sentence stage just yet. The train from Bar to the Montegrin capital Podgorica (now there’s a good quiz question) took just over an hour. I was going back along the way I’d come previously, only this time it was daylight. We went past Lake Skadar, which straddles Montenegro and Albania. I had to hang around in Podgorica, and made sure I had a good slap-up lunch, while I waited for my bus to Mostar. My ticket spelled out clearly that my departure was from platform 11, but everybody else seemed to be going from either 10 or 12. I was fine; my bus was just late. We set off half an hour late and after eight hours along slow, winding roads, and another border patrol, I arrived in Mostar. There was some drama along the way as an Italian passenger, also going to Mostar, ranted and raved at the driver in stereotypical Italian fashion, after refusing to let him out at the border for a smoke. “You’re a Russian fascist,” he said.

On the slow bus from Podgorica to Mostar

It was 10pm on a Saturday, and Mostar was buzzing. I didn’t have the faintest clue where I was, however, and my two maps weren’t much help. Which bus station had I just got off at? There were clearly two. Streets weren’t signposted. (This was about as bad as in Bar, where the streets were occasionally signposted, but very confusingly and in about size-8 font.) My guest house, which I found eventually, was down a narrow street called Stupčeva, which means “beehive something” in Romanian. My key was under the left flowerpot, as promised. There’s something quite nerve-wracking about these unmanned, unmarked apartments, but phew, I’d made it.

Balkans trip report — Part 1

I woke up this morning after more than eight hours’ uninterrupted sleep. For a few fleeting seconds I didn’t know where I was. Mostar? Sarajevo? Belgrade? No, Timișoara. That felt good.

I got back yesterday from my twelve-day trip around the Balkans. It was great to get away and see and learn about that beautiful but complex part of the world that happens to be almost on my doorstep. But travelling is, at times, quite stressful. So much to think about. So much to organise (and that’s never been my strong point). So much can go so wrong, so fast.

On Monday 12th August I took the door-to-door minibus from Timișoara to Belgrade. The driver called me to say he’d arrive in 15 to 20 minutes, and the bus showed up 80 minutes later. On the bus was a Taiwanese bloke who had lived in Barcelona for 30 years, and was travelling with an interesting-looking fold-up bike. I arrived at the guest house in the scorching mid-afternoon. It was near Skadarlija, where I stayed with my parents last year, and was perfectly adequate. On the table in my room was a laminated set of rules, in Serbian and English. I marvelled at how, in 2019, they got the English so spectacularly wrong.

I spent most of my day and a bit in Belgrade just pottering about. It was too hot to do much else. On Tuesday morning I picked up my train ticket from the old station, which closed last year. The ticket was inside an envelope, which had been dropped off by the fairly famous (as I was to find out) Mr Popović. I intended to visit the Nikola Tesla museum, but there was an enormous queue, which I didn’t fancy in the searing heat. I came back later, and was turned away because the museum was full. In the meantime I sat in Tašmajdan Park (which was Tasmanian Park in my head) and chatted to an older woman in French. (When I asked her in Serbian if she spoke English, she told me no, but she learnt French at school.)

The old station in Belgrade
St Mark’s Church, next to Tašmajdan Park
Making a mosaic inside St Mark’s Church

On Wednesday morning I panicked a bit, as the taxi I’d been promised by the receptionist never showed up. I hailed a taxi eventually, and the driver took me to the train station, or rather a field with a track running through it. The middle of nowhere, or so it seemed. Uh, is this it? The station? Are you sure? I asked a man who was working on the track. “Tamo!” he said, and pointed. Over there. It was a short walk to Topčider, which was only a provincial station. At the time I didn’t realise that the new central station, replacing the one that closed last year, is in the process of being built underground.

Topčider train station, eventually

On the dot of nine o’clock we were off, and before long we were climbing, through the mountains and beautiful, lush landscapes. It was a dull day, but that didn’t really matter. I got talking to a family who lived in Wales, another British couple, and a man in his sixties from Zrenjanin in Serbia. We talked about all sorts of interesting topics, as well as Brexit, which has become this huge amorphous all-consuming monster that you can’t escape from. We travelled through 254 tunnels, comprising about a quarter of the total length of the line. After a while I realised the number and length of each tunnel (varying from tens of metres to several kilometres) was posted on a sign at its entrance. The two longest, one in Serbia and one in Montenegro, both exceeded 6 km, and all the tunnels longer than about 2 km were named. At one point our phones beeped to let us know we’d entered Bosnia, and ten minutes later they chirped again to tell us we were back in Serbia. At the half-way point, where we passed a beautiful lake, we could buy beer and thick Serbian-style coffee, the only refreshments available on the journey. Passport control, on both sides of the Serbia–Montenegro border, took an age, although on one side at least we had an interesting monastery to stare at. At around six, as we reached Kolašin, the highest point, we finally caught sight of the sun. As we descended at a steep 1-in-40 gradient, I could see some wonderful rock formations. For the last part of the journey it was dark apart from the full moon. We arrived at Bar at 9:15 pm. When the railway was completed in the late seventies (quite a feat), the journey apparently took seven hours; it had taken us more than twelve.

Pushing off…

I’ve got a couple of hours until I push off. It’s going to be a stinking hot day, both here and in Belgrade. They’re forecasting 37s and 38s. Tomorrow will be the same. I can see myself being holed up in my hotel room for the best part of the day.

After the Belgrade bit, the temperatures should plummet (yay!) and everything will be pretty damn awesome. I hope.

I do need a break. I haven’t had a proper one since Christmas. Last week (23 hours of lessons) things felt ever so slightly stale on the work front. Hours of Peppa Pig. Hours of Romgleză with that woman. Four hours with Matei in that café, where you either sit outside (hopefully in the shade) and be lost among layers of cigarette smoke, or inside where you’re confronted with the Solid Shit music channel on their TV and you can’t hear yourself think.

Timișoara’s centenary (as part of Romania) took place on 3rd August, and to mark the occasion they finally reopened Central Park, a lovely park that had been closed since May 2017, not long after I got here. God knows why it was closed for so long.

Timișoara celebrates its centenary
A new statue erected close to where I live. What’s it going to be?
The big reveal. It’s Maria, who was the Queen of Romania. This might be the city’s first statue of a woman.
Central Park
Central Park, with my apartment block in the background. The park is lined with sculptures of famous Timișoara men, but no women.
Let the games begin!

Some time off

This afternoon I had a Skype chat with my cousin. He lives in upstate New York, and I stayed with him and his Italian wife (and saw the US Open with them) on my trip through America four years ago. (They weren’t married then. They tied the knot in Italy the following year.) I’d say my cousin has aged a bit. We talked about his job, my job, our parents, tennis, cricket, and I can’t remember exactly what else. Oh yes, he thought that S (regular readers might remember her) was still possibly a thing. We did venture briefly into the world of politics, and he thought Trump would probably fail in his re-election bid. “I hope he gets annihilated.” Well, so do I, but I wouldn’t bank on it. I’d put his chances of re-election at 50%, which admittedly is low for an incumbent presiding over a strong economy. So much will depend on who the Democrats nominate. On the bright side for us anti-Trumpers, the nominee probably won’t be as unpopular as Hillary Clinton was.

My brother told me that, according to some app he checks every five minutes, his house had dropped in value, in a currency that is itself dropping in value. Where’s it all going to stop? The pound is languishing at €1.064. British airports are now giving one euro (or less) for a pound, high-street bureaux may soon do the same, and before we know it the official rate – the one you see on sites like xe.com – might crash through the one-for-one barrier. Then we’ll all watch the same thing happen against the US dollar. And then, who knows? The Canadian dollar? The Bulgarian lev (currently two to the pound, and pegged against the euro)? I remember when the pound used to make me feel proud. I know it’s silly because the value of a unit of currency is arbitrary, but I’d look at the board at a Cambio Wechsel in Singapore or Bali or wherever, and the pound rate would jump out at me. It was always the biggest number. The Rolls-Royce of currencies. Now somebody needs to slam on the brakes before it hurtles over the cliff.

I’ll have money in all kinds of varieties and colours to contend with in the next twelve days. I say “contend with”, but weird and wonderful money is quite fun to deal with, really. I read that Montenegro doesn’t have a currency. That has the potential to be really fun, or not, but unfortunately Montenegro is pretty boring when it comes to money, and just uses the rather insipid euro with all its pictures of pretend bridges, even though it isn’t in the EU. Serbia’s note-heavy money is a bit more inspiring, while I’m looking forward to my first taste of the Bosnian convertible mark (currency code: BAM!).

My itinerary: tomorrow I’m taking the bus from Timișoara to Belgrade, where I’ll stay two nights, then I’ll the train from Belgrade to Bar (three nights in Bar), then I’ll need to take a bus and taxi to Mostar, where I’ll spend two further nights. From Mostar I’ll probably take another supposedly spectacular train to Sarajevo. Yes, I’ll be visiting some places that were all over the news in the nineties. I’d like to visit Jajce, a much smaller place in Bosnia, but I’m likely to just run out of time. A week on Friday I intend to be back in Belgrade and spend one night there on the way home. Whatever happens I’m just grateful for some time off.

Back from hell

It hasn’t been a bad day at all. After a good night’s sleep I had breakfast consisting of porridge, slices of watermelon, and a cup of tea, then I printed off what I needed for my three lessons. My first lesson from 9 till 10:30 was with a bloke of about 25; at one stage we discussed all kinds of names for all kinds of body parts. That gave me just enough time to pack and set off for my two hours with the woman who is afraid to speak English, and two more hours with Matei. I think the woman likes to have lessons with me because she’s a bit lonely. Predictably, about two-thirds of everything she said (and she says a lot) was in Romanian, although if anything that proportion has dropped a bit.

After the session, I FaceTimed my parents from the small park next to my student’s apartment block. Whenever I call them from outside, Mum is amazed; she says she wouldn’t dream of making a video call without WiFi because of all the data it chews up. In Romania, for a few quid a month (and without any contract) I have more data than I could possibly need. It’s a great pleasure to contact my parents. Perhaps Dad’s ordeal has brought us all together, but mostly it’s just that I get on so much better with Mum these days. Starting up a new life in Romania has helped a lot. I think she respects me for having the oomph to do my own thing, for being independent. It doesn’t feel that long since she saw an online job ad, and I felt I had to apply to keep her happy even though I knew it would damn near kill me. I got the job. I took it (to keep her happy?). It damn near killed me. I was 30, nearly 31. How bloody ridiculous. Those were the dark days. I’m so glad they’re over.

I had sandwiches and fruit in the park (the bread I buy is excellent but very sandwich-unfriendly), then I was off to Dumbrăvița to see Matei. The “lesson” was really just a chat in an outside café. He’d been to Tunisia and on a basketball camp in Serbia. After a quick stop at Piața Lipovei (the market) on the way back, I was home at 5:40. Unusually, I was done for the day. My first instinct was to pour myself a beer, as I often do whenever I get a free evening, but I didn’t because I’d read what alcohol can do to your sinuses.

Before today, you see, I’d gone through hell with my sinuses. Absolute agony. And all I could do was take painkillers. As well as the pain to contend with, I had virtually no energy, I was irritable, clumsy, hopelessly slow. For two nights I hardly slept. Yesterday I somehow survived my session with the six-year-old. I had the presence of mind to at least bring my laptop, and he just watched Peppa Pig non-stop. Are you bored with this yet? No. Fantastic! His mother wanted a chat with me afterwards. Please, just let me go! Today, after a proper night’s sleep, was a blessed relief.

Getting away

One hundred years ago today, Timișoara (and the region of Banat, or most of it) became part of Romania. Before that, it was part of the Austro-Hungarian empire. I have a map of modern-day Romania on my wall; yesterday my student of about 25 explained to me what bits used to go where, and when. I’ve been pleasantly surprised by how well young Romanians know their history.

Yesterday a concert started up in the square to mark the centenary. Last night Phoenix (a well-known band from Timișoara who formed the same year as the Beatles (!) and whose music I like) played in the teeming rain. I didn’t even think about going to bed until they wrapped things up at midnight; it was pretty loud. It’s currently 10:30 in the morning and it’s been tipping it down the whole time.

In the last 36 hours I haven’t been feeling great (sore throat, stomachache and general lack of energy), and yesterday was a dead loss apart from the three lessons I had, two face-to-face at home and one on Skype. I didn’t have to go out, thankfully.

If my student couple hadn’t run into financial difficulties, I’d have been jetting off to Greece with them (and hordes of other Romanians) today. That wasn’t to be. Instead I’ll be pushing off on my own, a week on Monday. I’ll get the bus to Belgrade, stay two nights there, and then take the train to Bar, on the coast of Montenegro, where I’ll stay three nights. That train trip is a 12-hour journey through the mountains and literally hundreds of tunnels. It should be spectacular. To reserve a seat on the train, I had to contact a Mr Popović, who booked me a first-class ticket, for the same price (only €24) as a second-class one. He told me that it was a kind of promotion, to encourage people to use the service. After Bar I don’t know what I’ll do. Perhaps I’ll take the train to Podgorica, the capital of Montenegro, and from there go up through Bosnia and somehow back through Serbia to Timișoara. That will certainly involve buses, which are never as comfortable or as much fun as trains.

In my lessons I often ask people about their holidays and travel experiences. I always ask them to state their favourite means of travel. With the exception of a boy who said he found flying scary, they almost all show a preference for travelling by plane. It’s almost a case of, “Well, when I go on holiday, I like to travel more than a couple of hundred miles, and the only sensible way to do that is to fly. I mean, duh!” I find flying, short-haul flying in particular, to be quite stressful, and distinctly un-fun. Saying that, you couldn’t beat Wellington to Timaru on a sunny day.

On Tuesday I joined a Skype meeting of owners in our apartment block. People are full steam ahead when it comes to selling. All the talk, amongst the annoying meetingese (piss off with your “quantum” and “I’ll talk to that”) was about solicitors and conveyancing and whether we’d be happy to sell for x or y million, figures that I can only get a handle on when I calculate what I’d get for my apartment alone. (One owner, who wasn’t in the meeting, said he would sell for one dollar.) In the absolute best case scenario, I’d get back half what I bought it for, ignoring all the interest I’ve also paid. But this is almost beside the point. People have just accepted their fate, and I think they’re all mad. I can see it now. We sell. Great. We lose a ton of money but we can all get on with our lives. The developer has, in theory, six or seven years to do something with the mess they’ve inherited before it has to be razed to the ground, but as D-day approaches, they and various other developers across the city are granted an extension, then a second, then a third, and in the end they won’t have to do anything.

Oh, I’ve been trying to learn Serbian again, after dabbling with it a year ago. I might write my next post about that.