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Showing posts with label 006 BULGARIA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 006 BULGARIA. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 August 2007

006 CYCLE TOURING BULGARIA


By Eddie Carter

6 BULGARIA
507 Kilometres – 9 Days
17 August – 26 August 2007

VOICE-OVER

  

 

17 August – Oltenita, Romania – Silistra, Bulgaria – 85 kilometres

After a breakfast of fresh tomatoes and paprika from Peter’s garden — the kind of breakfast that makes you feel like a wholesome, agrarian goddess even though you haven’t washed your cycling shirt in a week — we hurried toward the Calarasi border to cross the Danube into Bulgaria.

I was concerned about my Romanian visa, which stated I could stay for two days and which I had interpreted as “twenty.” I handed over my passport with the confidence of a woman who absolutely does not have her story straight. The officials disappeared behind a screen, presumably to debate whether I was a harmless tourist or an incompetent criminal mastermind. They returned my passport without comment. I took this as a diplomatic victory.

Bulgaria immediately presented a new challenge: communication. Bulgarian uses the Cyrillic alphabet, which made every sign look like a puzzle I hadn’t been trained to solve. Worse, nodding means “no,” and shaking your head means “yes,” which is frankly unkind to foreigners. My first encounter with this cultural quirk happened while trying to find accommodation. The lady shook her head, so I prepared to cycle away — only for her to produce a key. I accepted the room and the fact that I would now be second‑guessing every human interaction in Bulgaria.

 

18 August – Silistra – Balchik – 136 kilometres

Bulgaria covers 110,994 square kilometres — roughly the size of Malawi, which I consider small, though perhaps that says more about my sense of scale than geography. Eddie and I headed toward Balchik on the Black Sea, pedalling through farmlands, cornfields, and sunflowers that stared at us like cheerful spectators who didn’t have to cycle 136 kilometres in the heat.

Balchik had no campsite, because, of course, it didn’t, so we cycled another 15 kilometres to Kavarna. The campsite there was idyllic, and we threw ourselves into the lukewarm Black Sea like two overheated seals.

 

19 August – Kavarna

We spent the following day at the beach and unexpectedly reunited with the Baltic Cycle Group from Bucharest. It was a fun night of drinking and trying to communicate. They spoke Polish. We did not. Vodka did the heavy lifting.

I had initially mistaken the Black Sea for a lake — a detail I kept to myself until I checked a map and realised it connects to the ocean via the Bosphorus, the Sea of Marmara, and the Dardanelles. At 436,400 square kilometres and over 2000 metres deep, it is decidedly not a lake. I pretended I had known this all along.

 

20 August – Kavarna – Kamcija via Varna – 96 kilometres

We continued toward the Turkish border, though navigation was complicated by signboards written in Bulgarian.  Still, we found a basic campsite in Varna with a decent beach and, once again, the Baltic Cycles. They were like a cheerful, vodka‑powered mirage that kept reappearing. The restaurant owner offered us Rakia, a fruit brandy strong enough to make you forget mosquito bites, your name, and possibly your nationality.

 

21 August – Kamcija

The next day was spent at leisure, chatting with fellow cyclists. Communication improved in direct proportion to vodka consumption. By evening, we were practically fluent in each other’s languages.

 

22 August – Kamcija – Nesebar – 104 kilometres

We settled into a comfortable routine: pack up, cycle, find a campsite, repeat. In Nesebar, we met a 70‑year‑old German man travelling the world with a bike and trailer. His bicycle had no pedals. I didn’t ask questions. At his age, he had earned the right to travel however he pleased.

The campsite was excellent, and we stayed two days.

 

24–25 August – Nesebar – Yuk Camping – 96 kilometres

Thanks to the Baltic Cycle Group’s recommendation, we found one of the best campsites in the area. We stopped at Pomorie and Sozopol for swims, which were necessary because the weather was hot enough to roast a pepper on your pannier rack.

My fellow cyclists moved on, but I stayed to work on fading my cycling tan, which had reached “zebra” levels of contrast.

 

26 August – Yuk Camping – Border – 75 kilometres

Bulgaria’s terrain is diverse: coastline, mountains, and — in August — heat that could melt your will to live. The flies were relentless, buzzing around our heads like they were auditioning for a remake of The Birds.

Shortly before the Turkish border, we rolled into a small village for refreshments and ended up staying the night. There were no campsites or guesthouses, so we were directed to the hospital, which doubled as a guesthouse. I didn’t ask why. At this point in my travels, nothing surprised me.