The Elie Wiesel home in Sigheta |
More |
It now offers tours, but we decided our Romanian was too limited... |
Wiring in Sigheta; like a lot of other places we have visited |
One or two of the churches downtown |
Another |
The Palace Cultural |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
The Elie Wiesel home in Sigheta |
More |
It now offers tours, but we decided our Romanian was too limited... |
Wiring in Sigheta; like a lot of other places we have visited |
One or two of the churches downtown |
Another |
The Palace Cultural |
The night was very quiet |
But, to our surprise, the church was still in use, bells pealing Sunday morning, and amplifiers broadcasting the 2 hour+ morning Orthodox mass |
The Creatorul, Stan loan Patras, directly opposite the church entrance |
The tire guy, with whom we could relate... |
The school teacher |
A writer? |
And the most intriguing--and photgraphed-- of all |
And the mass went on, and on, and on... (mostly to the tune of "Car 54, where are you?") |
Most of the faithful outside |
Patiently |
We were struck by the number of very large residences,
most under construction, few actually finished and
inhabited
|
Even in fairly remote rural areas
|
We have seen hundreds, perhaps thousands; all of the
same very recent vintage, when Romania entered the
EU and capital apparently flooded in--but not long enough...
|
These beside more traditional dwellings, each with a front-
yard well and a yard given completely to fruit and vegetable
gardening
|
Up in the hills, a road-side picnic area
|
In one of the cities, like Cluj, much defunct heavy industry
and oil (?) pipelines
|
Ditto
|
A defunct farm collective out in the countryside, one of
dozens
|
Great beauty in the churches that are
everywhere
|
And more unfinished 5,000 square foot mansions
|
And more wagons...it is a country in transition
|
Our first night in Romania; northern Romania has few--
possibly no--campgrounds; fortunately, wild camping is
tolerated; especially if you clear it with the proprietors and
buy a beer or dinner
|
Alas, it was only the next morning that we discovered we
had parked nearby a business that traffics in the gnome cult;
the gnome cult knows no boundaries, no borders
|
These are Romanian hay-stacks, all organized around
central poles; we have dubbed them "Vlad the Impaler"
style; we have seen tens of thousands more in the last
few days
|
Hotel Montana
|
Isvorul Crisului, aka "Souvenir Village" a
little town approaching the Marmures that
is lined, both sides, with little tourist
trinket shops
|
We expected to see horse-drawn wagons occasionally;
they are everywhere, even in some of the cities
|
Ditto
|
Entering Cluj Napoca, another big city, not
attractive to our eyes
|
Back out in the countryside, nearly every
house has a painted metal Jesus
|
Ditto; the painted metal Jesus business must
be very good
|
Subway sign for hi-def TV (we think); still processing this
one...but you can see how difficult it is for us to follow
anything in the language
|
Non-conformist hotel
|
A wall near the Castle; the Russians besieged Budapest for
some months in 1944; the bullet and shell holes here were
preserved...
|
Eastern-bloc T-bird
|
"Oh, shit! Where's my arrow?!"
|
Much later: we bought this train for Penelope in Budapest at a store called Two TeddyBears Toygallery (Ket Macko Jatekgaleria) |
It's only 15 feet beneath the boulevard |
Heroes' Square station |
Interior--everything down-scaled |
Tiny little cars (by contemporary standards) |
Leather straps to hang on to, just like in the olden days |
Two tiny little cars; but a treat to see and ride! |