Saturday, June 30, 2018

Day 15: rain, rain, go away!

June 30, 2018

Sighisoara and Brasov, Romania
(the middle s in each is pronounced /zh/)



Today we checked out and it was cloudy, but not raining.  As we drove to Sighisoara, it rained off and on.  We were moved from the 4-lane freeway onto a smaller 2-lane road again.  The interesting thing about the smaller road is that it goes through all the tiny villages.  We saw some examples of traditional Romania--women in bright skirts and scarves on their heads (old women in black), men in hats, men using scythes to cut the grass and horse-led carts.  These sights were side by side with modern Romania.  It was cool seeing the two existing together.

We stopped in Sighisoara because it is a traditional hill town (like many of the ones we visited in Italy).  The town began at the top of the hill with a town wall and moved down the hill into the valley.  Now, you must park below and walk up.  We found a space on the main street and walked to the steps.  Yes, steps again, my favorite part of travel!  We climbed up into a little square.  We went to a history museum in the clock tower.  It has a glockenspiel, but we didn't get to see it move.  This part of Romania is very German (they call it Saxon).  The Saxons of Transylvania are a distinct ethnic group.

one of the glockenspiels

The clock mechanics
The other glockenspiel

This describes (in English) what each character of the glockenspiel means.


View from the clock tower


View of the city from the clock tower

View of the old town from the clock tower

View of the old town from the clock tower

In the observation area, they have placards for all over the world!


a nearby church



Children's dolls or marionettes?

Another tower

Model of the town

We walked around the old part of the town, at the top of the hill.  It's not just a cute tourist place (although there were souvenir shops and carts galore), real people live up here.  There are a few roads that are wide enough for cars to drive around (though not many).   We stopped at a cafe for lunch; we all had chicken and dumplings.  My lemonade was good, though very sugary.  There was a layer of sugar on the bottom after I finished.  Several years ago we began playing 20 questions with the children when we went out to eat (most often on vacation) to help them wait for the food.  We still play, taking turns with the "subject", even though Joshua is not so little anymore!


The Shoemaker's Tower


Town Gates


complete with portcullis!

A drivable street

A church

Town walls

town walls

cemetary

cemetary

Map of the cemetary

The Furrier's Tower?

The Scholar's Stair from 1642 (yes, even more stairs)

The old town square



A church in the town

Street in the old town

Clock tower


pretty bikes near where we ate

clock tower

I think all the rain is pushing all of the snails and slugs out of
the ground, this one is hungry!

town wall


Glockenspiel

Main street of the "new town"


It started off sunny during our time in Sighisoara and was incredibly humid!!   Then the wind picked up (which felt great with the high humidity), and it rained and thundered for the rest of our time.  It stopped by the time we got to the car.  Then it began again and rained all of the way to Brasov.  In fact, we saw a river that people were taking picures of because it was crazy high, ready to flood the bridge!  Then one part of the road was under water--a car had gone off the road and was covered in mud as the tow truck pulled them out.  We drove through, but hit a few slippery spots the rest of the way and tried to stay away from the deepest water on the edges of the road.  Their roads don't seem to shed water very quickly.

The water ended as we approached Brasov.  It is very clean and quiet.  We are staying in an area that has two of the roads that go through "portas"--or arches from the old walls.  In fact, our street is Porta Schei (probably someone's name).  Our host was there to greet us.  He actually kissed my hand!  Twice!  Once when we met and again when he left.  Very courtly, but unexpected!

Porta Schei


Our apartment is in a nice building.  We have a living room with a Murphy bed for Joshua, couch and chair, and a bedroom for us (with a sauna in it!).   There are many cute knick-knacks--especially in our room--very nice, but a bit cutesy for my taste!  We also have a light thing under our bed.  You can choose the color or have it change colors.  It has it's own remote.  Joshua was very excited about it, playing with it while we were giving our information to our host!

Then we went out to the central square to find a place for dinner.  It was sprinkling so we ate inside.  Just as we were ordering, it began POURING buckets!!  You could hear it inside!  All the people outside came running in, so the inside was full!  Good lemonade--this time it was very sour and they gave us packets of honey to sweeten it to our taste.  Honey gave it a slightly different taste than white sugar, but it is much better for you.

The only synagogue I've seen in Romania

Oh my.

Yes, they put their name up on the mountainside (like Hollywood)--it even lights up.

Central Square before it started raining



The kids were having so much fun with the pigeons!


The pouring rain had slackened to raining when we finished eating, so we walked to the grocery store we had noticed earlier.   By the time we were walking back to our apartment it was only sprinkling.

Friday, June 29, 2018

Day 14: Who's forecasting this weather anyway?

June 29, 2018

Cluj Napoca, Romania



The forecast for today was 80-100% rain all day.  So, since our plan A was to drive to the mountains where it was also raining), we slept in.  When we got up, we came up with a loose Plan B:  a museum, the botanical gardens, and climbing up the big hill to get a view of the city while keeping an eye on the weather.




We started out and the forecast predicted a few dry hours, so we headed to the botanical gardens (which is found up on a hill--uphill all the way).  Just after we paid our admission it began sprinkling so Joshua used his umbrella and I walked under it part of the way (it was too warm and humid to wear my rain jacket even though I had it with me).  It was interesting, many different areas:  Japanese Gardens, a cactus garden, greenhouses, etc.  So we walked through the sprinkles.

The entrance to the Botanical Gardens.  It was begun in 1872, then enlarged over the years.

Annuals

This is a map of Romania with a different type of coleus for each region.  We are currently in the middle area.

A cactus garden

More of the cactus garden

A statue--her sword is broken.  Maybe she's the lady of the lake who put the sword in the stone?

The Japanese Garden

Joshua on he bridge

Still on the bridge

The statue is poking out of the flowers

A turtle in the pond

The largest lily pads I've ever seen! (Found in the greenhouses)

Pretty flowers



Major roots

This plant is real, but the flower and stamen were super stiff--they felt like plastic

The Palm Room

More palms

The tallest palm is squished in the top

A gooey snail

Another snail

And yet another snail!  This guy is all stretched out.  


Back at the Japanese gardents--Joshua on the bridge

Pretty pansies.  I love pansies but never grow them because they don't live long in Minnesota--only in the spring, they die from the summer heat.


We decided to go to the museum, but just after leaving the botanic gardens, the rain stopped and the sun came out.  So we decided to climb the hill.  So across town, and over the river, then up the interminable steps.  After climbing up and then down, Joshua was thirsty and none of us had brought water, so we went into a small cafĂ© on the hill for drinks.  Randy and I had more of the weird flavored lemonade and Joshua had iced-tea.  We're thinking that maybe the weird taste is whatever mineral water they're using here in Cluj; the lemonades in other cities have been fabulous.  In fact, in my mint-elderflower lemonade, the mint leaves were spotted black.  I fished all of them out and put them on a napkin on the table (I left the green ones in the glass)--gross!  I wouldn't put leaves that looked like that in my salad, I'm sure not going to drink lemonade steeped in them.




Then we headed to the museum.  We paid less than half of what we paid for the drinks to get into the museum (and we even paid extra to be able to take photos).  It was a very small, quiet museum.  It was the Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania; it had very good reviews--4.4 stars out of 5.  We were surprised to see other people there.  We were given an English guide to each exhibit that labeled everything and gave a very dry description that was difficult to follow.  Most of the exhibits had English tags, so we read those.

 A Romanian sheep-wool lined vest

A Hungarian vest (also lined in wool)

This bag looks like early Steampunk

A loom

Waist distaffs used with a spindle to manually spin thread out of wool

Painted chair and table 

Painted dowry chest

Traditional Clothing

I love this man's outfit!

And this woman's outfit--I'd wear that!

Hand embroidery

Beautiful dress

Beautiful dress--the top is all hand embroidered

Hand embroidered vest

Early children's saucer?

This one won't go far!


I think it could have been very good.  It was well curated and they had a lot of great things, but they needed someone to "spice it up" a bit and put it into more context.   Oh well.  I suggested it because I was tired of walking through neighborhoods and taking pictures!  I wanted to do something.  I think we're all feeling like that.  Well, maybe in the next stop.  Tomorrow we will spend another day in the rain driving to Sighisoara for the day, then driving to Brasov for the night.

After the museum, we stopped at a cafe for a leisurely dinner, then got breakfast groceries, before returning to our apartment.  Early morning tomorrow.

Joshua in the public art

Detail from the Opera which is just a few blocks from our apartment

The door leads to the courtyard where our apartment opens from.