A New Year

Well, I’m slightly late with this post, it being the 3rd and all. I’ve been busy attempting to fulfil my New Years Resolutions. Some are proving a little tricky (getting up earlier and that sort of thing), but my resolution to blog more seems to be holding up. You probably won’t notice it, but I’ve made a few changes to this blog already, with the removal of all the last remaining dregs of my old site, and a tweak to the theme to produce a wider page. I also tidied up the ‘page’ template and brought the theme for my mini blog (mini.tredford01.co.uk) into line with this one.

My other resolutions range from the long term and just about realisable – such as getting a place to study at Oxford when I graduate from MMU – to the slightly odd desire to learn Dutch and go back to Sofia (yes, I know Dutch isn’t spoken in Bulgaria, they’re separate resolutions).

Anyway, so far, I seem to be doing better with my resolutions than last year, so I guess we’ll see if I’m successful, by my ability to write next year’s end/start of year post in Nederlands.

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At Journey’s End

I was chastised in the office today by a much better blogger than me for not having updated my blog recently, so here goes. Since my last proper update, over a month ago, lots has happened. I crossed Europe by train, then did it all again to get back, discovered the Edinburgh Festival, and started a politics blog.

My trip to Greece was like most long trips: there was a lot to enjoy, but most of it was sitting on trains (or rather, lying, as I used sleepers and couchettes for large parts of it), feeling bored. The trip was a little unusual, in that I was travelling with a friend from Brussel for the first few days, then I set off on my own for the remainder. It was interesting to see the different characters of all the cities I passed through. Praha felt like a faded jewel; Ljubljana had the same vibe that Edinburgh has, clearly something to do with being the capital of a small country; Zagreb was the first really ‘different’ city that I reached. It took a little while to get used to it, but once I had, it grew on me. Sofia was one of the best cities which I visited. I didn’t actually spend a lot of time exploring Sofia, instead I settled into the brilliant Hostel Mostel for a break from my holiday. There is only so much walking around cities looking at tourist sights that I can manage. After Sofia, I had one last comfortable sleeper train, before becoming acquainted with ΟΣΕ, the Greek state train operator. I say acquainted, really though, that didn’t happen until my return journey. From Thessaloniki to Athens, I had to use a coach thanks to a railway strike. I did get to use rail-based public transport in Athens though, with the Metro to Pireus. A quick overnight ship down to Crete brought me to that little corner of England in Crete that is my grandparent’s house. I’m not ashamed to say that the first thing I did when I arrived was to make a proper British cup of tea, and watch BBC World News.

The trip back was supposed to be more direct. With a very nice ship up to Pireus (if only Stena Line would take note of how ANEK Lines run their ships), I arrived in Athens ready for a comfortable and fast InterCity train to Thessaloniki, then a sleeper to Sofia. The man in the ticket office at Athens Larissa Station distinctly uttered the words “No, no. Free train to Thessaloniki for InterRail tickets”. Having heard this, I got on the train, then at Thiva (no, you probably haven’t heard of it, it’s in the middle of nowhere) I was kicked off the train, and had to spend four hours in the company of a few stray dogs, and a soldier bound for the capital. When a train I was allowed to use did finally arrive, I had to spend another four hours sitting in the luggage rack thanks to there being no seating reservation system in place. I truly felt like I was back in the UK. It worked out in the end though, and I managed to make a connection onto a sleeper train to Sofia. Hostel Mostel were kind enough to let me spend the day in their common room, and use the showers for free (after a full day travelling, and an overnight train, that was an urgent requirement). Mostel even provided me with free pasta and beer! 

Then the ‘long’ bit of the journey began. A sleeper from Sofia to Beograd, then theoretically a day train from Beograd to Wien, with a sleeper from Wien to Köln, and the Thalys to Brussel, then another Thalys to Paris. Unfortunately, I forgot to factor in that sleepers usually arrive a couple of hours later than scheduled, so as we were pulling into Beograd, the train to Wien was pulling out. A 140 km/h taxi ride up to Novi Sad sorted things out though, and I was only slightly ripped off by the driver. The remarkable thing about the train to Wien was the catering. This may not sound remarkable to any non-UK readers of this, but imagine being served freshly prepared food on a real plate, by a waiter, at a table with a table-cloth on it! Astonishing. Why can’t this be commonplace in the UK too?! 

I had a brief stopover in Brussel to buy a European flag, then it was onto Paris for a couple of nights rest, and a day being a hyper-tourist. Hyper-tourism is probably a product of my upbringing in Edinburgh, tourism’s second city in the UK. What you have to do is make a list of all the tourist sights in the city, so the Marais, the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, Montmatre, Bastille, and La Defense. Then plot a route, using the metro system and an all day ticket, so that you can visit each one, and spend roughly five minutes there to take some photos. Now I know that this isn’t perhaps the best way to ‘experience’ a place, but with only one day to hand, it seemed like a good idea. 

The last leg of my trip was filled with all the obstacles that occur in travel as you get nearer to the UK. Long check-in lines for Eurostar, pointless border controls (please UK Government, sign up to Schengen), delayed trains, crampt conditions, and the biggest annoyance: tiny overhead luggage racks. Seriously, I got all the way across Europe and back, and on every train I used, my suitcase went in the overhead luggage rack. Only in the UK can I not fit it up there.

So that was my trip. I made a lot of friends, thought I lost one for a while, saw a lot of places, and travelled a very long way. 

Click to see a Flickr Collection of my trip photos 

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