Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Bulgaria

Monday

On 22 August, we arrived in Varna after a 9-hour bus ride from Istanbul and we caught a taxi to our hotel, a basic but nice enough place called Hotel Colour. Our room had a TV with loads of channels, an excellent air conditioning unit, a little fridge and a good bathroom, so we were pretty happy. The young guy on reception spoke very good English and was extremely helpful.

After settling in and showering, we got a taxi down to the beach, where we had a drink and some dinner at one of the many restaurants facing on to the beach. It was a lovely warm evening and the food was pretty good.

Bulgaria is a country in south-east Europe, which borders Romania to the north, Serbia and Macedonia to the west and Greece and Turkey to the south. The Black Sea runs along the eastern side of the country. The capital and largest city is Sofia, the official language is Bulgarian and the population is roughly 7.5 million people. Varna is the third largest city in Bulgaria and the largest city and seaside resort on the Black Sea coast, with around 350,000 people.

Tuesday

After a big and much needed sleep in, we got sorted and headed out to get some breakfast. We found a great little bakery near our hotel, where we got a massive slice of pizza and some fresh bread (the food in Bulgaria is delicious, but rather bread and meat based). We carried on in to the town centre, stopping in at the brilliantly named "Dormition of the Theotokos Cathedral". The cathedral is a beautiful building that dominates the city centre with its onion-like domes shimmering in the sunlight. It is a Bulgarian Orthodox church and it is decorated majestically inside too. We also visited the tourist information centre, where we discussed options for travelling to Romania, and then we walked through town to the beach.

It was a beautiful hot sunny day (about 28 to 30 degrees) and the sand and sea looked amazing. We hired some beach loungers and an umbrella and pretty much did not move again for six hours. We had a short break for lunch at one of the beach restaurants, where we enjoyed a large beer for about 80 pence, meatballs and fries for Tim and a shrimp salad (with a lack of salad) for Megan. The beach was full of very, very tanned people - the women almost all topless, the men largely pot-bellied. There was also a lot of beach volleyball going on - it appeared to be a big sport in Bulgaria and there were plenty of energetic young Bulgarians keen to play.

In the evening we headed back to the hotel for showers before venturing into town for dinner at a great place called Happy Bar and Grill, which does all sorts of grilled meat, burgers and even sushi! Megan was delighted to be reunited with sushi again and Tim opted for grilled chicken and fries. On the way back to the hotel, we got an ice-cream for dessert. We enjoyed wandering through town, looking at all the crazy Bulgarian writing on signs (they use the Cyrillic alphabet).

Wednesday

A familiar pattern began to emerge during our stay in Bulgaria. We had another sleep-in, left the hotel and got breakfast from the little bakery near our hotel. This time, however, we took a detour by taxi to the main bus station to book tickets to Romania. The taxi driver was a complete loser (it seemed there were two types of taxi drivers in Bulgaria - the nice, honest sort and the complete arsehole sort) and it seemed to be a 50-50 chance as to which sort we got.

On this occasion the guy tried to rip us off massively. We had a two-minute taxi ride that was about 1.5km long. This should have cost something like 2-3 leva and the guy tried to charge 10 leva. Megs went to town on him, telling him exactly what she thought of him and that he had let his country down. We gave him 5 leva and Megs slammed his door so hard it nearly fell off. Quite amusing.

Getting information at the bus station was like trying to get blood out of a stone. As we had discovered in Istanbul, certain travel agents are affiliated to only one or two bus companies, which travel only to one or two destinations. As we cannot read Bulgarian too well, we had to visit each of the 50-odd travel agent offices at the bus station and ask if they travel to Romania. None of them did. They would all shake their head and point to the next office, where someone would then do the same. Eventually after about half an hour, we managed to buy bus tickets to Ruse, which is a Bulgarian city pretty much on the Romanian border only 75km from Bucharest. We were told we could then change buses at Ruse and travel into Romania. So we settled for that, bought tickets to Ruse for Saturday and then got a taxi to the beach.

The rest of the day was spent at the beach, lazing in the perfect sun and occasionally drinking a large, cold and extremely cheap beer. We again had lunch at a beach restaurant to break up the monotony of lying in the sun (te he he). The evening was a replica of the day before...left the beach around 6pm, showered and changed and walked to town to have a delicious dinner at Happy Bar and Grill. We love Bulgaria!

Thursday

On Thursday morning we surprisingly got breakfast from the little bakery near our hotel, but then we mixed things up completely, by negotiating a taxi ride 18km out of Varna to the west to visit the strange natural phenomenon that is the Stone Forest. Our taxi driver drove us there and back and waited for 20 minutes while we looked around (total trip of an hour) and charged us 40 leva (which shows how ridiculous the guy from the day before had been trying to get 10 leva out of us)!

The Stone Forest (known as Pobiti Kamani) consists of several groups of rock formations on a total area of 70 sq km. The formations are mainly stone columns around 5 to 7 metres high and ranging from 0.3 to 3 metres thick. The stones are believed to have been created from coral activity under the sea and are thought to be over 50 million years old. Woah! We enjoyed checking out the rocks and taking some photos, although it was pretty hot out there. Our taxi driver dropped us back in Varna at the beach and normal service resumed - rest of day was spent lying on the beach, paddling in the sea a little and eating and drinking delicious cheap food and drink.

In the evening, Megs was not feeling very well, so she had a rest at the hotel while Tim found an internet cafe and did a bit of blogging and picked up some takeaway pizza for dinner. As had been the case in Istanbul too, there were a lot of stray cats roaming the streets of Varna. Varna looked quite poor and run down in parts, which is not entirely surprising. There were a lot of big apartment blocks that looked really shabby. But the city centre and the shops and restaurants etc looked very clean and well kept.

Friday

Our last full day in Bulgaria was fairly predictable. We picked up some breakfast on our way into town and we checked out a few shops and some different streets we had not seen yet. We returned to the internet cafe and finished off some blogging and caught up with what was happening in the world. The internet was crazily cheap. We also got some stamps and sent a couple of postcards to NZ and Megan got the obligatory fridge magnet to add to her collection!

Then it was down to the beach for our last day of bliss. Actually it was a little windy at the beach on Friday. Still hot and sunny, but the water was a little rough. On the way home from the beach in the evening, we stopped in at a great little cafe where we had delcious cakes and chocolate milkshakes. Then we chilled out at the hotel, packed up all of our things, and then went out for some dinner. Dinner was a little disappointing (we tried a different place and it was below average - should have stuck with Happy Bar and Grill).

Saturday

On Saturday morning, we headed to the bus station and caught our bus to Ruse, in the north of Bulgaria. The three hour bus ride raced by and was very comfortable. But when we arrived at Ruse, we were told there were no more buses to Romania at all that day. It turned out the only way to get to Romania was by taxi. We negotiated a 50 euro taxi ride from Ruse to Bucharest, which was quite reasonable. Despite being just 75km away, it took almost two hours due to the border crossing and a toll bridge with long queues.

The taxi driver was really nice and dropped us off in Bucharest at the Gare de Nord train station. He commented as we were crossing the border that Romanians are terrible drivers and also bad people. He got the first bit right - we saw three crashes while driving through Bucharest! We really enjoyed our time in Bulgaria. It was fantastic to have a few days of chilling out in one place after a lot of travelling around. Next up, Romania!









Our
hotel















Varna
Cathedral












Megs
in town
centre












Crusader
statue











Crazy
dragon
statue











Awesome
beach













Pirate
ship










Megs on
the
beach












Tim
and
cheap
beer






































Varna
theatre













Varna
Cathedral
by night










Stone
Forest






















































Cake
and
shakes












Lovely
Varna











Bear








Monday, August 29, 2011

Gallipoli, Turkey

Saturday: Istanbul, Turkey

On Saturday 20 August, after a very refreshing and relaxing two days in London at our friend Simon's place, we got up at some ungodly hour to catch a taxi out to Heathrow and fly to Istanbul. Our flight left at 7.10am and arrived in Istanbul at 12.50pm Turkish time.

We got a taxi from the airport into our hotel in Sultanahmet, the old town of Istanbul. The taxi driver was a complete loser - he told us it would cost 50 lira, when the airport information desk had suggested that we should pay no more than 30 lira. We insisted that he use the meter since he thought 30 lira was a ridiculous price. He used the meter and drove like a nutter all the way, speeding way over the limit, swerving all over the road and slamming on his brakes regularly - apparently this is normal in Turkey! Surprise, surprise, the meter read 33 lira when we arrived at the hotel. We gave him 35 lira and he snatched it from our hands and glared at us. Grrrr.

The hotel (Deniz Houses Hotel) was solid. Pretty basic, but in a good location. It was clean and had air conditioning and a shower - relative luxury after 5 weeks of camping and sleeping in a car. We rested at the hotel for a while and then set off to grab some lunch. We found a great little cafe just down the road, where we got a mixed meat and yogurt kebab (Tim) and hummus, flatbread and a crushed tomato salad (Megan). We then wandered around Sultanahmet, not achieving much as we had visited Istanbul before, for three days in 2008, so we had seen the sights we wanted to see and this trip was only really to see Gallipoli.

We got some photos by the famous Blue Mosque and Haghia Sophia, which were looking beautiful with flower gardens in the foreground and a bright blue sky background. We then walked along the main street to the Grand Bazaar market. It was just as we had remembered it and with no desire to purchase anything, we had a quick walk through and then headed back to the hotel.

We decided we should book our bus to Bulgaria in advance. This proved rather more difficult than it should have been. After finding the correct website with the help of our hotel receptionist, we went right through the booking process and were then thwarted at our attempt to pay for the tickets, as the website would not accept any of our credit cards. Of course, you cannot book or pay over the phone (that would be too easy) and all of the 55,000 travel agents in Sultanahmet told us that they were not affiliated with the particular bus companies that travel to Bulgaria, so they could not sell us tickets.

Almost three hours later, we managed to buy tickets at the only helpful travel agent in Turkey - so we would bus from Istanbul to Varna, Bulgaria on Monday morning - a 9-hour ride, we were told... With that sorted, we had a delicious dinner at a restaurant called Faros, on the main street and then walked back to our hotel. The city was absolutely buzzing - apparently it was Ramadan, which meant that after sunset, all the townsfolk came out and had dinner (mostly picnics on the grass etc) and there were concerts, buskers, market stalls, and all sorts to keep people amused. It was amazing.

Sunday: Gallipoli Day Tour
For what was neither the first nor the last time on this short trip to Turkey, we woke at a ridiculous hour, fumbled about in the dark, banging into walls and the like, showered, dressed and headed down to the hotel lobby, ready for our 6.15am tour pick-up. The tour left Istanbul at 7.00am (after many hotel pick-ups) and we drove west out of Istanbul and then south down the peninsula towards Gallipoli. The drive took around 5 hours, including two comfort stops.

Our first stop in Gallipoli was for lunch at a decent enough restaurant, where we ate soup, salad, kebabs, rice and chips etc. and sat next to an older Dutch couple, who were nice enough, but very Dutch. After lunch, we drove a short distance to the coast and had an explanation of the Gallipoli landing, what had taken place and what the Allied Forces were trying to achieve.

The most accepted story goes that the Anzacs were supposed to land at a patch of coastline that was flat, but through some navigational error, actually landed a couple of kilometres further along the coast, where they were met by massive steep rocky cliffs, which made them sitting ducks for the Turkish troops, perched high on the clifftops. There are counter-theories that suggest that the troops intentionally landed by the steep cliffs, as there were far greater numbers of Turkish soldiers waiting for them at the intended landing spot.

After our background talk from our tour guide, we visited a number of locations on the rugged peninsula, the first of which was the Lone Pine Cemetery. This was the site of an important battle and it is now one of the largest cemeteries at Gallipoli, where mainly Australian (and some New Zealand) troops are buried. It was extremely moving reading the messages on the gravestones of the men/boys (often as young as 18 and 19) who died there. Some messages were written by their mothers. It was tragic to see so many rows of gravestones - such a waste of lives.

There is a pine tree growing at the entrance to the Lone Pine cemetery, which was planted around 20 years ago from a cutting or seed of a pine tree situated in Australia, which was itself planted from a cutting or seed of a pine tree that was growing in Gallipoli during WWI, and had been taken back to Australia at the end of war to grow a remembrance tree in Australia for the fallen soldiers. That was pretty cool.

The next stop was the trenches, where the soldiers had fought for months, right next to Johnston's Jolly cemetery. The trenches were still clearly visible, although not as deep as they would have once been. We then visited a Turkish soldiers' cemetery, the only Turkish cemetery in that part of the peninsula. Sadly there were quite a lot of tacky souvenirs for sale at most of these sites, but it is amazing that the Turkish government has allowed all of these Anzac cemeteries and memorials to be maintained here, on their land, the land that foreign troops invaded.

A Turkish general who led the Turkish forces in WWI at Gallipoli, Ataturk, had claimed after the war had ended that all of the Anzac troops who died and were buried on the peninsula were now "at home", to be treated as no different to the Turkish troops who died in the battle. That is quite amazing.

We then visited the New Zealand memorial, which is on top of Chunuk Bair, the highest point of the peninsula. Apparently New Zealand and British troops took control of this peak, a very important strategic location on the peninsula, for a couple of days before losing it again, which is why the memorial is located here. It has stunning views down to the coastline where the Anzacs landed, and also across to the other coastline in the opposite direction, which is where they were trying to get to. Next to the New Zealand memorial is a massive statue of General Ataturk.

Our final stop was at Anzac Cove itself, the landing spot. There is now a memorial wall and some information plaques about the landing and this is where the Dawn Service is held every year on Anzac Day. We stood on the very beach where the troops had landed 96 years earlier and looked up at the massive steep cliffs that they had to attempt to climb. The beach is so beautiful and the place is so quiet and peaceful - it is difficult to understand what it must have been like for the troops running up the beach, under fire from the Turks. Around 120,000 men died at Gallipoli in total, around 80,000 of them Turks. There were approximately 8,500 Australian and 2,800 New Zealand casualties.

The tour guide we had was OK - we got the feeling that some of the information he gave us was a little dubious and things were poorly organised in parts, but you don't have a lot of choice for Gallipoli tours. We felt extremely privileged to have been able to visit Gallipoli and to see it from all of the different vantage points was a great way to help us understand how the battle had unfolded etc.

The drive back to Istanbul took about 5 hours, meaning that we got back to the hotel at 10.30pm, completely shattered. We had to do a little bit of arranging of our things and packing, because we had another early start coming up!

Monday: Bus to Bulgaria

We left the hotel at 7.45am and caught a taxi to the main bus station in Istanbul. Thankfully we found our bus, as there are literally hundreds of buses and dozens of different bus companies that operate from the huge bus station. We stocked up on some supplies for the long ride ahead. The bus was fairly comfortable and departed on time at 9.00am.

It was a fairly uneventful bus ride really, although two separate women threw up near us during the journey...thankfully they had little sick bags that were thrown out the door on to the roadside, keeping the bus impeccably clean and fresh smelling. We had a few refreshment stops along the way too and a border crossing, where Tim was almost left behind in the toilet on the Turkish side of the border. Not cool.

Once across the border into Bulgaria, the views improved significantly. We were treated to spectacular views of mountains, rivers and forests and eventually coastal views, as we drove north along the Black Sea coast towards Varna. We arrived in Varna at 5.45pm - country number 48 for Megan and 44 for Tim!








Blue
Mosque











Haghia
Sophia











Blue
Mosque















An obelisk
thing...















Megs and
a pretty
round
thing















Grand
Bazaar











Our tour
guide

















Anzac
Cove












The
beach
at Anzac
Cove










Cemetery
on the
beach














Statue of
Turkish soldier
helping Anzac
soldier














Australian
memorial















Lone
Pine
cemetery












Trenches












Turkish
cemetery














New Zealand
memorial

































Lovely
hat











Friday, August 19, 2011

France Road Trip - Part 2

Day 7: St Emilion, Bordeaux

We started off the following day by driving west into the Bordeaux region to St Emilion, a gorgeous little town east of Bordeaux city. St Emilion is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, dating back to prehistoric times and with vines originally planted by the Romans! It seems everywhere we go, there is either a Roman ruin to inspect or some Roman tale to learn about.

St Emilion was named for an 8th century monk, who decided to hollow out a bit of a rock nearby. The poor guy just wanted the quiet hermit life, but alas, a devoted following joined him in his rock cave and started the good times rolling with a bit of wine production. Nowadays, there are underground wine caves, Roman ruins and Romanesque (again) churches to visit, along with cute stone paved streets, amazing resturants and macaroon shops to sample. Great place!

It was very hot and sunny in St Emilion and we wandered around the medieval town, checking out the churches, prety squares packed with cafes, and ruins of town walls and then visited some of the wine caves and tasted various wines, where the proprietors were good enough to explain details about the Bordeaux region to us, such as the different types of soils and the different types of grapes and wine that result from the soil type and location. We bought a few bottles and headed back to the car for some lunch. As we were eating we saw a familiar green t-shirt walking past us - Libby and Ben had arrived!

Together we visited a wine cave featuring wine from the Lussac area, which was where Libby and Ben had found us a campsite for the night. The guy providing us with tastings had spent a year in Marlborough, which was pretty random. Until then, we had found that nobody in Bordeaux knew much about New Zealand or its wines (snobs!) As well as explaining the qualities of the wine, he helpfully answered our questions about what qualifies as a Bordeaux wine, and what permits a winery to label its wine "Grand Cru" (very complicated, including harvesting by hand and passing tests by expert juries).

We left Libby and Ben to explore St Emilion and travelled out of town to check out the surrounding area. We pulled up to a wee estate which looked closed, but we were warmly welcomed in by the enthusiastic owner. We loved the family owned and operated aspects of wine production in Bordeaux and met people with so much passion for their business. This man was no exception, and he talked about the two areas in which he has vines and also explained the harvest process. We rather foolishly asked if the way they know when to harvest is to taste the grapes - turns out it is a lot more scientific than that, involving acid and sugar level testing, laborotories and what not!

With an impressive stash of Bordeaux wines on board, we thought it was time to park up the Spaceship for the night. The campsite Libby and Ben had found was really cool, set amongst a massive vineyard and coming complete with a swimming pool, sauna and play area (including a bouncy castle!) We had a great dinner of sausages cooked by Ben on his charcoal BBQ, salad and some local grapes. Very local, in fact. And of course, a little bit of red wine...ok, a lot of red wine.

Ben and Tim tested out the bouncy castle after dinner and can say that it was not quite as sturdy as they would have liked. You would expect bouncy castles to be solid and safe, you don't want them collapsing in on themselves. Not ideal.

Day 8: Bordeaux

The next day involved a rather slow start, and with such beautiful weather and a great campsite, it wasn't difficult to decide to stay another night. This decision was made even better when we discovered that it was all you can eat mussels and fries at the campsite restaurant that night!

We did some tidying up and admin sort of jobs and then forced ourselves to do something active in the afternoon - we hired bikes from the campsite and explored the surrounding area, picking up some blackberries so that Libby could attempt to make some blackberry jam. Impressive camping cuisine!

Our find for the day was the Chateau Vieux Mognac, where a delightful lady who spoke no English at all showed us around her vineyard with a friendy English family acting as translators. We sampled some white wine for a change (a sweet, almost dessert wine) as well as several delicious reds. We decided to buy a bottle of the sweet wine wine - which turned out to be a great apertif to our mussels - and a bottle of the 2003 red.

Dinner was all we had hoped for - fantastic mussels and fries and a little bit more wine on a stunning evening. Certainly not a busy day, but a great chance to relax in the beautiful sunshine and countryside of Bordeaux.

Day 9: Biscarosse Plage, Bordeaux

On Friday morning we decided to head out to the beaches west of Bordeaux city. Our original choice of Lacanau was under seige from Portuguese Men of War jellyfish, and given our previous run-ins with the Portuguese, their Men of War did not sound like something we wanted to mess with. So we headed for Biscarosse Plage, 200km or so north of the Spanish border.

We soon realised that a lot of people shared our plans! After a few stints in crawling traffic on poorly designed French motorways with crazy French drivers and sweaty conditions, we were glad to arrive at Biscarrosse and parked up in an "Aire Picnic" for some lunch. We then found a free camping spot down near the beach, strategically positioned next to a campsite where Libby and Ben had checked in. There are a number of quiet spots in France where free camping is tolerated and public toilets are usually provided. We were also happy to note that the campsite entry points were not manned, meaning a sneaky shower was on the cards too!

We met the others down at the beach, where we nestled into a spot amongst crowds of other visitors and chilled out for a few hours. Libby and Ben went off surfing at one point, but we were very lazy and remained essentially motionless. Delightful. Later in the day, we made our way back to the spaceship to shake some sand off (unsuccessfully as always - we were destined to be accompanied by Biscarrosse sand for the remainder of our journey) and then joined the others for a pizza dinner as night fell.

Day 10: Journey to Loire Valley

After a very good night's sleep by the Biscarosse beach, we said farewell to Ben and Libby and got going fairly early on Saturday morning, heading north-east towards the Loire Valley...or so we thought! We knew it would be a pretty big driving day to get to the Loire Valley (approx 3.5 hours), but then we figured we would need to drive much for the few days after that.

Unfortunately, we had a Sat-Nav incident combined with an extremely unfortunate coincidence. We decided to head to a town called Saumur in the Loire Valley as our first stop, and then explore the rest of the region from there. Apparently there are two towns named Saumur in France and both happen to be about 3.5 hours driving distance from Biscarosse, meaning we did not pick up the problem when we entered the incorrect Saumur into the Sat-Nav - now is that bad luck or what?!

It was only three hours into our journey that we discovered the mistake and when we turned the car and headed for the correct Saumur in the Loire Valley, we had another 3.5 hours to go! We had headed east, past Bordeaux and then north (all correct) but then somewhere along the way we had gone east and then south again toward the centre of France, rather than continuing north. Needless to say, we were unimpressed. It meant that our entire Saturday (a sunny, hot Saturday) was spent in the spaceship driving for nearly 7 hours, burning expensive petrol as an extra punishment.

We eventually arrived in the proper Saumur, a pretty town between the Loire and Thouet rivers, and we stayed in a camping ground next to one of the rivers. It was pretty decent and we cooked dinner of rice, mince, veges and tomatoes on the camping stove and charged our electrical gadgets before hitting the hay. We needed a big sleep after such a day!

Day 11: Saumur, Tours and Chenonceau, Loire Valley

Sadly we woke to a wet, grey Sunday morning in Saumur. Booooo. We had a little look around Saumur and went up to the majestic looking Saumur chateau, perched on a hill overlooking the town and river below. You cannot go inside the Saumur chateau, so we quickly moved on after viewing the outside and then decided there was little else to amuse us on a wet morning in Saumur.

We drove an hour or so east to Tours, which was a nice enough city. There weather had cleared a little, so we had a walk around town. The highlights were the beautiful Hotel de Ville in the city centre and the small medieval old town, with pretty buildings and churches. We had lunch in the spaceship before pushing on to Chenonceau.

While the village of Chenonceau is tiny, the Chateau de Chenonceau, which happens to be one of the biggest and most famous of France's chateaux, draws mammoth crowds all year round. The chateau has been destroyed and rebuilt several times over the centuries but the current manor was designed by French Renaissance architect, Philibert Delorme. We manged (somehow) to find a park and get tickets to go inside the chateau. It was insanely packed inside - you could barely move - but as it was still raining on and off outside, we thought inside was not a bad option.

We got a brilliant audio guide, which gave a detailed explanation of each room that we visited and what used to go on in there, as well as an overview of the history of the chateau. It was very interesting. We loved the tiny chapel - not much bigger than your average lounge at home - and also the Great Hall, a huge wide and long decorated hall that actually spans the River Cher on a number of arches.

After our indoor tour, it had stopped raining, so we walked through the beautiful gardens outside the chateau and then retired to a pub in the village of Chenonceau. We ended up having dinner there too and then free-camped in a quiet carpark in the village.

Day 12: Chateau de Chambord and Chartres, Loire Valley

We were a little slow in getting going on Monday morning, thanks to the extremely quiet, peaceful spot we had camped in. We drove from Chenonceau to the Chateau de Chambord, the other main tourist-favourite chateau in the Loire Valley. This chateau is one of the most recognisable in the world due to its very distinct French Renaissance architecture. We decided not to go inside this one, as it is not furnished or decorated like the Chenonceau chateau and there were literally hundreds of people queuing up for tickets to get in. So we enjoyed it from the outside, as we had a picnic brunch on the grass. All of the chateaux that we visited were stunning from the outside, like fairy tale castles.

As the throngs of tourists were getting overwhelming, we hopped in the spaceship and left Chambord chateau behind, heading north towards Chartres, via a brief stop in Orleans, where we picked up some supplies at the Auchan hypermarket - love that place!

Chartres was lovely. We arrived in the middle of the afternoon and we explored the town centre, admiring the famous Chartres cathedral from the outside and then doing some much needed blogging in an internet cafe. We found a great camping ground (probably one of the best we had stayed at in the whole trip) on the outskirts of the city, where we also did some much needed washing and dishes! Then we sat in the beautiful evening sun and enjoyed breads, cheeses, meats and a "bit" of red wine. We had to get rid of some of the bottles we had bought before we gave up the spaceship and were on foot once again!

Day 13: Chartres and Le Quesnoy

Tuesday was our last full day in France and we had to get up towards Dunkirk for our Wednesday morning ferry. We left the camping ground pretty early and drove into Chartres, where we visited the Chartres cathedral.

The Chartres cathedral is one of the finest examples of French High Gothic styled cathedrals. The current cathedral was built between 1193 and 1250. Its most striking feature is its massive collection of stained glass windows, all of which are originals dating from the 13th century. They were removed piece by piece to avoid being destroyed during bombing raids in WWII. We marvelled at the hundreds of amazing stained glass windows all over the huge cathedral and we also admired the labyrinth design on the floor of the cathedral and the extensive carvings.

After the cathedral tour, we grabbed an early lunch at McDonald's and then drove the 3 hours or so north, around Paris and up towards Lille. Just south of Lille lies the town of Le Quesnoy, a town that was liberated by New Zealand soldiers at the end of WWI. It is a town that is (still today) surrounded by huge fortification walls, which the New Zealand troops used long ladders to climb over and chase the Germans out of the town. The town is very grateful to New Zealand for freeing it from the Germans and there are a number of markers to commemorate little old NZ, including several streets being named after prominent New Zealand troops and even one street being named Rue Nouvelle-Zelande / Rue Aotearoa.

We stopped in and wandered through the town centre and visited the New Zealand memorial plaque on one of the fortification walls. We met a few Kiwis there, including one man from Waikanae, who had come all the way to France to visit the grave of his great uncle who had died climbing the very walls we were looking at. It was quite special to be able to visit the place and to see that there were significant memorials for the troops all over town.

We then drove on further north, around Lille and we eventually found a great "aire" (services area) just half an hour south of Dunkirk, which was complete with cafe, shop, picnic area, toilets, showers, free Wifi, TV, ATM - pretty much everything we needed and more! We stayed there the night, our final night in France.

Day 14: Return to London

In the morning, we woke early, got our stuff packed up all tidily and tried to clean up the spaceship as best we could. Then we drove the short distance into Dunkirk city centre, where we sent some postcards and got a snack for breakfast. Then it was on to the ferry terminal and back to the UK.

The ferry ride was smooth and uneventful. We enjoyed seeing the famous white cliffs of Dover as we approached England. We drove from Dover to London (on the left hand side of the road) and dropped off the spaceship at the space station. It was a little sad to let of go of Flash, but we were excited about not sleeping in a car again for a long time.

For the record, we managed to drive 4,697 miles (7,559 km) across six different countries in 36 days. That's about 7.5 lengths of the South Island of New Zealand. Nice work Flash!







St
Emilion












Megs in
St Emilion

















Wine
cave














St Emilion















Bordeaux
vineyards












Megs in
St Emilion












Chateau
Vieux
Mognac











Bordeaux
Bear












Saumur














Hotel de
Ville,
Tours











Chenon-
ceau
Chateau











Ditto













Chateau
de
Chambord











Tim at
Chambord











Megs at
Chambord
















Chartres
Cathedral















Stained
glass
windows -
Chartres
Cathedral












Megs
at Le
Quesnoy














NZ memorial
Le Quesnoy














White
cliffs of
Dover