| Met some friendly locals in Thakeham |
Sunday, May 28, 2017
Pub Walk: the White Lion in Thakeham
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Changing Places: Sussex Edition
| House, Mini Cooper, and Cat Exchange |
| Low tide at Birling Gap |
We spent the first week madly touring on a daily basis to see as much as possible... Birling Gap and the Seven Sisters, Cambridge and Grantchester, Amberly, Steyning, Chichester, Arundel, Portsmouth... and today Brighton.
| The Grand Pavilion, Brighton |
The sun was out (finally!) and it was a glorious day, the pier and lanes filled with people of all sorts, absolutely fabulous people-watching. Had our Sunday roast (and some incredible G&T's) at The Hop Poles, a tiny pub in the Laines and then on to the Brighton Pier.
| The iconic Brighton Pier |
Friday, February 24, 2017
Drying Out in Encinitas
![]() |
| Manchester Reserve after the January rains |
Monday, April 25, 2016
Ugljan, the "Olive Island"
![]() |
| Halfway around St. Michael's Fort, Ugljan, Dalmatia |
The island of Ugljan (pronounced "oog-li-yan") is an easy 20-minute ferry ride across the Zadar channel. Whenever the bustle of town life got to be too much, I'd hop on the next ferry to spend a few hours hiking and exploring this lovely Dalmatian island. The Jadrolinja ferry from Zadar arrives in the port of Preko, where there are a grocery store and a couple of cafes / taverns, as well as bus service to other towns on the island.
![]() |
| Hiking trail on Ugljan, springtime blooms |
Visit the Preko Tourism Ugljan Island website for information and advice on what to see, how to get there, and the natural and cultural history of the island.
Lunch with an island family
One of my husband's students, Ivan, lives on the island with his wife Suzy and their daughter, Marie. They invited us over to their home for lunch to sample some of the fish from Ivan's aquaculture operation on the remote western side of the island.
Like her mother, Suzy was born on the island. She and Ivan are starting an aquaculture business so they can stay on the island and make a life for themselves and their daughter. Fresh fish are in high demand as wild supplies are being depleted throughout the Mediterranean. The fish were harvested that morning and by noon we were feasting on the freshest, most delicious grilled seafood I've had in ages. The entire day was spent hiking, eating, and drinking endless rounds of homemade wine and local cherry brandy (Maraschino). Such a treat!
One of my husband's students, Ivan, lives on the island with his wife Suzy and their daughter, Marie. They invited us over to their home for lunch to sample some of the fish from Ivan's aquaculture operation on the remote western side of the island.
![]() |
| Lunch with Ivan's family. The fish are from Ivan's aquaculture farm on the western side of Ugljan. |
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Two Months in Zadar
![]() |
| little Zadarski girl, rockin' out |
For the last 2 months we've been living in a rented apartment in the middle of Zadar's historic old town. Zadar is an ancient port city in the central part of Croatia's Adriatic coast in an area known as Dalmatia. It's a small, friendly and cozy place, where you can easily fall into the local groove and get to know your neighbors. We are loving it here.
Old Town Zadar occupies a small peninsula off the mainland coast of Croatia. The city is surrounded by tall limestone walls built by the Venetians in the 1500's to successfully defend against the invading Ottoman Turks. At the southern end the walls are breached by the "Lion's Gate" affording passage to and from the city and the mainland. Zadar is thus surrounded on three sides by walls and water, and has a very active harbor with ferry service to the nearby islands (Ugljan, Dugi Otok, Iz, Olib, and Silba to name a few). I'll post an entry later with some photos so you can see how beautiful these islands are.
![]() |
| Cafe Toni, right below our apartment. |
A typical day in Zadar
Our routine is to wake up around 9 or 10, eat a small breakfast of bread and cheese or jam, get dressed, head downstairs to the main square for a "bijela kava" (latte), take a walk around the city walls, shop for groceries at the market, then have lunch at one of the dozens of konobas (taverns) or grab a "pizza cut" (slice) to go. The bulk of the afternoon is spent sitting at a cafe just watching the local fashion parade go by. People here do this cafe sitting thing for hours every single day, nursing an espresso or macchiato and chain smoking....Lots of chain smoking. Croatian "Dead Zone" is from 3-6, when nearly everything shuts down while people recover from lunch and get ready for dinner and drinking late into the night. The day is not complete without an evening stroll down the waterfront to listen to the Sea Organ, and watch the Sun Salutation's trippy solar-powered LED light show. (More on those later!) It's not entirely clear if people have jobs to go to. I can't see how they'd fit it in. It's a good life.
![]() |
| Roman column at Trg 5 Bunara (Five Wells) |
Some Observations on Croatian culture:
- Everyone smokes, everywhere.
- Both men and women tend to stare. Good, solid eye contact with random strangers while walking down the street. It's not offensive to stare back.
- Everyone minds their own business (except for the staring). No one is going to bother you. But if you need help and ask for it, they will go far, far out of their way to help you. If they can't help you they will hand you off to someone who can.
- Women dress to the nines. We're talking catwalk-quality fashion dressing and full makeup to go to the corner cafe, complete with 5" stiletto heels, at 10 am.
- You are not Croatian if you do not own at least one pair of designer sunglasses. Preferably several pairs, and in this year's style, not last year's.
Next: Day Trip to the Island of Ugljan
![]() |
| Pongo in his native habitat |
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Sarajevo, city of hope
![]() |
| Assassination site of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, whose death in 1914 triggered WWI |
The city is nestled in a mountain valley, surrounded on all sides by rugged terrain. In winter there is usually snow (Sarajevo hosted the 1976 Winter Olympics) but this year, in March, what snow had fallen was long gone, and the hills were brilliantly green. Except, that is, for large white patches on all sides... no matter which direction you look, you see the green interrupted by white. It isn't snow. It's gravestones. Thousands of gravestones. The modern capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina is surrounded by the victims of the Yugoslav civil war, a constant reminder of the atrocities committed here and throughout Bosnia as the former communist nation was torn apart by separatists. In some parts of town, most buildings more than 3 stories tall are pock-marked with holes from mortar shells and artillery fire. It's quite sobering, yet hope is also everywhere evident... in the artwork, sculptures, monuments, and memorials found throughout the city encouraging remembrance, forgiveness, and vigilance against hate.
![]() |
| Hotel VIP, Sarajevo.... |
A day in Sarajevo
![]() |
| Springtime in old town Sarajevo |
![]() |
| There are numerous outdoor cafes, all with wifi |
![]() |
| Ottoman period fireplace, Svrzo House |
![]() |
| View from Svrzo House to old town |
Friday, January 1, 2016
Bosnia or Bust!
![]() |
| Lovely Zadar, on the Adriatic Sea |
![]() |
| They said I could bring a backpack.. |
Due to the scary reviews and my tight connection time in Istanbul (barely 90 minutes to catch the last flight of the day to Sarajevo), I'm once again going carry on only. The carry on limit for Turkish Airlines is 1 overhead item at 8 kilos, roughly 17.6 pounds. My carry on bag weighs at least 5 pounds.
This should be interesting...
Next post, Sarajevo!
Budva: Mega-Yachts and Madonna
Lonely Planet gives an excellent introduction to Budva:
The biggest hotel on Bečići beach is the Hotel Splendid, a luxurious five-star resort that cost 70 million euros to build. It was the choice of The Rolling Stones and Madonna as well as Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie during their stay in Montenegro.
There are numerous cafes, bars, and restaurants along the extensive beachfront promenade. We had a lovely swim off the beach and a delicious fresh seafood lunch at Tri Ribari (the 3 Fishermen). Afterward we enjoyed a long stroll south along the walkway past some interesting people (most were Russian tourists from Moscow, an easy 3-hour flight away) and some interesting geologic formations - highly folded and warped layers of light and dark metamorphic rock are exposed by weathering along the coast here.
Gazing out at the Adriatic, we couldn't help but notice a large, strange-looking vessel several hundred meters offshore. It looked like an evil genius' submarine, something out of a James Bond movie. It was pure white, and more than anything else resembled an intergallatic battle cruiser. Asking around, we were told it was "Motor Yacht A", the ultra-luxurious mega-yacht built by French designer Phillipe Starck and owned by Russian businessman Andrey Melnichenko, who spent over $300 million on the ship's construction. This is the same guy who had both Whitney Houston and Christina Aguillera perform at his wedding to Serbian model Aleksandra Nikolic in 2005. His other yacht, also designed by Phillipe Starck, is nearing completion and will be the largest sailing yacht in the world -- "Sailing Yacht A," nicknamed "The White Pearl".
Seriously, these mega-yachts are ridiculously lavish. Once I started researching them it was hard to stop. The technology going into these ships is quite impressive, perhaps justifying some of the outlandish amount of money involved. The article below gives a good sneak-peak. Or, just Google "white pearl sailing yacht":
"Baccarat Meets Bomb-Proof Glass on the High Seas" - WSJ story on Motor Yacht A, w/ photos
![]() |
| Hotel Meridian on the Budva Riviera |
The poster child of Montenegrin tourism, Budva – with its atmospheric Stari Grad (Old Town) and numerous beaches – certainly has a lot to offer. Yet the child has moved into a difficult adolescence, fuelled by rampant development that has leeched much of the charm from the place. In the height of the season the sands are blanketed with package holidaymakers from Russia and Ukraine, while the nouveau riche park their multimillion-dollar yachts in the town’s guarded marina. By night you’ll run a gauntlet of scantily clad women attempting to cajole you into the beachside bars. It’s the buzziest place on the coast so if you’re in the mood to party, this is the place to be.Budva itself is functional, plain and uninteresting. The real draws are the lovely walled Old Town (Stari Grad, worth a half day) and the beaches of the Budva Riviera, which stretches for 22 miles along Montenegro's Adriatic coast. We decided to splurge on a reservation for 2 nights at Hotel Meridian, located at the far southern end of the Riviera on Bečići beach. At $50 a night, it was an affordable luxury.
Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/montenegro/coastal-montenegro/budva#ixzz3w15uzEDE
The biggest hotel on Bečići beach is the Hotel Splendid, a luxurious five-star resort that cost 70 million euros to build. It was the choice of The Rolling Stones and Madonna as well as Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie during their stay in Montenegro.
There are numerous cafes, bars, and restaurants along the extensive beachfront promenade. We had a lovely swim off the beach and a delicious fresh seafood lunch at Tri Ribari (the 3 Fishermen). Afterward we enjoyed a long stroll south along the walkway past some interesting people (most were Russian tourists from Moscow, an easy 3-hour flight away) and some interesting geologic formations - highly folded and warped layers of light and dark metamorphic rock are exposed by weathering along the coast here.
![]() |
| Lunch at Tri Ribari (Three Fishermen), Bečići |
![]() |
| Bevare! |
![]() |
| Motor Yacht A |
Seriously, these mega-yachts are ridiculously lavish. Once I started researching them it was hard to stop. The technology going into these ships is quite impressive, perhaps justifying some of the outlandish amount of money involved. The article below gives a good sneak-peak. Or, just Google "white pearl sailing yacht":
"Baccarat Meets Bomb-Proof Glass on the High Seas" - WSJ story on Motor Yacht A, w/ photos
Friday, October 23, 2015
Best Bus Station Award goes to - Budva, Montenegro
Apologies for the late posts.. keeping up with bad WiFi during the trip was harder than I thought.
October 1-3, 2015: Dubrovnik was enchanting, but after a few days we were ready to explore further afield. Our choices came down to: north to the Croatian coastal city of Split, east to Bosnia-Herzegovina, or south to Montenegro or Albania. Many of our shipmates were making similar plans, with a place called Kotor in Montenegro emerging as the most popular destination. We chose to head south to Budva, Montenegro, a seaside resort area popular with the Russian jet-set and just another half hour from Kotor.
There is no rail line serving Dubrovnik. To get to Montenegro using public transportation means you take the bus. Buses here are clean, fairly reliable, and fairly inexpensive. Our bus to Budva had a transfer in Kotor, so we would at least get to see it along the way, and if it looked really awesome, we could cut our time in Budva short to spend a day in Kotor. Although on a map the two cities look very close, the ride from Dubrovnik to Kotor took about 3 hours, due to the lack of any bridges spanning Kotor Bay, a long, deep, and very scenic fjord (technically, it IS a fjord, just like the ones in Norway) forming a three-pronged trident shape with Kotor on the southeastern prong of the trident. The views along Kotor Bay are spectacular, with the brooding stony mountains rising nearly perpendicular from the road cutting along the bay's edge. But Kotor didn't look very enticing from the bus stop, so we were happy to press on and transferred to the bus for Budva. Happy too that there was a working toilet at the spartan-looking Kotor bus stop, even though it cost about 50 cents to use and was pretty filthy... the local buses don't have bathrooms aboard so you need to make sure to use the facilities when and where you can on a long trip.
Arriving at the bus station in Budva was a surprise; the place is obviously someone's labor of love. The Budva Bus Station, or "Best Bus Station Ever" is a multi-faceted, quirky establishment combining a rest stop, ticket office, gourmet deli, gelato shop, magazine stand, bar, and restaurant surrounded by gushing fountains, swans, lush gardens, and a menagerie of little animals -- tortoises, bunnies, goats, pigs, turkeys, songbirds, and deer cavorting together inside their chain-link paradise. To top it off, there is a big treehouse with a few tables inside where you can sit suspended above the zoo, and waitresses come up to take your order. After enjoying a couple of refreshing (and cheap) Montenegran beers in the bus station treehouse, we knew we were really going to like Budva.
Some photos of the Budva Bus Station:
![]() |
| Bay of Kotor, Montenegro |
![]() |
| The Kotor bus station |
![]() |
| Budva - Best. Bus Station. Ever. |
Some photos of the Budva Bus Station:
![]() |
| The awesome treehouse. |
![]() |
| Awesome treehouse waitress. |
![]() |
| Budva bus station cafe |
![]() |
| Swans & fountains |
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




















![By User:MatthiasKabel (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6f/A_(ship)_at_Sorrent_2012_3.jpg)






