Croatia
Vranjic

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    • Day 24

      A la redécouverte de Split 😉

      October 30, 2023 in Croatia ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      Notre dernière visite date de l'été 2020. Une visite à Split c'est traverser les différents moments historiques vécus par la ville : à travers l’architecture antique, médiévale romane et gothique, Renaissance, Baroque et moderne. La richesse du patrimoine de Split est exceptionnelle et peut en dérouter certains d'un point de vue architectural (romane, vénitienne, austro-hongoise, française.. communiste )!

      Notre taxi nous dépose tout près du marché aux fruits et légumes, il a lieu tous les jours, ces petites grand-mères qui viennent vendre leurs quelques légumes du jardin est un spectacle a lui seul. Je repars avec mon petit panier, mes noix fraîches et mon miel croate 😋.

      Puis nous rentrons dans la vieille ville par la porte d'argent, classée au patrimoine mondial de l'UNESCO, où les touristes sont toujours aussi présents même à cette saison.

      Au coeur de la ville se cache le palais de l’empereur romain Dioclétien, passage obligatoire lors d'un séjour en Dalmatie.
      La cathédrale St Dujam, le temple de jupiter, les souterrains, le péristyle, la place du peuple.... se rappellent à moi 🤩.

      Et voilà l'heure d'assouvir les estomacs des enfants 🤣. Mon chéri m'avait promis "la fritule dalmate", nous ferons un détour au marché au poisson et nous la dégusterons sur la riva. 😋

      Une fois rassasiée, la petite famille part à l'ascension de la colline Marjan pour profiter d'une vue imprenable sur la ville, la mer et les iles.
      Mais elle se mérite, nous y accéderons par les escaliersqui partent de la vieille ville et mènent à la terrasse du café Vidilica.
      La colline Marjan est pratiquement entourée par la mer, en faire le tour représente 10 km💪mais le spectacle est juste 🤩. Notre déjeuner est digéré, je vous assure.

      Le redescendons tranquillement, rencontrons les chats du quartier....

      Nous sortirons de la vieille ville par une autre porte pour saluer Gregoire de Nin, un évêque qui au 10e s. lutta pour imposer le vieux croate comme langue liturgique. Cette statue fut créée par Ivan Meštrović (ivane mechtrovitch), le plus célèbre sculpteur croate du 20e s.
      Toucher le gros orteil de Grégoire de Nin porte chance, alors les enfants ont fait un voeu avant de rentrer de cette belle journée bien occupée et riche.🙂
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    • Day 44

      Split, Croatia

      September 18, 2023 in Croatia ⋅ ☁️ 82 °F

      What we did:
      - Morning workouts to sweat out the boat beers and then caught 10-11am ferry into Split.
      - Walked through town to check into our hotel in the heart of a college campus, navigating through pods of 20yr old girls gunning cigarettes. It ended up being such a nice boutique hotel! We contemplated just spending the day in it
      - We did venture out and grab some fresh salads for lunch and then walked for two - three hours around the harbor, oceanside parks and beaches. Steph relived memories of her and the Buda crew roadtripping over here junior year and cliff jumping into the ocean. This time around we read books on an ocean front bench for an hour… we’re still hip and fun we promise!
      - Grabbed some big Croatian beers and Aperol Spritz’s (see we’re still hip and fun) at a harbour front cafe for a while and watched P Diddy’s massive yacht pull in (you can lease it from him for $400k a week). Good to finally see where all our summer paychecks spent on Ciroc ended up
      - Jenna and Joe landed around 5 from their bus-train-plane trek from Lake Como so we showered and met them on their apartment rooftop for pre-dinner wine. Still can’t believe we happened to be in Split on the same day!
      - Had an awesome time at dinner catching up on our four days apart and reliving the good times in Nice!
      - The group debated calling it early given activities the next day, but psh life’s short and when are we going to be in Croatia together again. To another bar we went until midnight-ish for more big Croatian beers and you guessed it - Euchre. Steph and Trent finally got a win! Such a great itinerary surprise to see them again!

      What we ate:
      - Coffee and chocolate croissants on the ferry
      - Salads at Restaurant “Feel Green Healthy Food” - could not be a more literal interpretation of the consumption our bodies needed at this point. Thank you Croatian-english
      - Bokeria Kitchen and Wine for dinner. Couple bottles of wine, Bombolini and Burrata apps with melt off the bone lamb skewers and risotto dinner.

      Fun facts:
      - We saw many bars across Croatia with “fun” included in them as a very literal translation to nab tourists. Names such as “Charlies - Fun and BBQ pub”gave us a chuckle every time
      - Our first lodging mix-up…we knew it would happen at some point during our 3 month trip (fingers crossed it’s the first and last time)! Had it booked for the wrong week, but luckily we were only staying one night and Trent was able to find a much better hotel for a cheaper price! Yay for same-day booking!
      - This marks the end of our month on the Mediterranean and Adriatic coasts. Goodbye ocean, sun, Aperol spritz, and warm weather! Hello autumn, sweaters, red wine, and BIG beers!
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    • Day 7

      Split

      September 27, 2019 in Croatia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      Mit dem Bus 26 vom Campingplatz in die Stadt. Ausstieg direkt am Platz des Diokletian, einem riesigen Gemäuer (180 x 125 m) mit vielen kleinen Läden, einem Museum, einer Kirche etc.
      Spaziergang durch die engen Gassen mit vielen Cafés und noch mehr Geldautomaten!Read more

    • Day 33

      Tag 33 - Split

      August 16, 2019 in Croatia ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

      80 km / 1915 km - 8 / 167 Stunden

      Ausgaben:

      0 € / 24 € Transport (Fähre, etc.)
      19 € / 355 € Lebensmittel
      20 € / 231€ Unterkunft
      0 € / 34 € Eintrittspreise
      0 € / 5 € Anschaffungen
      8 € / 8 € Ersatzteile

      47 € / 657 € Gesamt

      Heute Morgen scheint mir die Sonne ins Gesicht.
      Mal wieder im Freien geschlafen, wieder nicht vom Bären geweckt, dafür aber von den Insekten besucht.
      Meinen Gliedmaßen nach zu urteilen an vielen Stellen auf meiner Haut.

      Vielleicht auch von den Burschen in meinem Frühstücksbeutel.
      Eigentlich dachte ich, wenn ich diesen an den Lenker hänge, wird heute Morgen nicht das große Krabbeln drin losgehen.
      Dafür aber das große Hopsen. Ich schmeiß die Schelme raus und mache Frühstück.

      Dann geht es weiter Richtung Split.
      An einem der übersichtlichen Schilder wird sich erstmal orientiert.

      Zwischen mir und Split liegt noch die Hafenstadt Trogir.
      Sie will besucht werden und ich suche mir auch gleich einen neuen Freund.
      Denn ich parke mein Fahrrad auf dem einzigen Platz, den ich in dem überlaufenen Stadtkern finden kann. Als ich mich mit meinem Eis niederlasse, kommt ein dickbäuchiger Glatzkopf an und gibt mir zu verstehen, dass er wohl denkt, die Straße vor seinem Schaufenster gehöre ihm und ich möchte mein Rad davor entfernen.

      Gerne doch. Das Eis hält noch fünf Minuten. Wir sehen uns dann in zehn.
      Dann wollte ich gerade weiter, da ruft ein Freund an. Welch Glück ist vor dem Schaufenster ein Sonnensegel unter welchem ich sogleich telefoniere. Der Fast-Food-Schreck meinte es gut mit mir und war sich sicher, mit meinen nass geschwitzten Sachen sollte ich nicht im Schatten verweilen. Ich fand sehr nett, dass er alsbald das Sonnensegel extra für mich in der Wand versenkte, damit ich nicht friere.
      Wie nahezu den kompletten Tag genoss ich die Sonne.

      Nach zehn Minuten war dann auch das Gespräch beendet und ich wurde vom Ladenbesitzer nebenan zum Kaffee eingeladen.
      Mir scheint, ich bin hier in ein paar Zwistigkeiten geraten.

      Wohl an, nach einer weiteren halben Stunde setzte ich meine Erkundung der Stadt fort und finde, dass die Gebäude und das Wasser hier stark an die Bauten erinnern, die man aus der Karibik kennt. Schön hier. Tolle Architektur, schöne Plätze und nette Menschen.

      Kurz überlege ich, ob ich mit der Fähre übersetze. Entscheide dann aber, die zehn Euro lieber in meiner Tasche zu belassen. Zwischen mir und Split liegt noch der Flughafen und die Straße, direkt am Ende vom Rollfeld. Nach einer halben Stunde Planewatching fahre ich weiter nach Split.

      Im Hostel angekommen passiert heute nicht mehr viel, außer dass ich einkaufen gehe, in einem Fahrradladen eine neue Kette kaufe und meine alte ersetze.
      Ab ins Bette.
      Morgen Sightseeing.

      Song des Tages:
      Gotta Move - Heneymoon Disease
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    • Day 7

      Split

      July 30, 2019 in Croatia ⋅ ⛅ 29 °C

      Alustasime päeva Spliti kõige kuulsamas rannas, käisime ujumas ja suundusime seejärel Solini linna varemeid vaatama. Nägime ägedaid sarkofaage, katedraali ja amfiteatri varemeid.
      Õhtul olime Spliti kõrval asuva Trogiri linna vanalinnas. Nägime seal ägedaid tänavaesinejaid, sõime kaheksajala pada ja ronisime väikese kindluse torni.Read more

    • Day 37

      Dalmatia coast.... Split and Dubrovnik

      October 20, 2018 in Croatia ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

      One observation during our drive through Lika-Senj County and other areas around Plitvice Lakes was the number of empty and deserted houses. We drove past little villages or clusters of 10 or so houses where the windows and doors had been removed and no one home. Not sure of the reason but maybe related to the war during the early 90’s.
      The highway to Split was excellent although it was a toll road. The speed limit was 130kmh but even driving at 140kmh relegated me to the slow lane with cars zooming past me. The highways have some extremely long tunnels one we travelled through, “Mala Kapela Tunnel” being almost 6km long. They are an amazing feat of engineering as MDW said. Although the tolls add up, the time saving is worth it.
      Our hotel in Split is 300 metres from the Old Town and provides parking. The hotel had sent us an email with a link the the parking area which we allowed Google Maps to take us to. It was supposedly on 20 meters from the hotel. We parked in the space the farthest from other vehicles and probable an 3xtra 20 meters from the hotel. We started to walk towards the destination as directed by Google Maps dragging our luggage behind us. 20 metres, I don’t think so, more like 200 metres. When we were at our destination it took MDW’s sharp eyes to find the entrance. Someone grabbed one our bags and motioned us inside. We checked in and I asked if we had parked correctly and what was the payment procedure for the paid parking showing the hotel manager our parking receipt. “Wrong car park” he said, “just park behind the wall, 10 metres away”. I was going to tell him the link was wrong but we went back to the car and moved it to the correct car park. As we got out I passed MDW the phone and parking receipt that would need to be verified by the hotel. When we got to the hotel I asked MDW for the parking receipt. “What receipt “ she said. In her hand was a scrunched up piece of paper. Between us we flattened it out and although the ink was a bit smudged it looked useable.
      We spent almost all our time sitting in cafes near the water. The beauty of doing that was if you passed wind no one would know because of the smell of sulphur which varies in pungency during the day. Not that MDW would do such a thing. There were a lot of market stalls which were all operated by Croatians. We even came across the famous? fish markets which overpowered the sulphur smell. We also found a lovely restaurant where MDW had half of a huge pork schnitzel and I had a tuna steak, medium rare, which was delicious.
      The old town is right on the promenade and very interesting. Most of it is free to visitors with the underground or cellars of the Diocletian's Palace an exception. There were some clever builders over a century ago with stone roofs still surviving.
      Split is a great place to sit and enjoy the views.
      We needed to book one night at a town between Split and Dubrovnik, preferably on the coast. We ended up at Brela about 90 minutes south of Split. We got there way too early for our room so drove on to Makarska for a drink. Parking was scarce but we found a space on the footpath, along with other cars. We had a drink in the square where we saw more buildings with bullet holes. Off to our hotel, we checked in and the room was lovely but the air conditioning did not work. MDW told me it’s not working but I swear I could feel a trickle of cool air coming through the vents. After a couple of hours in the sauna and me finally admitting MDW was right (why do I ever question or doubt her) I contacted reception who sent a maintenance man down who fiddled for a while then disappeared without saying a word. On the phone to reception again where it was suggested I turn it off then on again. Did that, no good, on the phone to reception. Reception lady comes to the room, presses some buttons, turns aircon off then on. Still no go so we are offered another room. Although the hotel has lifts, we are in the annex which only has stairs, lots of. From our original room it was 2 flights up, 200 metres along a corridor, up 1 flight then down 3 flights. Luckily they sent a young man to carry our luggage as we were starting to struggle carrying ourselves. By now it was 7pm and we had seen nothing but 4 walls. Fortunately our accommodation included half board which is dinner and breakfast. Dinner was a Buffett with plenty of options to satisfy us both. Not only good food but a trio singing a Croatian and contemporary music which made for a wonderful atmosphere to accompany the wonderful meal. The dinning area was full with German tourists as there were at least two bus loads staying at the hotel.
      MDW asked when did we have to have the car back and I said I think the day after we get to Dubrovnik but I’ll check. Of course I was wrong, had to get it back tomorrow morning which meant early breakfast to allow for the two and a half hour trip plus potential google map direction errors. We were quickly on the highway where at times the speed limit was 130kmh and other times 50kmh. We seemed to be following the edge of the Adriatic Sea which provided some incredible views along with the Dinaric alps providing a menacing but impressive backdrop. We were instructed to keep left when we came to the start of a new toll way which wasn’t operational. Panic! Let’s turn right. Dead end. Let’s recalculate the route. Perform a u turn. We were soon heading in the right direction, this was our only potential “getting lost” moment in Croatia. On the way to Dubrovnik we had a couple of passport control areas when driving through Bosnia and Herzegovnia. When we were re-entering Croatia we had to show our passports twice in 10 metres as the two booths were adjacent to each other.
      We arrived in Dubrovnik with plenty of time to get the rental car back. We took our luggage to our hotel where I left MDW to look at the water view whilst she bravely trusted me to get the car to the rental car place and get back. I think this is the first time we have been more than 1 kilometre apart during this holiday. The car returned with out any issues, the rental car rep drove me back the 4 kilometres to our hotel. MDW was surprised to see me so soon. Our room was not ready so we had a drink then caught bus 6 to Pile Gate, the entrance to Old Town Dubrovnik. To get an idea what it’s like, watch Game of Thrones. We have never seen it but apparently some of it was filmed in Dubrovnik. The old town is interesting with lots of streets, a lot better planned than Venice. People still live in the town with washing hanging to dry out of their windows. Lots of Game of Thrones memorabilia for sale along with local Croatian products. Expensive to sit down for a drink, a small bottle of coke 50 kuna or $11 Australian. Needless to say we didn’t sit down for a drink.
      We had dinner at one of the many restaurants near the hotel. When we returned to our hotel I couldn’t find the door access card. No problem, I’ll get one from reception. I tell the guy I have misplaced the swipe card. He says what room. I say 812. I meet MDW on the eight floor and we walk towards room 812. I touch the swipe card thingy and hear the door click, meaning it is open but at the same time see a Do not disturb sign on the door handle. Oops, wrong room. Hopefully we didn’t disturb the people in room 812. I go back to reception and ask them to check what room I’m in. This time they check and give me room 804 access. I wonder if anyone could ask for any card to access any room?
      The next day we did the cable car ride to the top of the hill where there is an amazing view of Dubrovnik and the Adriatic Sea. It was a hard slog up the hill to get on the cable car, more than the 7 minutes we were told by the ticket seller.
      Again we have been fortunate with the weather. Croatia is a good place to visit, plenty of touristy stuff all down the coast plus Plitvice Lakes. It is amazing how the “old towns” survived and are still being lived in. Driving on the other side of the road wasn’t too bad. My navigator, MDW, did an excellent job as we had to rely on the take next right or left instruction because the street names are too long to read. Even the Google Maps voice jumbled the longer names. On the narrower roads overtaking is risky but done on a regular basis with cars happy to overtake over solid lines with a corner approaching. Only twice did we need to hit the brakes to allow an oncoming car to make it.
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    • Day 28

      Trogir & Split

      July 25, 2020 in Croatia ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

      Jonathan’s letzter Tag! Was hatten wir für eine gute Zeit! Aber nach 2 Wochen und gut 2000km verabschiede ich ihn am Flughafen Split. Vorher besuchen wir mal wieder einen weiteren kroatischen UNESCO-Ort: das Städtchen Trogir. Vielleicht liegt es an den Wochenend-Touristen aus dem Umland, aber wir empfinden Trogir als touristisch stark überlaufen. Wenn auch architektonisch nett und original.

      In Split nehme ich mir dann kurzfristig ein Zimmer nahe der Altstadt und bin bei meinem anschließenden Bummel sehr begeistert von Diokletianspalast, bei dem mit unglaublich viel Umsicht bestehende Gemäuer genutzt & restauriert wurden für neue Nutzflächen. Alle scheinen hier am Samstagabend im Urlaub zu sein und das Wochenende genießen zu wollen; scheinbar auch das Coronavirus... mit meiner neuen Ankermuster-Maske vom Markt wirke ich in den engen Gassen wie ein alienated Matrosen-Bankräuber. Nach einem Besuch beim nächstbesten Frisör laufe ich raus aus der Stadt in den Park Marjan, der direkt an Split auf einer Landzunge liegt. Hier werden Hunde oder Geliebte zum Spaziergang ausgeführt, Sport getrieben und dalmatische Sonnenuntergänge bestaunt. Letzteres ist dann auch mein Plan - gemeinsam mit dem Verspeisen dalmatischen Käses und slowenischer Salami. Wunderschön riecht der Wald, die Wellen rauschen an die Felsen und das Licht!!! Es taucht alles in Gold. Wahnsinnig beruhigend diese Atmosphäre. Hier könnt ich länger bleiben 😏👌
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    • Day 64

      Split

      October 2, 2016 in Croatia ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      After an exciting journey into Split with some storms and flash flooding, we managed to find a lovely little apartment right in the centre of town and even squeezed the bike up the stairs too!
      I had my first ever Hugo cocktail, my new favourite and dangerously cheap! Beautiful old town and amazing sunset, deceptively tasty looking ice cream (totally gross!) but the local dish of cuttlefish and squid ink risotto was deeeeelicious.Read more

    • Day 8

      City of Split

      October 29, 2016 in Croatia ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      These are miscellaneous photos of Split. First are images of the market located near the dock outside the palace. There were flowers everywhere in anticipation of the Catholic All Souls Day (Croatia is a largely Catholic country). The statue is of Grgur Ninski who was bishop of Nin during the 10th century; he is honored by Croatians for fighting to allow them to worship in their native tongue as opposed to the previously required Latin. The other photos are from the harbor and the Stars Ura (old town Clock Square). The clock was built between the 13th and 15th centuries.Read more

    • Day 6

      Kill the Master, freiwillige vor? Split!

      May 29, 2018 in Croatia ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

      Nachdem unser Vorgehen Ankommen > Strand > Sightseeing in Sibenik so wunderbar geklappt hat, haben wir die Vorgehensweise auch gleich auf Split übertragen. Einen kleinen Zwischenstopp auf der Festung Klis (kurz vor Split) ausgenommen. GoT lässt grüßen.

      Der Strand selbst war...welch Überraschung sehr steinlastig aber für einen Stadtstrand doch ganz ansehnlich und direkt am Fuße des Marjan gelegen.
      Split selbst ist schon eine ganze Ecke touristischer als zuvor Sibenik, mit der breiten Promenade und dem Geflecht aus unzähligen kleinen Gassen in der Altstadt aber sehr schön. Verlaufen ist hier inklusive, da GPS bei den schmalen Gassen kaum klappt, so dreht man halt ein paar extra Runden. Neben Burgen und teuren experimentellen Jasmin-Cocktails hat die Stadt natürlich auch den ein oder anderen GoT Drehort wie bspw. die „Kill the masters“-street...sieht alles von den Gebäuden her gleich aus hier also nicht so leicht zu finden. Aber: Mission completed!

      PS: Sowohl Nagelschere als auch Rasierer vergessen, sehr mittlerweile aus wie der schmächtige Wolverine oder der bärtige Edward mit den Scherenhänden 🤦‍♂️🤷🏼‍♂️
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