Meet-Ups for Travellers on Trains in Transylvania
No one told us that meet-ups on trains in Transylvania was a given. We were travelling from Budapest to Istanbul by train and it wasn’t just the scenery that was getting
better. By Romania, scenes of pocket-sized farms carved into dense forested hillsides were becoming secondary to what was really capturing our attention; our fellow passengers.
Meet-Up with a Videographer on Trains in Transylvania
Upon leaving the lushly-green mountain town of Sighisoara, we meet a young American videographer who had just returned from Ethiopia where he had been filming skateboarders in Addis Ababa. A grassroots movement, coupled with a coterie of international supporters, had led to the establishment of a new public skatepark; the Addis Skatepark, and Matt’s videos were vital to securing ongoing international interest and support for the project. Still vibrating from his experiences in Ethiopia, freshly-showered Matt is on the way to another assignment. As we head deeper into Transylvania and Vlad the Impaler’s hunting ground, he turns north towards the Ukraine.
Vlad of Transylvania
Ground central for Transylvania is the city of Brasov, named and built by its Saxon founders. Finding its cobbled-stoned streets more akin to a scene out of the Pied Piper of Hamelin than one backdropping Vlad’s reign of terror, we nonetheless play along with the dominant tourist schtick in the town and the macabre humour that it had engendered. Vlad was not a man to be trifled with; 100,000 people had been subjected to his
brutal means of torture and death. Our city guide reassures us that, other than inspiring a book (“Dracula” by Bram Stoker), Vlad’s techniques had fallen out of fashion.
Meet-Up with Road Scholars on Trains in Transylvania
Brasov to Bucharest is a morning’s train ride away, so it was no surprise to meet Arlene and Larry, two other senior backpackers, upon reaching the station. Their swing into this legendary corner of Romania was via Bulgaria, and, according to Arlene, a sizzling tour with Road Scholars.
“It was a fantastic tour,” she tells us. “They took us to all the historical hot-spots in Bulgaria. We had no idea that Bulgaria had been so powerful, particularly during the Second Bulgarian Dynasty, so the country teems with artifacts from those eras. You should have seen the fresco work – inside and out – in some of the monasteries. Stunning!”
Seems Road Scholars is a way for seniors with a bent for culture and an aptitude for dates to unearth and explore their inner archeologist, and
Arlene’s retelling of their trip through Bulgaria attracts a few eavesdroppers. Eager to practise a language she is
learning, a young woman who introduces herself as Chantel from Sicily, chimes in. She has no problem swinging the conversation over to a subject she is passionate about – her mother country. She highlights the areas on Sicily once settled by the Ancient Greeks and within moments, we could feel the searing sun, and the dust between our toes as we imagine scrambling about the ruins scattered across the island.
Meet Up with Romanian Family on Trains in Transylvania
But we had a train to catch first, however. We board the busy Friday afternoon train to Romania’s capital, a family clan of many, with children too excited to sit, crammed in the seats across from us. Their conversation is animated, switching back and forth between Romanian and German. One of the women slips seamlessly into English to inquire, mirth dancing around her eyes, how we were enjoying Brasov and Romania and the always-late trains. She translates our responses to her eight-year-old son, who, having found out that we live just north of the US, reiterates to his mom that though he liked Obama, he is no fan of Trump’s. We find out that the precocious boy’s mom is a German teacher (with a PhD in English literature) and his father a mechanical engineer working for a German company in Brasov. They have taken the Friday off for a family trip to a local castle, and I catch a photo of them in the full flush of ‘playing hookey for the day’.
Meet Up with Club Med Instructor on Trains in Transylvania
When the Brasov family leaves the train, children and baggage and laughter trailing behind them, their seats are taken by Paula, a young Romanian woman. She is keen to converse (being fluent both in English and French), and tells us she is taking a reprieve from work.
“What is it you do?” I ask.
“I animate kids,” she replies.
Well, that needed some unwrapping. Turns out she works in the children’s activity department for Club Med. Her last post was in the Dominican Republic, and in a few weeks she will be heading to Tunisia (well away, she assures us, from the ‘trouble’ there) to help the children learn to kitesurf while their parents sip cocktails by the pool. She tells us she will be looking for a new job after this posting as she finds working with kids exhausting. She is 29 years old.
Animating kids for Club Med, filming Ethiopian skateboarders, two seniors on the road to scholarship in Bulgaria, one scintillating Sicilian, a Romanian couple with five university degrees and a Trump-intolerant son between them – these are the treasures uncovered within three days of train travel in Romania. Now, that’s what I’d call a meet-up extravaganza!