Day 5 of the Croatia trip. After indulging in cevapi for dinner and bureks for breakfast it's time for some exercise. A bit of biking and swimming on the island of Čiovo it is for today! ImageImageImage
Cycling the narrow roads of Čiovo.. ImageImageImageImage
Goal of the bike ride: this beautiful church on the cliffs above the water, which I would have completely missed out on if not for a great tip I got yesterday from a knowledgeable local. Absolutely stunning, peaceful location. Image
What a great view.. and not another soul around. ImageImageImageImage
Let's dive in and open this year's swimming season! ImageImageImageImage
Cycling back to Trogir - with a pit stop for coffee and some much needed water. ImageImageImageImage
Some more Trogir impressions. ImageImageImageImage
There are many other areas of Croatia worth visiting too but this one definitely has been great. ImageImageImageImage
Split is of course always worth a visit as well. I have only been once before here, passing through on a big Balkan road trip w friends on a 2nd hand Zastava GT55 (a 'stojka') bought for 400 euro in Bulgaria. Cheaper than a rental and endlessly more fun! Fond memories. ImageImageImageImage
Split is of course best known for Diocletian's Palace, built in the 4th Century for Roman Emperor Diocletian. A palace might not be the best term as it was more of a fortress, of which half was used as personal palace and the rest as military barracks plus other functions. ImageImageImageImage
Best about Split is not the area of Diocletian's Palace, nor the touristy palm-fringed seaside boulevard, but its backstreets. Colourful, full of local life, and with some great restaurants and bars. ImageImageImageImage
Food and wine in Croatia van be as good as in Italy. Pizzeria Portas makes excellent pizzas, and for the best ice cream in Split go to Ela's Icecream & more (the orange and ginger flavour is fantastic). Bonus pics: two local cats. Unfortunately not as many here as in Dubrovnik. ImageImageImageImage
Time to slowly head home. First by taking the IC train to Zagreb. Split's small station is located right next to the harbour with frequent passsenger ferry departures to the islands - as well as Italy I believe. ImageImageImageImage
The two-car carriage looks fine from up front, but wait.. what happened to the rear part where my assigned seat is? An ugly ad pasted over the windows ruining the view!! The railway executives who signed off on this really deserve a special place in hell. ImageImageImageImage
Departing Split. Right after leaving the station the train runs through a tunnel under the city centre.
At first the train runs parallel to the sea, but soon climbs up higher and goes inland proper. ImageImageImageImage
Having moved to the other carriage, at least I'm able to enjoy the fantastic views. As you can see, there are plenty of rock formations where the line runs right through.
One great advantage of this route is that the (single) track is built high up the hillside for most of the line, which means sweeping views over the green countryside.
Arriving at Perković, where a branch line to Šibenik joins the main Zagreb to Split railway.
This really is a scenic line well-worth travelling on. Many Croatians take buses as they are more frequent and faster due to excellent motorways, but you would miss out on most of this. And even when the views are similar, it's just not the same feeling from a bus window. ImageImageImageImage
Approaching Knin, famous for its hilltop castle and nearby waterfalls. There is now only one daily IC service due to trackworks, otherwise you could take the morning train here, look a bit around, and move on with the afternoon train. It saw heavy fighting in the war of '91-'95.
Scenery between Knin and Gracac. ImageImageImageImage
At Gračac the train stops for 10 minutes. It being the Balkans, half the passengers go out to smoke. ImageImageImageImage
After Gračac the scenery changes a bit as the mountains grow taller and the environs more wild, less verdant. ImageImageImageImage
And after the highlands we follow the course of the River Mrežnica to Karlovac - the last stop before Zagreb. ImageImageImageImage
Along the river. FWIW both sides of the train have good views depending on the exact part of the line but if you can opt for left-hand side seat going Split to Zagreb as 65% of the best views are from there (this is one of the exceptions where not, the part right after Knin too)
One thing Croatian Railways does well is having proper seat maps, showing direction of travel and allowing you to select your exact spot when you book online.
Approaching our final stop: Zagreb.
Zagreb Glavni Kolodvor. This night, I'm stretching my budget a bit (partially thanks to Hotels.com great book 10 nights get a night free loyalty programme) by staying in the most historic hotel in town - just a three minute walk away from the station. ImageImageImageImage
Built in 1925 to provide accommodation for passengers of the Orient Express, the Esplanade has tons of history and a great Art Deco interior - a style which I absolutely love (together w Art Nouveau). Even the lift oozes class! ImageImageImageImage
And quite fitting to these days of train travel, my room overlooks the gorgeous railway palace where HŽ, the Croatian Railways, re headquartered. ImageImageImageImage
So let's explore Zagreb a bit more. A great place for coffee is a hiddden bar one floor up in a building overlooking the central square of Trg Ban Jelačić. The sign at the door reads 'club privé' but it's no sex club, but a legit, normally priced bar! ImageImageImageImage
Dolac is the market place where each morning to early afternoon there is a big farmer's market. Empty by the time I arrived with cleaners tidying up some lettuce.leaves on the floor and workers disassembling market stalls. ImageImageImageImage
And on to the upper town where many of the Croatian government buildings are housed. ImageImageImageImage
One of my favourite museums in Europe is the Museum of Broken Relationships as it's so bittersweet. This time the exhibits are rather more on the bitter than on the sweet or funny side, however. Also lots of stories about the recent Balkan wars. ImageImageImageImage
Some more exhibits.. ImageImageImageImage
As a point of comparison, the last time I visited they had more of such hilarious items on show with brilliant descriptions. Image
Evening stroll, passing by some old favourite watering holes (Tolkien's House, Harat's). For good local craft beer, try the brews of 'The Garden'. ImageImageImageImage
Back in the hotel, with a complimentary bottle of red which I somehow got as an extra perk through my lowly silver status on hotels dot com (and a very fine wine that is too!). Signing off for now, one-and-a-half days of train travel back home to follow tmrw morning. Goodnight! ImageImageImageImage

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More from @PaliparanDotCom

13 May
After all the Croatian fun it's time to go home - by train. First up: the EC train to Vienna. To blend in better with the Balkan surroundings, the OeBB carriages even have quite some grafiti on them. ImageImageImageImage
As the scenery during the first few hours is exactly the same as on the Graz-Zidani Most-Zagreb trains on the inbound, I won't post anything and just take a nap. Below is a thread what you can expect to see if you take this journey, in case you missed it.

The Slovene border guards are on it again at Dobova with thorough checks. They even kicked out my friendly Croatian compartment mate for not having a negative corona test - despite the fact that this is not needed for transit! Poor guy.. ~1 hour delay and counting. Image
Read 9 tweets
10 May
Day 4 of the trip and I'm off to Zagreb Airport for a rather unique flight. It seems it will be a gorgeous day for flying judged by this sunrise.
I will fly with Trade Air on a PSO route (Public Service Obligation, similar to the EAS - Essential Air Service - in the US). It's a government sponsored route linking smaller but vital places which would otherwise not be viable. But that's not what is unique about this flight..
What is special is the plane that is operating the flight, a Czech-made Let L-410 Turbolet. And the fact that I'm the only passenger on this flight!
Read 28 tweets
8 May
Day 2, back at Warsaw Airport. The friendly people at my hotel (Four Points Sheraton Mokotow) were kind enough to make a breakfast bag w tasty sandwiches and even freshly made waffles as I checked out before breakfast service started. Coffee time now in the LOT lounge! ImageImageImageImage
I do like these beautiful @LOTPLAirlines retro posters a lot! ImageImageImageImage
This flight marks my first time ever on board a Boeing 737 MAX 8. ImageImageImageImage
Read 69 tweets
7 May
Bucharest Airport. Time for the next trip! 3 flights, 9 trains (of which 2 overnight) are to come in the following days. Passing through 8 countries in total -- if all goes according to plan that is as I'm testing corona entry/transit rules to the limit. Count me excited!
Frequent OTP flyers will be pleased to hear that e-passport gates are now installed and working for EU citizens! I for one was certainly happy to see this sudden improvement.
The #Embraer 175 which will fly me to Warsaw. These little planes (and LOT Polish Airlines in general) have grown on me in recent years. Comfy, spacious 2-2 seating, great customer service, great network across Europe. Not the most exciting airline, but amazingly reliable!
Read 14 tweets
5 May
Fully agree. There's a reason why the French only banned a few flights to Paris Orly - and not those to Charles de Gaulle. Improve competition (and thus price) & point-to-point connections, which will automatically earn a huge rail share between city pairs (see Barcelona-Madrid!)
You may not win over all connecting pax - but you don't have to. Those travelling between 2 cities is already a good start & leads to less short-haul traffic. Curious to see how eg. Athens-Thessaloniki traffic will develop now rail is a viable alternative, as fast as the plane.
And frankly speaking, you'd be mad as a domestic passenger to opt for a flight here. Metro ticket to ATH airport €10 extra, check-in hassle, on arrival in Thessaloniki long bus ride in bad traffic to town, while city to city centre will be 3 hours by train! This is way to start.
Read 4 tweets
28 Apr
What I hate most about flying during COVID: no online boarding pass w many airlines. Look at this queue for the @wizzair check-in desk running through the entire airport! Horrible experience, please bring back document checks at the gate where they should be. Image
This queue is like the old Tell Sell commercials: "But wait, there is more!" Utter chaos as well as the first Wizz flights (Paris, Charleroi) are about to depart and there are still people far out in the queue, w pax from later flights sneaking ahead. Image
Bizarrely enough, Wizz actually hired two security guards to watch over it all but it's still about the most unorderly queue I have ever seen, with dozens of sneaky queue jumpers creating chaos. And I've been to India..
Read 23 tweets

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