Lake Ohrid

3-5/11/2023

On our last night on Berat, neither of us slept. On top of a rock hard bed, one of the hosts chained dogs kept barking! I mentioned it to the son, saying other guests would not be happy. Later, I received an email from Booking.com. The host had claimed we had failed to show. Either, they were concerned that I’d leave negative comments in my review or they didn’t want to pay Booking.com their commission. I was concerned that my credit card would still be charged, so I filled in the form that we had stayed. Despite the noisy dog, the rigid bed, the lack of kitchen equipment (e.g. 1 knife), rubbish Internet, no freezer door (everything in the fridge froze,) and leaking toilet… I would have left a generous review as a) it was cheap and b) the mother and 2 teenage children were so sweet and we felt sorry for them. Ho hum.

Being shattered, we pretty much drove directly to Lake Ohrid.
Much poorer area, for instance, Chicken soup, bread and water for lunch was £2.50 ….. for both of us! Most people we’ve seen at lunch order soup and a big bowl of rice. And strip farming. I imagine this is a legacy of the communist years where people had a strip to grow their own veg. A bit like allotments on a larger scale.

A large area of long narrow strip farming


For much of the drive, we followed a railway track. Neither of us thought the crumbling concrete viaducts looked safe. Google advised this line closed in 2007. Shame as it used to be a known panoramic trip. The whole of the Albanian railway line is now defunct. A small freight section is apparently under repair.

Just short of our Airbnb, we drove through Lin on Lake Ohrid to the spit at the end.

Looking down to Lin
And across Lake Ohrid to North Macedonia

Having parked, I was scammed into buying a jar of fig jam by an insistent older lady. I was NO match for her. We both started the walk around the headland. A bit of a clamber over a steep drop. J’s vertigo kicked in, so he returned to the car.

Part of the headland walk

Our Airbnb is a step up in quality. Gifts of food and the hosts mother delivered baked goods yesterday. Apparently, she would have bought pastries today, but we politely declined. as we knew we were going for a fish supper. But the apartment is cold! Oh so cold. A small electric heater thankfully in the kitchen / lounge. Our warm PJs are in the roofbox, and that is not being unlocked till Crete! Lots of heavy blankets on the bed and snuggling for warmth!

Yesterday we had a bitter wind and lots of rain. Max temperature was 13C. All our warmer clothes, hats etc are buried … in the roofbox! Not kind that friends on Crete were telling us it was 32C!

We attempted to drive to an ancient burial ground. But the road went from tarmac, to stones to mud. Didn’t fancy 11km of that in the rain.  So aborted, but not before passing a rubbish dump, including about 30 vehicles. People lived opposite!  We’ve been staggered by how much rubbish there is … everywhere. We have seen people throw sacks over the edge of the road. Drop things out of car windows. And we will stop using wet wipes … seen loads, and they just don’t disintegrate.

Part of the unofficial rubbish dump

Pogradec is pleasant … cold having a coffee.  We stopped for a fried fish late lunch at a taverna recommended by the Airbnb host  So good we went back today and shared a large fish … Ohrid trout is deservedly highly regarded.

The taverna was full of stuffed animals … thought some might think we were lunch!
Great to watch a family of 3 generations celebrate and dance.

Day 2. The sun returned today so we set off on a walk. Up and up.  It became a sheep track.  Fab views. The summit (summit as it truly is a mountain) is crowned with phone masts. We decided to stop following the walk, as we didn’t fancy a steep descent on a path, similar to those we’d climbed up. We re-routed the slightly longer way along the easier the access track for the masts …   Leaving the masts, we saw all the Restricted Area signs. Oops. Then the police appeared. Language barrier. We were clearly hapless tourists walking, so they waved us on!

From the top
A quick look at the ponds where the karst feeds Lake Ohrid

We went directly and hungrily to the fish taverna and shared a whole BBQ Ohrid trout. Being on a healthy eating kick, we started with salad. Being greedy and hungry, we also had chips! But we did manage to maintain our dry November!

Berat

1-2/11/2023

A wander in Berat the night we arrived and our last supper out! We are going dry and healthy eating for November!!!

Yesterday, we drove up to a typical town for coffee. Full of people.

Advert for BA on a travel agent, probably as so many Albanians go there. All the other adverts were domestic companies

Just beyond, the valley floor was littered with abandoned military buildings … the largest Albanian munitions manufacturing was here. Used to employ over 2000. Now, those, that work, make stone bricks and tiles. Officially, unemployment is reducing and at about 10% for men. Probably as so many have left for the UK. And frankly, I just don’t believe the official stats given how many working age men, particularly, are hanging around cafes, bars and town centres.

A small part of the munitions factory

We were headed to walk to a waterfall and then to view points over a canyon. But the road was a dirt track. I was having an off day (lost my mojo) and didn’t fancy 11km each way of having to concentrate just to the waterfall.


That afternoon, we walked up to the castle … at one time, 42 churches, until most were destroyed during the atheism years. Now only 8. Some were then destroyed during WW2. Proper castle, still with houses inside the castle walls.

Today was wandering Berat proper. Either side of the river. Great views of the Ottoman town of a 1000 windows. Had to Google… apparently, there were no windows on the street side so the women couldn’t be seen from the street. I guess they put as many in as possible the other side for light.

Wouldn’t want to have to curtain all these!
J’s haircut and beard trim … £2.90 with good tip

We’ve been interested in car ownership since I read that in 1991 (end of communism) only 600 cars were registered. I appreciate there were probably a number of illegal ones on the road. So a few googled facts:

  • Albania has the oldest cars in EU and EEA members.
  • In 2020, 540,000 cars were registered. Of which only 4000 were under 2 years old. The majority of 311,000 were 10-20 years old. 180,000 were over 20 years old.
  • Albania has the lowest ownership rate… just 1 in 5.
  • 40% of all vehicles are registered in Tirana … no wonder it was noisy, polluted and chaotic.
  • Mercedes is the most popular vehicle brand, accounting for over 18% . Perhaps we should bring our young (12 year old Merc) over for a refurb!

Triple A Day

31/10/2023

Appollonia ancient site, Ardenica Monastery and Ate well.

Update on sleep. We slept brilliantly. Even the neighbouring dogs didn’t bark for long as the pup wasn’t howling! It transpired, the poor pup had been tied up far the other side of the owner’s house. Oh dear … at least we slept.

We packed up as moving day. Vlore to Berat. But with stops, of course.

Appollonia Ancient site

It’s a national park, and it did feel like a nice walk with things to see. The site is quite vast, and we quickly lost other visitors when we walked to the Nypheum and main Theatre, which were out on a limb. Only 10% has been excavated and relatively recently 1920/30’s and then 1980’s. The museum had some fine pieces. Some going back to C8 BC. Despite such long occupation, the buildings are Roman, with many stones recycled from earlier construction.

Iconostasis and some frescoes in the church
No site in Albania would be complete without damage by Hohxa’s communist era
The main Theatre away from the other visitors
As was the Nypheum
Don’t mind this sort of visitor!

Ardenica Monastery


The only monk inhabited monastery in Albania. Not surprising really since the atheism years repressed religion and Albania is mostly Muslim – a legacy of the hundreds of years of Ottoman rule.
It was saved destruction in the atheism years, 1967-99, as the quick thinking Abbott said that the national hero, Skanderbeg, had been married here. Didn’t stop some damage as it was then used as a military barracks.
Despite this, it was a goose bump moment. Stunning frescos on nearly every wall from 1744.

No pix allowed so pinched these off the web.

They’ve done fundraising so loaded. Restoration works, new plumbing etc
The frescoes were pretty much on every wall

Ate Well

We arrived in Berat at our new home for 3 nights. Talk about chalk and cheese! The last was bijou, and this is super spacious. But not well equipped, not even a dish cloth. And bits broken, like the toilet seat, the toilet leaks, the front door doesn’t lock. The fridge was brought in whilst we were out, and it’s ancient and missing the freezer compartment door. Ho hum only £16.50 per night! Oh, and the bed is rock hard 😔.

We wandered up one side of Berat in the dark and then down. Started our meal outside. Finished it inside … it had started to rain so Corrie was left in the car. Good food and half a litre of red. Waiter happy to talk about a waterfall and canyon I’d read about and the state of the roads! Good to have a good Last Supper. We are going dry for November and healthy eating. Think we will definitely lose weight as breakfast is fruity quinoa with honey and lunch is Dahl with leftover grilled veggies! Wish us luck, fortitude and sympathy.