Blog of Romania

Filed under Romanians on Romania, Travel

Last weekend took place the Ravasitul Oilor Festival (Sheep Scattering) in Bran village located in Braşov County. Before we reached our destination, Platoul Inima Reginei near Bran Castle, we saw how the festival increased the traffic in the area. Also, the barbecues’ smoke could be confused with a thin fog… sandwiched between layers of air. The old Bran Castle (recently available for sale) walls powerlessly watched the joy of the festival’s participants, natives or tourists.

Being a shepherds’ festival, the main attractions were the cast-iron kettles (necessary to prepare the corn mush/polenta for the bulz, a shepherds’ food specialty), the green ewe cheese, the grilled pemmican and the unfailing traditional dances, like Brasoveanca. The local boozers danced in the front of the festival stage, keeping the rhythm with the local folklore band. The participants could admire the skillfulness of the local hatters and furriers and, near to the Bran Castle street entrance, they could buy the delicious Kürtös kalács.

Unfortunately, Sunday we could not make it to the sheep exhibition, but we visited the Dâmbovicioara Cave, in Piatra Craiului Mountains.

The cave is located between Câmpulung and Bran Village. Following the road from Câmpulung to Podul Dâmbovitei Village, I was surprised to see that all the houses, even the ramshackle ones with broken-down fences, had Boom TV & Digi TV satellite antennas. To enter in the Cheile Dâmbovicioarei, you must pay an entrance tax, a hand with all the fingers bedecked with golden rings asking you 1 RON for each person if you want to drive your car in the area. To visit the cave you must pay 5 RON.

Although the cave is poor in karsts forms, the main attraction are the guides, all of them very young. Only the cave’s first 250 meters can be visited, half of them arranged with a metal platform for walking.

After you visit the cave you can admire the beautiful landscape in Cheile Dâmbovicioarei or you can relax making a barbecue near the river.


Original post: here.
Petrus is 25 and lives in the city we all love to hate, Bucharest. He blogs on ProfilVirtual (RO) and DigitalGuide (RO/EN), the latter a blog about tourism, a spinoff of a category of the first blog. He writes less often because personal and corporate life don’t leave him much time.

Posted by Ioana on Friday, January 18th, 2008


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