Tag: Adventure

  • A summer holiday in the Carpathian mountains

    A summer holiday in the Carpathian mountains


    It’s
    mountain lovers we dedicate today’s installment to, since the Romanian
    Carpathians’ tourism offer is extremely generous for those who want a relaxing holiday,
    or an active one. The beginners as well as the advanced tourists can practice
    all sorts of mountain sports. As for the families, they can discover trekking
    routes. Furthermore, a holiday in the mountains can also translate into an incursion
    into the fascinating world of the rural regions. Old traditions are still being
    kept in the villages that are scattered on the hills. As for the dining table,
    it is rich in food prepared using the ancestors’ recipes.



    Marius Adrian Coviltir has been a member of the
    Carpathians Mountain Association
    since 2008, when the association
    was established. Marius has been the vice-president of the association for more
    than ten years now. Also, Marius Adrian Coviltir is a mountain rescue service
    operative and head of squad as part of Vrancea County’s Mountain Rescue Service.


    Marius Adrian Coviltir:

    There is a very generous offer, that of Romania’s Mountains, thanks to a
    wide range of opportunities to spend the leisure time there, for the
    well-trained people, who want rather more difficult areas for themselves,
    higher ones, but also for the tourists who are not that well trained physically
    or regarding experience of equipment. So we can recommend a couple of areas. My
    recommendation has to do with the most important project carried by the Carpathians Mountain Association, which is ongoing, as
    we speak. It is about an altitude shelter in the Faragas Mountains. Fagaras is
    also the Romanian Carpathians’ main massif. It has the largest surface area and
    it is also here that we find Romania’s seven tallest peaks, lying at an altitude
    of more than 2,500 meters. We have a main ridge, which is very attractive and
    where I ran into most of the tourists in Romania’s mountain area.


    A holiday in the Romanian Carpathians might also enable tourists
    to get closer to the rural world. Therefore, we get to know villagers and we
    can get acquainted with their traditions. We’re sure to discover a universe
    which is as old as it is diverse.

    Marius
    Adrian Coviltir once again.


    Therefore, I can mention
    the Vrancea Mountains, but also other areas lying a bit further away from us, in
    the westernmost points. I’m speaking about the mountainous Banat area which
    includes a couple of less-well-known regions where traditions have been very
    well kept, sone of them truly Romanian, others being influenced by the national
    minorities. In the Banat Mountains we have Czechs, Germans and Hungarians. There
    we can run into that kind of mix of three or four cultures.


    The mountains are a perfect place for an active holiday.
    The swift-running waters invite you to practice rafting, while the high ridges invite
    you to practice climbing. In fact, people do the escalade quite often. With
    details on that, here is the vice-president of the Carpathians Mountain Association,
    Marius Adrian Coviltir, once again.


    We have many areas where routes have
    been arranged to that end. Most of them are in central Romania, in Bucegi Mountains,
    Piatra Craiului. The rock in that area is prone to such sports activities. Access
    also matters here as well. Lying at the centre of the country, those are easier-to-access
    areas, and pretty well stocked as regards the accommodation infrastructure. There
    are also competitions. We must admit that in recent years we’ve had fewer competitions
    because of the pandemic which took its toll on all of us, yet as of this year,
    all those competitions will be resumed. Most of them have to do with the
    mountain marathons, or with running or climbing contests. Most of them are
    carried in the Bugeci, Piatra Craiului or Ciucas mountains. There marathons
    there are all too familiar, and you can get all the info about such events on
    the Internet.


    The Romanian Carpathians are also famous for the
    wilderness of the places, for the areas that are still unspoiled by the human intervention.

    Marius Adrian Coviltir:


    Ours is a richness
    that has not been put to good use properly . Nevertheless, in the protected areas,
    in the nature or national parks, such activities are staged quite often,
    targeting the lay public. They promote the flora, the fauna, with the entire
    set of rules properly observed, so that the effect on the environment stands at
    the minimum or is practically inexistent. There we can observe the plants and the
    trees in the region, but mostly animals. Tourists are attracted by animals because
    they are more difficult to notice. We’re mainly speaking about the bear and the
    wolf. Various animal observation towers have been built, while the info can be
    accessed visiting the parks’ sites.


    Here is the vice-president of the
    Carpathians Mountain Association, Marius Adrian Coviltir, once again, this time
    speaking about how the foreign tourists have also been impressed by the
    wilderness of the places.

    I met very many tourists, mainly German-speaking
    tourists, but also a lot from Eastern Europe, from Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic.
    They are very much attracted by the offer of our mountains. In another move,
    some of them said the natural assets could have been put to good use more efficiently,
    as access is still difficult in certain areas. In recent years, such problems
    did not occur that often. The tourist infrastructure made of marked trekking
    routes, pathways, but also the tourist shelters have seen a great deal of improvement.
    Likewise, the access driveways. So overall, a good impression prevails. The
    wilderness of the places is very much appreciated, it is something that cannot
    be seen in the West any more. For instance, the Alps have very much been under a
    steady degradation because of human intervention.


    Marius Adrian Coviltir recommends the Vrancea
    Mountains as a holiday destination.


    They’re not that well promoted, and
    for a good reason, somehow, since until 2010,
    2012, the trekking routes were not in the best condition. Meanwhile, as the
    Vrancea Mountain Rescue Service was founded, things have changed. The routes
    have been reconditioned and, practically, the mountain tourism in Vrancea has
    been reborn. The Association I represent, over 2011-2013 got involved in that
    as well, and roughly 250 kilometers of pathways have been marked. These
    mountains are pretty wild. I am not sure if they are Romania’s wildest, but
    they definitely are at the top. Human intervention has been rather limited. The
    Vrancea Mountains are not that high, their Goru Peak being the highest, with an
    altitude of 1,773 meters. We have 20 tourist trekking routes that cover 300 kilometers
    of pathways.


    So
    here is a rich and diversified offer for you to spend a holiday far from the hubbub
    of the city, and far from its sweltering heat, but quite close to Romania’s natural
    riches.


    (EN)

  • Inside Romania

    Inside Romania

    100 years before mankind made it to
    the Moon, the famous French Sci-Fi writer Jules Verne in 1865 had published his
    inspired novel ‘From the Earth to the Moon’, describing the adventure of three men
    who landed on the Moon in a projectile shot from a cannon.




    Today this is just one of the
    stories people are recollecting while visiting the Space Adventure exhibition
    open in Bucharest. One of the exhibition’s dark rooms houses a simulator, where
    visitors can see what a real space flight is like, and what astronauts actually
    see through the windows of a space shuttle.






    Visitors embarking on such a
    virtual journey to outer space by means of the aforementioned exhibition can
    admire a replica of the projectile described in Jules Verne’s novel or a series
    of images from the movies inspired by his books because as the exhibition shows
    there are a lot of similarities between Jules Verne’s books and NASA’s Apollo programmes. While visiting the
    exhibition one may learn about the pioneers of space exploration, be they
    scientists, such as Herman Oberth and Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky or writers like
    HG Wells.






    The Russian scientist was the first
    to come up with the idea that the best vehicle for space exploration would be a
    multi-stage rocket fueled with liquid hydrogen and oxygen. Von Braun’s ferry
    rocket is one of the numerous exhibits on view at Space Adventure where the
    Apollo Moon landing takes pride of place. Visitors simply cannot take their
    eyes from the amazing collections with hundreds of objects belonging to the US
    Space and Rocket Center, which were used or brought back by various NASA
    missions.




    There are on view moon rocks, space
    suits as well as accurate replicas of the rockets and space capsules and modules.
    There are also humorous aspects to this exhibition, illustrated by a club,
    Apollo 14 Commander Alan Shepard used to hit two golf balls on the surface of
    the Moon. The exhibition includes a special area for those who may want to put
    on a space suit, or see for themselves what life in an astronaut training camp
    is like or how one can fly a space shuttle. Nicolae Cioca took his two
    grandsons to the exhibition.






    Nicolae Cioca: They saw the
    commercial on TV, saw the posters in the street and begged me to bring them
    here. Both are space enthusiasts and want to see the exhibition again. They are
    in the flight simulator right now. Of course I recommend the exhibition as I
    haven’t seen anything like this before.




    Alina Savu was in charge of the
    space flight simulator a place, which makes the delight of all the children
    visiting the Space Adventure exhibition.




    Alina Savu: I am going to
    present the 5D simulator, a zero-gravity simulator meant to show the little
    ones how difficult a space mission can be and also to feel how the human body
    is floating in space. We also have the Multi Axis Trainer, which simulates the
    experience that astronauts may have when they lose control of the spaceship
    while leaving the atmosphere. There is also a fighter plane simulator, which
    can also simulate a dogfight and since these simulators are connected, kids can
    compete with each other. The VR simulators that we have here, can create via
    virtual reality, a space journey from take off to landing. Here kids can see
    stars, planets a nebula, and even a black hole.


    We asked Alina Savu how visitors
    react after a simulator ride.




    Alina Savu: Most of them are
    very delighted. They are curious and eager to try everything, even the little
    ones; the five-year olds, for instance would like to try the Multi Axis
    Trainer. Children have a positive reaction about every simulator and so have
    their parents!




    For many of us, Space Adventure -
    an exhibition whose personnel is dressed like the future astronauts currently
    training at Space and Rocket Center – is an event definitely worth seeing.




    (translated by bill)