Friday, 10 June 2016

Romania - Skåne Old Boys Rugby - Part 2 - Walking Tour of Bucharest (3-6 June)


The next day I started a little slowly, sleeping in until about 9, before heading down for a buffet breakfast.  Then we decided to go for a walking tour around Bucharest with a couple of my team mates.

Here's some of the sights of Bucharest:






Life and Death shrines at a church





EU building

Quite an impressive building
The church

An interesting wiring job - seen all around Romania
An old Communist era block of flats
Academy of Economic Studies
Not sure what this sign is - I think its a school zone.  There were some interesting suggestions on my facebook page
Some very interesting scaffolding outside a church
More scaffolding

The view from my hotel window

We came across the Romanian Athenaeum, a concert hall in the centre of Bucharest. It was opened in 1888 and is the home of the George Enescu (a famous composer) Philharmonic.

The Atheneul Roman (Romanian Athenaeum)
The dome
The front
 












Some more shots of Bucharest central:






The art museum

Carol I Royal Foundation Palace


The base of the statue
King Carol I

The ornate doors to the Central University Library


This next building was pretty interesting:

A glass building inside an old shell

Through the window you can see that the glass building fills the whole inside
The rear of the building

It turns out that the shell was the Headquarters of the Union of Romanian Architects. It was destroyed during the revolution in 1989.  When it was renovated in 2003-2007 it was decided to retain the historic outer shell and build inside it.

An interesting church hidden between two large concrete buildings



Another church





An unfinished cement building


When we arrived back at the hotel the boys were having lunch and starting to get ready for the game:

Lunch

Romania - Skåne Old Boys Rugby - Part 1 - Tour kit, history and dinner (3-6 June)

What happens on tour stays on tour...

Except for sight-seeing and any rugby shots that make me look like I have any ability at all...

This weekend was my tour with the Skåne Old Boys team to Romania.

First up was our special tour gear:

The jacket


The polo shirt
Training shirt
Playing kit
I was a little nervous heading off, as I hadn't met many of the guys before, but I was made to feel really welcome and it was an awesome weekend.

We flew out on Friday at 10:30am for a two hour flight to Romania from Malmö airport. When we landed we caught a taxi to the Bucharest Mercure hotel and settled in, had a couple of drinks and headed out to dinner with the Romanian Draculas team.

The currency of Romania is the Lei - 1 Lei was about 30 Australian cents, or 2 Swedish Kronor.  The taxi ride from the airport to the hotel with 4 people in the cab cost us 17 Lei (about AU$6 or 40kr).

The scenery from the taxi was interesting - Bucharest had an odd mix of buildings, some communist era cement blocks and some with ornate carvings.  Some of the buildings were big and well tended and others were very run down.

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Brief history:
In the middle ages, Romania consisted of Wallachia, Moldavia and Transylvania. In the 14th century Wallachia and Moldavia combined to fight against to Ottoman empire, but by 1541 all three regions were under Ottoman control as a 'suzerainty' (a tributary vassal state with subservient autonomy).  There were several revolutions against the Ottomans in the 1800s and in 1877 Romania allied with Russia in the Russo-Turkish war.  After the war, Romania was recognized as an independent state.

In World War I, Romania remained neutral for several years, but eventually joined the Russians, French and United Kingdom against Germany and Austria-Hungary.  This didn't work out well for Romania and the country was two-thirds occupied by 1917.  After Russia withdrew from the war, Romania was left isolated and negotiated a ceasefire.  It was fully occupied in May 1918 and subject to some harsh sanctions.

Romania tried to remain neutral during World War II, however the Russians threatened to invade unless Romania yielded land, including parts of Moldavia.  The Germans negotiated with Romania, offering them Moldavia back if they assisted in the war effort, however the Germans also negotiated with the Russians, promising them Moldavia.  Romania joined the Axis powers and contributed large numbers of men to the war as well as large reserves of oil.  The allies bombed Romania regularly to try to stop the oil supply and the Romanian people became unhappy, eventually undergoing a coup and switching sides to the Allies.  This removed the third largest supply of oil to the Axis and possible assisted in hastening the ending of the war.

After the war the Soviets occupied Romania and a communist government ran the country after a fraudulent election and King Michael I was forced to abdicate and was exiled.  In 1965 the communist leader was Nicolae Ceaușescu who was not popular.  After a visit to Pyongyang he began building a massive palace in the image of the North Korean capital. He was overthrown in 1989 and executed along with his wife, before the palace could be finished.

Romania then converted to democracy and has since joined NATO and become a member of the EU.

The capital, Bucharest, was not located in the best location - being in an open plain with little natural defenses.  It was often attacked and few of the original buildings remain (mostly churches).
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This history explained many of the buildings we were seeing.  The solid, blocky communist flats sat next to old pre-communist ornately carved buildings, next to incomplete or run-down ruins.  It made for a very interesting city, that was in parts very beautiful and in others slightly sad, with hints of a troubled past.

On the way to Bucharest Mercure hotel


There was lots of graffiti



After we left the hotel we headed to dinner and beer and Pálinka (a plum brandy).

Beer and Pálinka

Anyone who has known me for a while, knows that I don't usually drink beer.  Of course, when on tour and the beer is free (or cheap - AUD$2 for a large stein) rules can always be bent...

The entertainment was some traditional Romania music, including a violinist and Romanian dancing and lots of beer.  The food was great, we started with a cheese and cold cuts plate, followed by
Sarmale (cabbage rolls) and polenta.  The company was great and it was a fun night.  Near the end of the night, small plates were bought out and we expected a small dessert, however huge plates of meat were brought out - grilled chicken, pork and beef.
The meat tray
 I ended up home around 2am after a great night.







Kris's Weekend (4-5 June)

Last weekend was fairly quiet  - I had a rugby game MRC XV - Lugi RFC 48-31 and Kris did the colour run:

Colour Run - After
Before I get on to describing this weekend, I thought I'd retell a story about Kristine and Rebecca's trip to the colour run.  The week before I had been joking with Rebecca how things always seemed to happen to Kristine and this weekend pretty much proved it.  They got out of the house fine to catch the bus to Lund for the Colour Run and that's where things started going strange...  The road outside our house only has the #4 bus line, which heads into Malmö Central Station, to catch any other bus we need to head in the opposite direction a few streets.  That was fine, they wanted to head to Central in order to catch the train, so when a bus turned up with #34 on the front they were a little confused.  We'd seen buses with the wrong number before, so they weren't overly concerned, but they did ask the driver to make sure the bus went to Central.  Once they were assured that it did, they settled down for the ride.

A few minutes later, a passenger came down to the driver to inform her that she has taken a wrong turn and that she was a #34 and was now on the wrong route.  The bus (which happened to be a double, articulated bus) then tried to undergo a three point turn and ended up doing about 30 points with some nice grinding of metal and blocking all four lanes of the road as well as cutting across a park.  When Kris and Rebecca realised that this was now going to be a #34 they asked to get off so they could catch the #4, but the driver wasn't going to stop until she got to the next stop, that was in the complete opposite direction.  Eventually they managed to escape and walk to the bus stop to catch the correct bus.

A Malmö Bus (not the same one)
The train was also an interesting trip - some old men in front of them were downing mini-bottles of spirits and copious amounts of alcohol. The wives were drinking mini-bottles of champagne.

They got to Lund and then had no idea where to go, so they randomly followed people until they found the signs for the colour run (or got arrested for stalking...) They lined up for an hour and a half to get their kit and then lined up for another hour to get through the chute.

Kris met up with a Swede who was walking alone and struggling a little, so they teamed up and finished together.

Somehow they ended up home safe. 


Meanwhile I had taken the kids to my rugby game and Cameron had a birthday party to go to straight after, so I changed quickly and we raced off to get to the party - turns out that the address was on Kristine's phone and not mine, so I had to call her and get the address.  We arrived just in time and got home just as Kris arrived.

Sunday was Swedish Mother's Day and after giving Kris her presents we had a Skåne Old Boys training and BBQ.

This weekend I disappeared off to Romania to play Skåne Old Boys Rugby and Kris was left home with the kids. I probably would have just put the TV and XBox on and hidden in the bedroom, but instead Kris got out and about in the awesome Swedish sun.  The weather sat in the high 20s and there was plenty of sunshine.

On Saturday, Kris took the kids down to the beach at Ribersborg (as a random note, the recommended spelling for Ribersborg in the auto-correct is "BeriBeri" for some reason) with one of our friends and their family.

Riberborg with the Badhus (Bathhouse) in the background
The kids has plenty of fun splashing in the water and watching the swans swimming in the ocean.

Swimming

Swans in the ocean in front of the Badhus
 

On Sunday, one of the expats had a birthday and Kris took the kids down to the park for a picnic and some games:
Tom gets some cricket tips