Malcolm Leick
Registered user
21 days – 6757 miles / 10,811 kilometres - Solo trip – BMW F650GS twin
Countries visited by order: France, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Greece, Bulgaria, Macedonia (for about 30 seconds!), Bulgaria, Greece, Albania, Montenegro, Croatia, Slovenia, Austria, Germany, France.
Highlights:
• Riding and wild camping on the Trans-Alpina in Transylvania
• Romanian castles including ‘Dracula’s castle’, Bran.
• Black Sea coast to Sinop
• Getting pulled over and taken for lunch by traffic cop in Zongulduk
• Unfinished and empty roads though mountains on route from Sinop to Gorem in Cappadocia
• Rock churches and underground cities of Cappadocia
• Stunning lake and mountain scenery around Beyseheir Milli Park/Kovada Golu Milli Park
• Mountain road from Kurucaova to Egirdir
• Ancient city of Olympus on south coast (plus beautiful beach and chilled camping)
• Fires of Chimera (walk from Olympus)
• Acropolis at Bergama
• Anzac War cemeteries and scenery on Gallipoli peninsula
• Non-stop twisty roads and OMG wild scenery through southern Bulgarian mountains
• Staying alive, night riding in Albania!
• Unbelievably beautiful scenery of Skadarsko jesero national park Montenegro
• Camping at Punat on Krk island, and Croation landscape in general.
• Insane 1000 mile in 24hr ride back to Calais from Croatia
• Kindness and generosity of strangers, particularly away from tourist areas.
• All the people met on route who gave me tips on things to see/places to stay.
The approach: Start each day’s ride with a rough destination in mind, which may have been inspired by a conversation with someone a few hours previously. Ride until it starts to get dark. Look for somewhere to sleep. Improvise. Always look for beautiful and interesting places. Trust people.
Aside from the above I had a UKGSer contact in Tekiradag who had offered to give me information and advice on the Black Sea section of the trip. However Birdal did far more than that. The first leg of the journey was the most tiring and unsettling and by the time I reached Turkey I was exhausted, and very very hot! Birdal and his family welcomed me with fantastic hospitality and Birdal spent a long time converting his Garmin waypoints into TomTom format, supporting his detailed notes with information on campsites and things to see. Huge thanks to Birdal. The kindness of the Turkish people I met was outstanding.
The Ride.
Nottingham to Mako, Hungary.
The first thousand miles or so was largely uneventful motorway mile munching. However my first wild camp somewhere near Aachen was a real Blair Witch affair. As darkness closed in I turned off the motorway and headed up a small road into a forested area. I spotted a dirt track which looked promising and pulled over to take a closer look. I just happened to have chosen the one spot with a 12 inch deep hole right below my right foot and the bike keeled over as I dismounted. A good start.
Having secreted the bike up the track and pitched my tent about 30 yards into the trees. I lay there uneasily, listening to the muffled soundtrack of creaking trees and an eerie wind. I started getting the jitters when I heard someone being dropped off near the entrance to the track. Why would anyone come here at this time of night?? Okay, set the alarm on the bike. The alarm goes off in the middle of the night. Who the hell can be out there??? I stay put in the tent where I can’t be seen. The alarm goes off again. My imagination is doing back flips and I keep my knife close at hand. At first light I tentatively creep out to take a look. A large dead bird is stuffed between the head lamp and the mudguard, its bulging eyes staring at me. After the initial paranoia settles down I realise I must have hit the bird in the dark with some now traumatised animal setting off the alarm after sniffing a free midnight snack.
However from then on I am inflicted with the curse of losing things. Where’s my phone. Frantic searching. Okay got it. Damn, where’s my keys?! Frantic searching, unpacking, re packing. Phew got them. Shit where’s my phone gone again???!. This becomes a daily and insane ritual that requires the implementation of rigorous systems. Wallet ALWAYS in left pocket. Phone and knife ALWAYS in right pocket. Keys...shit where did I put them??? Tiredness amplifies the problem hugely.
At a service station somewhere in Austria I meet a Dutch guy heading for the Trans-Alpina in Romania on his Honda Trans Alp. Something about Transylvania grabs my imagination I have to check it out. I set course for Romania. 1 kilometre from the border between Hungary and Romania I spot Gillian, a Latin teacher from New York, her heavily laden 650GS single crippled on the roadside with a snapped chain. She calls the nearby camp site but the owner confusingly interprets Gillian’s explanation that her bike is broken down as ‘you have a dog?’ We are running out of daylight and inspiration when amazingly the camp owner rolls up, assesses the situation and calls his mate with a truck. The sophisticated mechanism for operating the cable that hauls her bike onto the trailer involves twisting two wires together. It takes him a while to work out which two wires have to be joined. Camp at Mako. First night in hammock. Cool and embryonic.
More to follow

