It's
déja-vu all over again!
The
campsite, somewhere along the Rhine, was full of mobile homes and
caravans. The receptionist reluctantly showed us a patch
of grass where we could pitch our tiny tent. Looking remarkably like the painting of The Last Supper by Leonardo Da Vinci, a row of
campers were seated at a long table, they invited us to join them. The couple at the centre of this tableau were
celebrating the silver medal they had been awarded to
mark their 25th
visit. They seemed genuinely sorry for us when they discovered that
this was our first time and we would probably never be able to recieve such an honour!
Similarily
in the south of France a Dutch couple proudly told us that they'd visited the same campsite for years. Just once, they
said, they'd stayed at campsite down the road but it wasn't as good AND it was full of
French
people! Adding
seriously in response to one of our increasingly less serious questions
“Well,
yes, we did try the local food once but we didn't like it”
At
the other end of the spectrum backpackers seem equally uninterested in local cuisine and customs. Now, there have
been adventurous people travelling around the world wearing backpacks since they were invented but 'backpacking' as a lifestyle has evolved into mass tourism on the cheap, at times verging on the miserly. You will see them at backpacker hotspots swarming around wi-fi
points clutching bottles of water and packets of cut-price cookies.
They spend more time interacting with other backpackers rather than the with the locals.
However, unlike the caravanners, they will not be staying long. They will soon move on to the next hostel listed in the packpackers handbook ticking
off countries,cities and sights on the way.
A long weekend in Paris and they've 'done' France, one night in a Yurt just outside Bishkek and they've had their nomad experience in Kyrgyzstan!
Now, to be honest, we were also restless travellers, never spending more than three days in one place and on long bike trips less. Until at some point we decided to explore more fully some of places we'd previously breezed through. A change of pace maybe but it has not often involved visiting the exact same place twice and never, ever, three times.
Until this year...............
A long weekend in Paris and they've 'done' France, one night in a Yurt just outside Bishkek and they've had their nomad experience in Kyrgyzstan!
Now, to be honest, we were also restless travellers, never spending more than three days in one place and on long bike trips less. Until at some point we decided to explore more fully some of places we'd previously breezed through. A change of pace maybe but it has not often involved visiting the exact same place twice and never, ever, three times.
Until this year...............
2x Smizany, Slovakia: Same time, same place.
The big difference was that Ivan greeted us wearing swimming
trucks that were way too small instead of a rain cape. This time his extensive covered patio sheltered us from the blistering heat rather than the frequent and
heavy showers last year!
3x Breb, Romania: our third visit and the second year in a row helping
at the village campsite. Did we get bored? Not at all, actually we had a
much busier social life than we do at home. At the end of our three
weeks we still had things to do places to go and people to meet. There is
every chance we the will go again next year. On the way, maybe, to a bronze medal??
1x Runc, Slovenia: There has to be a first time for everything.
Allegedly this tiny, remote village has two shops we only managed to
find one. They had bread on Wednesdays.
5x Parad, Hungary: We had visited this campsite twice when guiding
bicycle tours, then again quite by chance, then once more! Is it such
a great
place? Well, no, not really. The grass is well maintained, it has to
be said. The sanitation block is clean but in a perpetual state of
disrepair. The rest is bent, broken, loose or faded. It has not
improved over the years but, strangely, has got no worse.
“Nothing
changes here” said the lady behind the bar “only the staff”.
It
was damp, dismal and deserted but the next day there was a change.
It was sunny and we were overrun by a project for lively underpriviliged gypsy children. Ah well, we thought, after a moment of panic, 'if
you can't beat them join them'. And that's what we did, earning us a huge hug from the generously
proportioned project leader when we eventually left.
3x Kapfelberg, Germany: Yvonne had picked out a suitable stopover campsite to punctuate a two day drive. The description seemed familier to me
but Yvonne assured me that it wasn't the place I was
thinking of and I believed her right up to the moment we left the
autobahn.
“It's déja-vu all over again”! I exclaimed!
Yes,
we had been there twice before AND the circumstances leading up to the second visit had been exactly the same.
I guess I'll never learn!
It
had changed though,
it now had a proper reception with a desk, a computer and a potted
plant, instead of an old man with a note book.
2x Walldorf, Germany: After weeks of intentional and unintentional
repeat visits it seemed fitting that we should finish our journey
by dropping in on a Kyrgyz friend living in Germany. Yes, you guessed
it, we'd done the same before at the end of another
trip. Well, it was not quite a repeat, she had moved house, even if it was only just around the corner and down the road a bit!
Yeah, some people are more steady than others. On a campsite I visited (once) next to the Donau river the whole place was in turmoil: THE FAMILY JANSEN WAS COMING!!!! Every year they came twice for a week or so, on their way to and again from Italy, doubtlessly staying there also on the same campsite every year. The (elderly) guy didn't see you passing their 'sleurhut' but told me proudly he had just driven some 800km and was awaiting his cataract operation which was due shortly. Boy, was I glad I left before him!
ReplyDeleteAnother time, in a Dutch hotel we landed on a 2-day hike, we were shooed away by the staff from the breakfast table we had chosen, because this was the table of the family De Bruin who ALWAYS sat there. OK, we had breakfast at 8 and they hadn't shown when we left the hotel at 9, but maybe we might have polluted their environment?
I like being greeted when I come back (as a travel agent I often visit the same places), but I don't like being 'furniture'!