Seth
Kugel for The New York Times
A
beach in Himare, Albania.
Just
past the tiny village of Ilias, on the two-lane highway that weaves
through the Ceraunian Mountains, a sign pointing down a narrow road
indicated a monastery about two kilometers on.
“Why
not?” I thought, putting on the turn signal of my rental car. I had no
agenda other than to seek out adventure along the very affordable
80-mile stretch of beaches and villages between the cities of Vlore and
Sarande, an area known as the Albanian Riviera.
But
the road ended at a hilltop house where an old woman dressed in black
stared at me quizzically.
“Monastiri?”
I said in a hapless attempt at an Albanian accent in what I later
discovered was a largely Greek-speaking region.
She
pointed in the direction of the way I had come and seemed to signal
that I had missed a turn. Back toward the main road, I found a severely
rutted turnoff, grabbed a camera and sunglasses from the car, and
started hiking. Travel fantasy mode kicked in. Would the monks invite
me to dinner? Let me stay on a cot for the next few days if I did
chores? Ask my opinion about their latest batch of ale?
They
would not, because there was no monastery at the end of that road
either. Instead, there was an idyllic
pebbly beach where
an otherwise inaccessible canyon opened up to the deep blue Ionian sea.
There was not a soul in sight.
Seth
Kugel for The New York TimesBunkers
along the coast put in place by Enver Hoxha, the isolationist leader of
cold-war-era Albania.
Near
the beach were a number of mushroom-shaped bunkers that the
isolationist dictator Enver Hoxha, who died in 1985, installed across
the country to defend it against a foreign attack that never came.
There were more recent artifacts too: a newspaper horoscope page dated
a few days earlier and plenty of soda and beer bottles that indicated
the beach had been used much more recently for purposes other than
defense.
But
today, I thought to myself, it’s all mine. With my bathing suit back in
the car, I stripped naked and dived into crystal blue waters,
registering the scene in my internal archive of top travel moments. It
was only as I came out of the water that I spotted two sunburned
Austrian tourists hidden under a rock outcropping reading paperbacks,
or pretending to as they laughed at me. (I went over to chat with them,
pretending nothing was out of the ordinary.)
Seth
Kugel for The New York TimesGjipe
Beach.
O.K.,
the Austrians had slightly sullied my afternoon at Gjipe Beach, as I
later found out it was called. But at least in budget terms, Albania
was surely the best stretch of the six-week-old Frugal Mediterranean
adventure. For the first time, 500 euros a week easily paid for
everything I wanted, starting with a confusing but not torturous
seven-leg bus ride from Dubrovnik, Croatia, just 300 miles away. (Short
of hiring taxis, I can’t figure out a more efficient way to do it, and
despite language barriers drivers were thoughtful in making sure I got
to the next bus.) I also rented a car for four days and private rooms
from local families every night. I ate huge restaurant meals topping
out at around 8 euros, and guzzled espressos and spring waters at
beachfront cafes with glorious views. Still, I didn’t even come close
to hitting my budget. (Though it would have been a bit tougher in July
or August, when many rooms cost more.)
For
most travelers the starting point of the Albanian Riviera is Vlore, a
somewhat tacky city with lots of outdoor cafes that have fancy cushions
but too much mindless club music; the cluttered, unattractive coastline
has mediocre if bustling hard-sand beaches. There’s a certain amount of
chaos in Vlore – virtually no signs giving street names, nutty drivers,
ugly and seemingly stalled concrete construction projects. But that’s
not really surprising in a country that’s still one of the poorest in
Europe and only a quarter century removed from the Communist
dictatorship of Hoxha. If Albania no longer feels isolated or scary, it
still seems to be finding its way.
Seth
Kugel for The New York TimesIn
a park along the main drag of Vlore, men huddle around an intensely
contested game of chess.
There
were two highlights in Vlore: a park along the main drag, Bulevardi
Vlore-Skele, where old men smoked like chimneys around intensely
contested games of chess and dominoes and warmly welcomed a visitor
with a camera.
And
then there was the Museum of Independence, in the two-story house where
Ismail Qemali ruled as the first prime minister after the country
gained independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1912. As the lone
visitor that afternoon I was rewarded with a personal tour by the
director, Ilia Cano, who made a valiant attempt to explain the history
in poor English mixed with French. (He also let me sit at Qemali’s desk
and pretend to sign documents with his quill pen.)
I
stayed in Vlore on the first and last nights of the week, but the
trip’s real payoff came in the string of small towns that start once
you drive up and over the perilously steep and forest-lined roads of
Llogara National Park. After asking around about prices of hotels and
private rooms in a few towns, I chose Himare as
my base. A young man named Simos whose family runs the Internet cafe
offered me a large apartment attached to his house, practically in the
center of town, for 20 euros a night. (The Albanian currency is
actually the lek, at 142 leke per euro or 96 per dollar, but lodging
and car rental are often quoted in euros.) Himare didn’t have the best
beaches, but it impressed me with cafes overlooking the water and
souvlaki stands galore. And it won my heart forever when I spotted a
man leading a donkey through town, trying to unload two baaing baby
goats slung over its back to the highest bidder.
Seth
Kugel for The New York TimesWarm
feta with olive oil, peppers and tomatoes at Taverna Viron.
My
favorite place in town was the family-run Greek restaurant Taverna
Viron. I had three dinners there, attended by Amalia, the
English-speaking 15-year-old daughter of the owners, who was very sweet
but not so helpful in helping * the from the menu. Everything, she
said, was “so delicious.”
Then
again, she was right: pork chops with tzatziki and potatoes, shrimp
saganaki (tiny shrimp in a tomato-based, feta-heavy and Tabasco-spiked
sauce), and whole grilled fish were all, indeed, quite delicious.
I
ate alone but often chatted with interesting groups, from an
Albanian-American family from Pelham Parkway in the Bronx to Amalia’s
male cousins who invited me over to drink rakia, a liquor distilled
from grape pomace.
Though
Albania is known for its historic and archaeological treasures like the
ancient city of Butrint,
this particular stretch of coast has few. But I loved Himare Castle, a
medieval site on the northern edge of town across the street and up the
hill from the Alpet gas station. Don’t even think of looking for signs,
either directing you to the ruins or telling you what they are. But in
lieu of actual information, you can play amateur archaeologist, as in:
“This must have been an oven. Or a child’s bedroom.”
Though
that first trip to Gjipe Beach was fun, I soon switched loyalties to
Jali Beach, three miles downhill from the main highway. The beach,
lined with umbrellas for rent, is very family-friendly; I’d estimate a
running toddler is swept up in a grandparent’s arms approximately once
a minute. And the shallow water is a shade of electric blue that
designers of mint gum packaging only wish they could emulate.
I
was hooked on Jali not for the beach, though, but for the instant
friends I made at Taverna Peshkatari, one of several informal beachside
restaurants specializing in seafood. (Peshkatari means fisherman in
Albanian.) I usually ask for the menu before sitting down, to scout out
prices and size up the friendliness of the staff. The guys at Taverna
Peshkatari were friendly: they immediately brought a bucket of fish
from the kitchen, noting that the owner had caught them all this
morning.
Jorgo
Andoni mans the outboard motor on a fishing expedition.
I
hear these claims all the time, so I shot them a dubious look.
“Tomorrow, come fishing and you’ll see,” said a young blue-eyed man in
passable English. “Be here at 6 a.m.”
This
is what we in the frugal travel business call a ka-ching moment. Free
boat trip! Local friends for the making! “When I was fishing in
Albania” stories for back home! The next morning I arrived at 5:55 a.m.
to find that I had beat the young man, Jorgo Andoni, who turned out to
be the owner of Taverna Peshkatari. But three older guys who recognized
me from the day before were there drinking espresso and rakia. They
invited me to join them. Hey, a 6 a.m. shot of liquor to start the day?
Why not, I’m on vacation.
Soon
after I was out on the water with Jorgo and his two fishing assistants
– Geni Pirra and Eljon Likmeter — reeling in the nets they had laid the
previous afternoon just off the rocky coast and watching them untangle
their catch: merluza, cuttlefish, shrimp, even a flying fish.
Round
about Net 4, Eljon and I abandoned work and dived into the water,
swimming over to a tiny sand-lined cove carved into the rocks. I took
another mental snapshot to file under Travel Memories – Best Ever. And,
this time, no sunburned Austrians to ruin the moment.
IF
YOU GO
You
can fly to Albania from many European cities, but I’d suggest combining
it with a trip to Greece, Italy or another Balkan nation. From Athens,
there are daily buses via Ruci
Tours to
Vlore or Himare (30 euros, about 11 hours) and there’s a ferry from
Brindisi, Italy to Vlore (six days a week; seven days in August, 45
euros). Then there are buses from Croatia and Montenegro: it took me
seven legs and just under 43 euros from Dubrovnik to Vlore. Your
results may vary. In Vlore, I rented a car for 33 euros a day (price
goes down with longer rentals) from Tirana
Car Rental. Few hotels and fewer private rooms have Web
sites, though those intent on booking online will have some luck on [url=http://www.albania-hotel.com]www.albania-hotel.com[/url].
In Himare, you can e-mail Simos at hokyspokys@hotmail.com about his
family’s rooms; Amalia and her family rent nice rooms above the Greek
restaurant as well; call (355-69) 221-8728 or (355-69) 425-5755. Jorgo
Andoni rents rooms; try him at Taverna Peskatari, (355-68) 200-0343.
But unless you’re going in August, it’s probably best just to show up.
MY
BOOKS
I
ate fresh fish and octopus and lamb and Greek salads and Albanian
byreks (savory pies) until I burst and still couldn’t break 8 euros a
meal. I slept in private rooms for 20 euros a night and could have
spent less if I had bargained. I rented a car. I did pretty much
whatever I wanted, and the total bill was 459.87 euros, 40 and change
below budget and finally covering my debt from Week 2 in France.