May 10, 2023 Dragizhevo BU

Last night was the coldest night of the trip. In addition to a hard rain the temperature dropped into the low 40’s for the night. We both got dressed pretty quickly once we got out from under the blankets and while it was chilly the rain had stopped.

There was a Bulgarian military base down the road a bit so I walked down in the morning to take a look. As I was shooting this photo the sentry came out and gave me a long look, so I moved on. The jet is a Mig-19.

We had about 130km’s to transit thru the Balkan Mountains to our next campground Camping Veliko Tarnovo. This campground had been recommended to us by our friends Rick and Kathy Howe as they had stayed here during their trips thru Bulgaria, and had made good friends with the owners who were just starting up the campground when they visited.

After a pretty but uneventful drive over the Balkan Mountains we arrived at the campground around 12:30 and settled in. We spent some time talking to Niki the owner about tips on things to do and I asked for a place I could find a new headlight bulb for François as he has blown one of the ones we just replaced in Montenegro in the fall. Niki and her husband Nick are a nice British couple who moved here in 2009 with the intention of building a campground as they saw an opportunity when they toured thru Bulgaria in 2007. They have built a first class campground. Business has taken a hit since Covid, but hopefully it will rebound this year. Nick is now the head of the Bulgarian campground organization, and they are starting to do some national marketing to make sure people are familiar with what is available for campers in Bulgaria.

Dragizhevo didn’t seem to have a proper church, just this bell tower.

Niki mentioned there was a village down the road about 1 kilometer so Ton and I walked in to see what we could see. The countryside around here is beautiful, rolling hills with mountains and very green fields. In fact the whole country has that verdant green that comes with spring.

While the village had some nice houses on the edge, the center felt a little neglected. Many of the buildings were unoccupied and run down. This is a pattern in rural Europe where between a declining population, rapid urbanization and in countries like Bulgaria emigration to more affluent countries in the EU a lot of the villages are emptying out. In a town that once looked like it had a sizable population we only saw two small markets and two coffee houses/bars.

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