This was somewhere I had been meaning to visit for a while, as I had read it was a spectacular cliff jutting out into the Black Sea and covered with the ruins of an ancient fortress.
We made the forty minute or so trip from Varna, past Balchik towards Kavarna, passing various 'golf developments' along the way with names like Thracian Cliffs. These appeared to be large, half finished complexes in the middle of random fields and with no sign of life anywhere near.
We turned off the main road and drove through the town of Kavarna, famous for the annual rock festival held here each summer, but appearing to
France to Bulgaria – The Verdon Gorge (Part 1)
With the ski season over and the garden under control and veggies all planted, it was time to set off on our trip across Europe back to Bulgaria. We took the seats out of our minibus, used for airport transfers to Courchevel in the winter, put in a sofa bed, blackout blinds at the windows and set off the with 3 dogs for our first stop in Provence, South of France, to see the Verdon Gorge. The Verdon Gorge is also known as the Grand Canyon du Verdon and it didn't disappoint. We had pre-booked two nights camping at 'Le Bois de ...
Tuscany – France to Bulgaria Part 3
We hit the road fairly early the next day and got straight on the motorway to head down to Pisa for a whistle stop tour. We could see the Leaning Tower of Pisa in the distance and managed to pick up signs for it, along with navigation from the Sat Nav, find a nearby street to park in and then ran to the Campo die Miracoli square, where the Leaning Tower and the Duomo are, took a few photos and ran back again, hopped in the van and back out of Pisa - done and dusted in 20 minutes! From Pisa ...
Italy to Greece – Ferry Problems
Having managed to get hold of the woman from Anek ferries, who we were supposed to be crossing to Greece with, I was assured we would face no problems or additional charges for choosing to go on the Superfast ferry crossing at an earlier time. We were to simply turn up a couple of hours before departure time and present our original tickets at the Anek desk and we would be given a voucher for Superfast. So we set off Tuesday across Umbria and into Le Marche and towards Ancona. We had hoped to stay at one of the ASCI sites ...
This was somewhere I had been meaning to visit for a while, as I had read it was a spectacular cliff jutting out into the Black Sea and covered with the ruins of an ancient fortress.
We made the forty minute or so trip from Varna, past Balchik towards Kavarna, passing various 'golf developments' along the way with names like Thracian Cliffs. These appeared to be large, half finished complexes in the middle of random fields and with no sign of life anywhere near.
We turned off the main road and drove through the town of Kavarna, famous for the annual rock festival held here each summer, but appearing to
Just outside Varna, on the old Devnya road which passes the airport, there is the geological wonder known as the ‘Stone Forest’.
On either side of the old A2 road heading west out of Varna, around 18km outside the city, you will see scrub land with large pillars of stone standing upright.
These strange rock formations were formed over fifty million years ago when two chalk strata of the earth’s crust fused together and pushed up these stone columns. There are hundreds of them, some just a couple of feet tall, some standing as high as two or three metres.
As use approach the site along the road, par
While staying in Varna for a few days we visited the ruins of Aladzha Monastery and Catacombs, half way between Varna and Golden Sands. These caves, set high into a cliff are thought to first have been occupied in the Stone Ages by ‘pygmies’ and then possibly gave shelter to others during the Dark Ages. The monastery that now occupies the site was probably built in the thirteenth century.
The entrance fee is 6 levs for an adult and 2 levs for a child and includes entry to the Monastery ruins, the catacombs and the small museum. The museum houses a few artefacts found around Varna and some mosaics and has a
Now back in Bulgaria for the summer, we decided to head to the Black Sea Coast for a few days.
We had a house to visit and a garden to clear around Yambol, so once that job was completed we carried on to the coast and headed for Sozopol. According to the guide books and my personal experience from two or three years back, finding accommodation in the months of July and August in the resorts a long the coast can be difficult, and finding a room to rent or a hotel bed in the old towns, near impossible.
Yet we drove into the old part of Sozopol, parked without problem and walked into the narrow streets of t
After protracted talks and court cases, the Bulgarian government has decided that the tourist holiday village Zlatna Perla (Golden Pearl) will be town down and bull dozed.
Although the large complex was never actually completed, most of the units were sold off-plan to foreigners, with at least 90 British and Irish investors being caught up in the scandal. In fact the RightMoveAbroad are still advertising the complex as a fantastic new development that is all sold out – to foreign investors that have now lost all the money they put into the development. Previously the people who had bought into the developmen
Bansko continues to experience problems with planning issues and ownership issues. Back at the beginning of March, a group of investors who have collectively spent millions on a development in Bansko, decided to hold a peaceful protest outside the Four Seasons developments, where they have bought apartments but are being refused access due to ownership issues.
The group of investors feel they have been conned out of their property. They initially purchased the Bulgarian property through Rockarch Estates in London, but the agency claim that it was then defrauded by their Bulgarian business partner who transferr
2009 was a disastrous year in terms of the Bulgarian property market. Property prices dropped on average by over 30% and a 40% decrease in the number of real estate deals finalised. The cities and towns that suffered the most were Bansko and Sunny Beach which both saw around a 40% decrease in property prices and rural Bulgarian property prices saw a massive decrease as well in regions such as Veliko Turnovo and surrounding villages, Montana, Kardzhali and Yambol.
However, despite the downturn in the Bulgarian property market buyers were still keeping a close eye on the property market there and bargain prices
Would you buy a property if you had to hack your way through over grown vines, nettles and weeds just to get to the front door and then wait around for 20 minutes while the agent struggled with a rusty old lock, before being thrust into a room full of cobwebs, spiders, other horrid creepy crawlies and jars of undistinguishable matter and empty beer and vodka bottles?
It would certainly leave an impression on you, but the right impression? Yet many people are still trying to sell an old abandoned Bulgarian village house that has not had the garden touched in years and is in the same state it was when the old in







