Comana, RO
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Through Some Very Swampy Areas |
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I Hope We Are On The Right Road |
What a way to find the town, look at those roads. Yes, our GPS had them marked as 'roads'
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Dusty, Windy Conditions |
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Sand, Pebbles, Brush On The Road |
Our goal
for today is the town of Comana, where scholars believe Vlad Tepes (Dracula) is buried in a monastery. We
read that there is a plaque showing where he was killed and some kind of
memorial park, too. The only thing was that all of this would be within a
Romanian National Park, the Parcul National Comana. Inside the park are mostly dirt roads and in
order to find all of these spots I set my GPS to allow the use of ‘dirt’ roads
to get us there.
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Swamp Bridges, Very Narrow And Rickety |
All went
well until we came to the small town of Luica. Until Luica we had tarred roads,
but then……our GPS lead us to roads I can only describe as farmer’s roads. I
drove on just the faintest hint of a road in some spots, grassy, overgrown
areas where not even a tire track was visible. I came to bogs where I literally
drove the car through a corn field to get back on the ‘road’ again. Pointy,
rough gravel here and there that made me glad we had good tires. A flat in this
nowhere land would have been a real problem. I felt my way through those paths,
rather than really knowing which way to drive.
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Trying To Find Our Way |
The GPS was not really a help,
because it told us the general direction, but all the details by this time were
gone. It was a tense drive in a car; I would not have done this on my bike. The
setting on the GPS allowed ‘dirt’ roads now, but what do you do when you don’t
even see the road? Or when you come to a
fork in the road and you have no clue which leg to take? I could swell with
pride and tell you yes, we made it without incident, but we must have had a
good luck charm someplace in the car. It sure was not my driving alone that got
us through this. Maybe it was good to have Carol in the car! Even the end, just
before we got to the hill town of Comana, was a drive up a hill that was so
rutted and steep that I had a hard time picking my way up this lane.
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Comana Monastery Church |
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Comana Monastery |
But then,
all of a sudden, we came to a tarred road and we were in Comana. We had made a
reservation via Bookings.com and found our place for the night. What we did not
find was any restaurant in town. It is such a small town, that we had to stop
in the middle of the road to let the cows pass us by. The cows were being
herded to their stables for the night to be milked and we got caught in the
return of the beasts. Everybody knew what to do in this town, except us. We
were the total outsiders. As soon as we drove into this town, everybody looked
and immediately knew those are ‘tourists’. The store where I bought some bread
and cheese for our dinner even knew. We walked to the Monastery and everybody gawked, we were the tourists.
There is much controversy over the location of Vlad III's tomb. It is
said by the local people that he was buried in the Monastery Church on an Island
in Lake Snagov, on the northern edge of the modern city of Bucharest, in
accordance with the traditions of his time. But recently, historians have
questioned whether Vlad might actually be buried at the Monastery of Comana,
between Bucharest and the Danube, which he founded and built and which is close
to the presumed location of the battle in which Vlad was killed, according to ProfessorCurta.
Comana has
one Monastery; a rather large complex that is now being re-furbished.
Construction was going on all around the court yard. Some holes were dug around
the outside walls, some electrical lines were being installed, and it was a bit
of a mess within this monastery. Inside the church however it was peaceful and
one could forget all the chaos outside. Carol was looking for the grave of Vlad
Tepes. Scholars believe the actual grave site is within this monastery or even
within this church. Along with Tepes there were 3 or 4 ‘other’ famous people
buried here, but we could not read the tombstones in the floor because they
were all covered up with rugs or cloth. We knew the battle ground where Tepes
fell or was murdered was not far from this spot, but that is what we have to
search for tomorrow. Today we just try to find the actual burial site. We asked
workers outside, we asked the proprietor of our hotel, we asked anybody we saw but
nobody spoke English and our Romanian sign language did not get us anywhere
either. We looked for any kind of map, brochure, sign, etc. yet found nothing
to substantiate the claim of Comana that this is the final resting place of
Dracula.
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Do I Go Straight Or Take A Left ? |
We sure
drove in a crazy way to get to this town. Comana is on a bluff, overlooking a
huge swamp. We came in the back way, alongside this swamp, through fields.
A battle was fought centuries in the past, near
this small hamlet of a town and Vlad Tepes was killed somewhere nearby. The
details of his death are sketchy at best. Some say he was murdered, some say he
was slain in battle by the Turks or by his own soldiers. Who knows, it was a long
time ago.
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They Have The Right Of Way, They Live Here |
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Going Home To The Barn |
Tomorrow we will take another dirt road to the actual spot where it is believed that Vlad Tepes died.