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JOURNEY BY CANOE

TRIP MADE THROUGH EUROPE. INTERESTING PLACES VISITED. It is a rare piece of luck to “discover two first-class canoeing areas in one season, as I did this year, writes Major R. Raven-Hart in the Manchester Guardian. One area is that round Bordeaux, the other is Dalmatia, which, owing to its sheltered “fiords” and its perfect climate, is probably the only sea coast really suitable for cancers. Before the Bordeaux trips came, however, we repeated the tour of the Loire from Sully to Saumur, with that astounding procession of chateaux which alone would make this river worth doing. After Bordeaux we traversed,- among other parts, the harmless Lake of Zurich; the Rhine above the Lake of Constance— bitterly cold and fast and full of aggressive wild swans; Lake Constance itself, along the Swiss shore for a change; then more of the Rhine, down to its falls at Schaffhausen; then the Danube, with less water in it than I have ever seen, from Ulm to Regensburg; and then that gloomy lake near Munich where Ludwig wan drowned —murdered, as many there believe.

The Danube seems to get into my programme every year. This time we took the Salzach from below Salzburg, and so canoed down the River Inn to Passau, With the best of the Danube from there to Vienna. It is hardly necessary to repeat here the praises of the Danube; even in England it is at last becoming known, and I found with joy a. whole string of British signatures in the visitors’ book at one of the little “canoers’ inns” that are so pleasant a feature along its banks. But to end a canoeing trip at Vienna would be a great mistake. The parts from Vienna to Bratislava and from Esztergom to Budapest are definitely fine, and the curious, willow-haunted area between them appeals to me more every time I see it. (Read Blackwood’s “The Willows” for this section, but not before the trip if you propose to camp, for it

would spoil the Jeep even of a canoer.) To see Budapest itself is worth going the additional distance. Towards Paks the river is pleasant company, if somewhat placid. Then Lake .Balaton gave me three days of steady rain; the scenery is poor, but the bathing should be superb, and in any case a. canoe along Lake Balaton is an economical way of travelling towards Dalmatia. Another pleasant side-trip on the way is to canoe along the Drave from Maribor to Gvekenves; above Maribor this river is difficult, but quite easy from there onwards, and it. has agreeable' scenery along its banks, with castles and old wooden bridges and jolly towns, while the multiplicity of sandbanks simplifies bathing if it complicates navigation. On one sandbank we came across people washing for gold, unexpected people to see in Europe. .

DOWN TO THE ' ADRIATIC. And so by rail via Zagreb to Susak, beside Fiume on the Adriatic. Nearly all the coast near Fiume is so sheltered by the islands lying off it that one could spend months wandering about it, canoeing all the way, arid falling back on the frequent and cheap steamers in bad weather. Rab (Arbe on older maps) was my first stay, an ’land. trying hard to be “smart” and spoiling itself in the pitiful attempt; a better island from the cancer’s point of view would be Pag, and as yet Pag is far less spoilt. Next came the area from Obrovac in Dalmatia to Starigra.l, superb and quite unknown. We took the steamer in to Obrovac, and returned by canoe after exploring further up the river where larger craft cannot go. First, from Obrovac down the river, there iS a gorge six miles long and about fifty yards wide, between sheer naked limestone cliffs five hundred feet high and more. Then comes a group of inland arms of the sea, with deserted chapes and sandy beaches and forgotten villages—which, however, can produce clean beds and surprisingly good, simple food; average prices were. Is 6d for a room for two, and about the same for two huge suppers. After these little sea lakes another gorge brought us to the gulf proper, sheltered and fine, with ruined castles on every headland. Here we took ship again. TOWNS TO VISIT.

The towns one must visit in Dalmatia are Sibenik, Split (Spalato) with its crazy patch work of streets in the shell of Diocletian’s palace, the picturesque if rather “touristy 1 * Dubrovnik (Ragusa), and Kotor (Cattaro), By excellent luck there is a canoeable sheltered area near each town. Thus, behind Sibenik is the mouth of the Krka River, with no current to prevent one from canoeing right up to the terrace falls. From Dubrovnik there are several trips available, in all but the worst weather; up the currentless Ombla River to a place where it bubbles up eerily into a huge calm pool after miles underground; or to Cavtat, with Mestrovic’s arresting mausoleum. And, finally, the whole inner gulf of Kotor, with its dying towns and justly famous islands, is so shielded by the mountains of Montenegro that we canoed happily here When it was too stormy outside for the steamers to run. It is difficult to do justice to the harsh grandeur of the scenery. The people, who wear their traditional peasant costumes, are charming; prices are really low; there is any amount of sunshine; and the water along which one canoes is clear and disconcertinglj warm. My only regret is that I arrived too late in the season to make a longer Stay.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19350105.2.131.13

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 5 January 1935, Page 12 (Supplement)

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927

JOURNEY BY CANOE Taranaki Daily News, 5 January 1935, Page 12 (Supplement)

JOURNEY BY CANOE Taranaki Daily News, 5 January 1935, Page 12 (Supplement)