EASTERN EUROPE

Eastern Europe: Susan Spano explores the Old World

Venture away from the crowds, into the understated charms of Romania, east Germany, Montenegro and Hungary.

Los Angeles Times Travel Editors
11:42 AM PDT, June 27, 2007

Many readers have been asking us: Where is Times Travel Writer Susan Spano? Susan is in Beijing, where she is learning Mandarin, and she will be returning to the Travel section this summer.

Eastern Europe is getting increasingly popular with Americans looking for an authentic taste of Old World life. Spano took a peek at some Eastern European destinations, some familiar and some unknown. Here are a few of her reports from the eastern front.

The Danube's green waltz into Romania

At the end of its 1,771-mile journey across Europe, the mighty Danube River seems to give up trying to reach the Black Sea. It turns north, away from the coast, crosses the lonely steppe country, then frays into myriad channels, marshes, swamps and lakes edged by waterlogged willow trees. Colonies of birds fly in from Asia, Africa and Siberia. In the stalled, murky water, giant carp and catfish lurk, sought by fishermen who live in villages that can be reached only by boat.



Dresden's spirit soars once more

You can't get lost in Dresden. Wherever you go, you can see the stately white dome of the Frauenkirche, as much a landmark in this eastern German city as St. Peter's is in Rome. It isn't just that the church towers 300 feet above Dresden's lovely Baroque skyline, that its colossal dome was an architectural marvel when consecrated in 1734 or that it stood for religious tolerance in a Protestant city ruled by the Catholic electors of Saxony. Even its extraordinary acoustics, which inspired composer Richard Wagner, don't fully explain its profound meaning to Dresden and the world.



Montenegro plays understudy to the Riviera

A few intrepid travelers came here for suntans and seafood in the Soviet era, when Montenegro was a part of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia and hotel rooms were a steal. But the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, of which Serbia and Montenegro were a part, in the early 1990s, followed by a dark decade of ethnic cleansing and war, virtually erased the region from the tourist map. Now, with peace restored and all but two of the six republics that made up the former Yugoslavia independent, vacationers have started returning to the southern Balkans.



Budapest, so Nouveau

Two remarkable things happened in Budapest around 1900: The city shot up almost overnight, and Art Nouveau arrived, reshaping the face of Hungary's capital along glorious new lines. It was a happy coincidence for Budapest then and for visitors now, especially those who have a passion for Art Nouveau, which put its richly ornamental stamp on buildings, furniture, glass, ceramics, textiles and jewelry.

Where am I?

Should we take offense, order a drink, or what? That depends, of course, on where you think these words turned up.


National World War II Museum

The National World War II Museum in New Orleans dedicates its latest building.

My Trips

Subscribe to the Daily Deal blog Daily Travel & DealBlog

Water parks vie to open first U.S. looping water slide
The race is on to see which water park debuts America's first looping water slide — a gravi...
Read more »

SIGN UP Newsletter_icons

Taking restless Southern California on vacation

Los Angeles Times e-mail newsletter, delivered every Thursday


Expedia
  • Departing from:
    Depart:
  • Going to:
    Return:

Subscribe to this section    

Subscribe to
Save and share