You know you’ve had a good New Year’s Eve when you wake up to three empty bottles of prosecco, three of wine, and the scent of leftover Chinese takeaway, and all for under €20.00 a head. However, you also have on your mind the fact that you are meeting a driver/guide at 13.00, you’re meant to be out of the apartment by 12.00 (though who’s going to come knocking?), and you have a flight at 21.15. You also have some vague memories and turn to your phone’s gallery to see how things panned out last night.
I am surprisingly alert that morning, yet the brief videos show us laughing and cheering, counting down, yelling ‘Xronia Polla!’ from the window in very non-Greek accents, generally being silly and having a good time. Outside, at the appointed hour, fireworks light the sky, bangers explode, there’s a party outside some kind of club or bar at the end of the street, car horns, lots of noise and revelry, and the whole city, it seems, is having a good time. The police were called to the bar at the end of the street, then an ambulance. There was some breaking of glass, and in the morning, just outside the door, we discovered someone had tried to use the gutter for an explosion of their digestive system, but had missed, and instead, decorated the pavement with the outflow. A good time was, clearly, had by all but one.
There are also photos of Neil fully fledged in a dazzling piece of Temu’s finest polyester, and Harry trying to escape to his room.

On to New Year’s Day, and, as stated, there is a timetable. The issue was: What do we do between get-out time and check-in time? We have untold pieces of luggage now, several bags for life, additional clothing, and nine hours to kill with no guarantee of being able to leave our luggage anywhere. The solution? Daniel and his comfortable car. (Again, see Harry for make, model and production specs.) Marco in Brasov had suggested him, should we need a driver, and he came at a reasonable cost – very reasonable when you read what we saw with him between 13.00 when he collected us, and 18.00 when he dropped us at the airport.
Luggage packed, and the apartment tidied, we left our little corner of Old Town Bucharest, avoided the evidence of the good time had by the city the night before, and loaded up the car.

The first stop with our incredibly knowledgeable guide was the National Cathedral of Romania. The cathedral is dedicated to the Ascension of Christ, which in Romania is celebrated as Heroes’ Day, and to Saint Andrew the Apostle, the protector of Romania.
It’s huge.

A few details from the web: Name: People’s Salvation Cathedral. Construction Period: Foundation in 2010; consecration ceremonies in October 2025 after 15 years of work. Length (building): 126 m. Width: 67.7 m. Height: Up to the base of the main dome cross: 120 m – 127 m, depending on measurement reference. With main cross: overall crown reaches approx. 127 m (some records cite up to 134 m including elements), making it one of the tallest Orthodox domed churches in the world.
Yes, it’s big. So big that photos don’t give you the scale of the building. From one angle, it dwarfs the parliament building behind. Once inside, it’s pretty unbelievable. Not only are the (what do we call them?) artworks massive, but they are also mosaic. I can’t remember how many people you can fit inside the building, thousands. If you look through the gallery in a minute, you might get a scale of the place by looking at the people standing before the altar. I’ll let you explore that on your own.
And move on to the old cathedral, where we went afterwards for a quick look, and where it was much warmer, more welcoming and friendlier than what we’d just seen. Here, outside the home of the Archbishop, they dispense holy water from an industrial bucket.

Sadly, many attractions in the city were closed on New Year’s Day, but that didn’t deter Daniel, who took us to Mogoșoaia Palace (Palatul Mogoșoaia). The most prominent palace just outside Bucharest. This is a stunning example of Romanian Brâncovenesc style architecture, blending Eastern and Western influences, and it’s known for its picturesque setting on a lake with beautiful gardens.

Cold, but interesting, and followed by a futile look for an open coffee shop. We still had several hours to play with, but Daniel was not perturbed. In fact, he had a surprise up his sleeve. ‘A friend was there yesterday,’ he said. ‘So, I know it will be open today.’
It was a drive through the countryside beyond the city, back along roughly the same route as the train had taken yesterday, to Snagov Monastery, which stands on an island in a lake about 40 km north of Bucharest. We parked, crossed a bridge over the water, parts of which were ice, and came across a small farmyard complete with goats and a random ostrich. O…kay. Beyond lay the entrance to the church dedicated to the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary. However, the monastery itself is linked to Vlad the Impaler. Apparently, he was killed there, and his remains lie inside the church under a slab. Well, most of them do, because his head had been chopped off and sent to Constantinople, so it’s not a long grave.

This unexpected visit completed something of a circle. On my 50th birthday, I woke in Sighisoara, in Transylvania, and that morning, we had coffee in the house where Vlad Tepes was more than likely born. Now, here we were at his resting place, and we had no idea we were going to be there.
That, the view of the lake, seeing such sights in one day, the sunset on the way to the airport afterwards, even the airport itself provided special moments, but there was another one to come later that night.

Having checked in, been able to get rid of our luggage, and fed the teen, we set up camp in a coffee shop beside our gate, there to wait for boarding. Here’s a thing about Aegean Airlines. Very often, if you’re only carrying cabin luggage, as we were, they will ask if you want it put in the hold for free. Sometimes, they do this at the boarding gate, and when you see the bags, cases, trunks and furniture some people like to take on board an aircraft, you can see why. In our case, our bags would go all the way to Rhodes for free, even though we had a stopover that night, but it saved carrying them around. It also saved hauling them through the gate where our plane had boarded early and where we were just about the last people to take our seats.
Here’s another thing about Aegean. Every New Year’s Day they hold a lottery aboard every one of their flights, and that’s got to be a fair few on such a big day. We heard the announcement, and I thought, ‘Oh, that’s nice, someone’s in for a surprise.’ A little later, I vaguely heard another announcement in Greek, with the number twenty involved, and thought nothing of it. Until, the teen, behind, taps on Neil’s shoulder and says, ‘That’s you.’
‘What is?’
‘Seat 28 b. That’s you.’

Because we’d swapped places, I had the boarding card, but Neil was in the winning seat, and sure enough, was given a voucher for two free return tickets to anywhere Aegean flies to. We got some looks from those nearby, especially the young man from 28 c, but what can you do?
What a way to end the day, I say, but, as we’ll find out in the final instalment tomorrow, the day was not over yet.






































































































































