Sunday, August 10, 2025

7 Countries 7 Days: Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland

 

Memmingen

Saturday, 9th August 2015 – Bangor to Bavaria

This whole adventure started with a bit of an experiment: no fixed itinerary, no plans, just see what happens. The idea was simple — make it up as we go along. Memmingen, our first destination, was chosen almost at random via the Ryanair “Take Me Anywhere” app. Honestly, I had never even heard of it either. That was part of the fun — drop yourself somewhere new, figure it out, and see what happens. To add to the challenge, I also decided I’d try to speak as little English as possible with the locals and communicate in their native language.

The day began at Bangor train station, where groups of girls in sparkly tops were clearly gathering for a big Saturday out in Chester, and, quite nice to see, not a filled lip or false eyelash in sight. Meanwhile, Charlie (age 12) and I had our own plans. Frustratingly, the train fare to Manchester Airport cost more than the flight to Germany, which says everything you need to know about the state of UK rail travel. Our trains aren’t run for passengers — just companies bleeding us dry.

By the time our Ryanair flight landed in Memmingen at 10:30 pm, the heat still clung to the air. Since I had Charlie with me, I had booked us a room at the airport hostel, a no-frills spot right on the grounds. If I’d been on my own, I probably would’ve just wandered into town, grabbed whatever bed I could find, and then found a bar (not necessarily in that order). But with a twelve-year-old in tow, practicality won.


Sunday, 10th August 2015 – Memmingen to Lindau

Morning came, and with it our first surprise: Memmingen on a Sunday is like a Tesco sushi bar — so quiet it’s practically in a coma. No shops open, no supermarkets open, no nothing. Religion still rules here in deepest Bavaria, and Sundays feel like Christmas Day or Easter Sunday back home. Honestly, it’s not a bad thing… unless you need to buy suncream in 30°C searing heat.

We did eventually stumble across a coffee shop, where we broke a 14-hour fast with some bread piled high with cheese, tomato, and sauerkraut. Continental, tasty, and predictably overpriced. Our table companions were less than ideal — a squadron of persistent wasps that buzzed around like self-appointed guardians. They would, as it turned out, follow us almost everywhere.

The town itself was pleasant but sleepy, so after a play in the local park, we decided to shake things up. Our original plan this morning had been to grab a night bus to Strasbourg or Stuttgart, but then we spotted a train and thought: “Why not?” That became the theme of this trip — leap first, plan later.

Lindau

The train rolled through Swiss-lookalike landscapes: clean, pristine, a log-chopper’s paradise. Eventually, we found ourselves in Lindau, a small jewel on the shores of Lake Constance (Bodensee). It was beautiful — and expensive. The lake shimmered in the heat, and we couldn’t resist diving in for a swim. Floating in those cool alpine waters with the mountains in the distance was life affirming


Dornbirn
Dornbirn, Austria – A Different World

With the cheapest accommodation in Lindau starting above £100 it was decided to take another short hop via train (didn't buy a ticket), which took us over the border into Austria. In Dornbirn, we grabbed a salad bar dinner from the local Coop supermarket and ate it in the company of the local drunks who had claimed the station benches as their own. (Every town has them — I’m still trying to work out the collective noun. A stumble of drunks? A blur? A cheer?)

Our digs for the night was an Airbnb apartment on the 4th floor. A family home, run by Walter (Austrian) and Alexandria (Peruvian). They turned out to be the kind of hosts who remind me why I travel this way in the first place. Friendly, curious, and generous, they gave us a little window into their lives — the sort of cultural exchange you’ll never find in a hotel.

Our room was basic but comfortable with an alpine view, though the fan struggled to push the hot air around enough to keep us cool. Still, after the long, sun-soaked day, it didn’t take much for Charlie and me to drift into sleep, knowing the adventure was just beginning.

Three Countries Before Lunch

Monday, 11th August 2015 – Dornbirn → Liechtenstein → Switzerland → Zurich

We rolled out of bed around 9 am after a warm night in Dornbirn. A quick morning chat with our host Walter, then out into the already-blazing heat of Austria. Breakfast was our now-standard travel combo: croissant, yoghurt, banana, and fruit juice from the local supermarket. We perched ourselves on a pavement and ate as the Austrian world bustled quietly around us. Simple food, but it did the job.

From Dornbirn, we caught a [free] train to Feldkirch, and from there hopped onto a free [as in, we didn't buy a ticket] bus that wound its way into Schaan, Liechtenstein. What to say about Liechtenstein? If Memmingen had been sleepy yesterday, Schaan had taken a sedative. The place was hot, quiet, almost too neat for its own good. But it was stunningly beautiful — surrounded on three sides by the Alps, every corner framed like a work of art. We had a coffee in a small café, used the toilets (a bold move for which I’ll spare the details), and then wandered the empty streets for a while.

Schaan

Another bus (£3) later and we were in Buchs, Switzerland — just ten minutes over the border. That made it three countries before lunch. This little corner of Europe doesn’t do cheap, though. At Charlie’s request we ventured into McDonald’s. Normally I avoid the golden arches like the plague, but credit where it’s due: the curried veg burger was actually tasty — far better than the cardboard patties they serve in the UK. Still, £27 for two meals left me wondering if we’d accidentally ordered gold-plated fries.

From there, we boarded a train bound for Zurich. It wasn’t cheap either (£51), but what a ride. The train trundled along the southern edge of Lake Zurich, where holidaymakers were making summer memories on the water while the mountains rose dramatically behind them. It was one of those “wow” journeys that reminds you why you put up with the blistering heat, the expense, and the constant legwork.

Zurich 

Zurich itself turned out to be just as impressive. The city has a real wow factor, with elegant architecture, rivers, and green parks. We had about five hours to explore and soaked up as much as possible. Even stopped off at The Nelson pub for a beer (me) and a coke (Charlie) — though £15 for two drinks did sting a little.

Our accommodation was an Airbnb in the Seefeld area, north of the lake. An elderly man named Patrick greeted us on behalf of our host, he's a Swiss choirmaster who also doubled as a church organist. Patrick showed us around the house, which turned out to be the oldest in Seefeld — full of character, every floorboard creaking as if it had a story to tell. He asked if I liked music, and I resisted the urge to mention that I once wrote a song called Paedo Death Church. Probably for the best.

Patrick also suggested that if we cancelled the booking online and paid him £55 in cash, it would be cheaper. But it meant a trek to a cash machine in the sweltering heat, and with 17,000 steps already on the clock and a sore arch in my foot (plantar fasciitis? must look that up), I opted to leave things as they were. This, at the point of exhaustion was the most sensible choice.

By the time evening came, Charlie and I were wiped out. My friend Wyn was covering my Monday night Louder Than War radio show, but we didn’t make it to air time. Sleep claimed us before the first track. We’ll catch up tomorrow.

Three countries, 17,000 steps, blistering heat, and one creaky old Swiss house. Not a bad Monday.

Monday, August 04, 2025

Show #183 - Louder Than War Radio (04.08.25)

Neil Crud on Louder Than War Radio, Mondays at 10pm

Another Week, Another Show – and One Vinyl Sold!


This week’s show delivered everything from fierce punk blasts to bilingual hip-hop, with a healthy dose of nostalgia thrown in for good measure. And mission accomplished – one of our lovely listeners (and he is really lovely) grabbed a vinyl copy of Street Hassle by Puffer after I spun a track from it. That’s me on the Static Shock Records Christmas card list this year… maybe even a mug?

Puffer are I think from Australia, tho I could be wide of the mark. Street Hassle, out via the ever-reliable Static Shock Records, is as frantic and jagged as it is compelling. If you haven’t checked it out yet – do.

It was also brilliant to revisit Crapsons' gloriously brash 'Fuck Off...Again' – the Wirral-based trio mix humour, anger, and commentary in a way few can. Catch them at Rebellion Festival this year – always a riot, never a letdown.

Looking ahead, I was excited to share a track from the upcoming Mr Phormula album 'Cymraeg Worldwide', out August 15th. 'Celtiaidd Lydaweg' is a standout – fusing Welsh and French, with what sounds like a hint of Breton in the mix too. Mr Phormula is a true pioneer of Welsh-language hip-hop, blending boom-bap beats with lightning-fast flow and multilingual flair. Don't sleep on this one.

Had a bit of a Welsh wave early on too with two brilliant flashbacks:

  • Genod Droog’s ‘Gwn Tatws’ – always a thrill. A supergroup of sorts from the early 2000s Welsh-language scene, blending hip-hop and funk with tongue-in-cheek Porthmadog attitude.

  • Gruff Rhys’ ‘Gwn Mi Wn’ – sublime in a very different way. One of Gruff’s finest solo moments, full of surreal warmth and poetic flair.

Also had to dig out Blitz’s Propaganda – originally released in 1982, but its message feels just as biting today. That lyric:

"I can see many reds underneath my bed, but the fascists in my letterbox are messing up my head"
Still hits, 43 years on.

Closed the show with a classic from Y Cyrff – 'Cymru, Lloegr a Llanrwst'. A perfect homage to the People's Republic of Llanrwst and a reminder of the vibrant energy of the Welsh alternative scene in the ‘80s. Before frontman Mark Roberts went on to form Catatonia, Y Cyrff laid the groundwork and did all the hard work for Welsh-language rock to go mainstream.

That's it from me for this week – Wyn will be sitting in for me next Monday, so please tune in, support, and make him feel welcome!

Until next time – diolch!

Moscow Death Brigade - It's Us
Genod Droog - Gwn Tatws
Gruff Rhys - Gwn Mi Wn
All Consumed - Upon the Altar
Blitz - Propaganda
AKU - Phase Me Out
The Bordellos - You Vagabond You
ChePaa - La Rage
Mr Phormula - Celtiaid Llydaweg (ft Plouz & Foen)
WORN OUT - Deeper
Fucking Angry - Fuck Off
Crapsons - Fuck Off…Again
Body Maintenance - Broken Sculptures
Joe & The Shitboys - Drugs R’4 Kidz
Bruise Control - Bottom Feeder
Puffer - I’m Out
El Toro - I Wanna Know
AMASS - Gamekeepers Gallows
Sona - Gone But Not Forgotten
Y Cyrff - Cymru, Lloegr a Llanrwst

Monday, July 28, 2025

Show #182 - Louder Than War Radio (28.07.25)

Back on the Air, Back on Facebook (Whether I Like It or Not)

Well, here we are again — back on the airwaves and, reluctantly, back on Facebook.

Turns out one of my photo uploads apparently carried a virus, and after three weeks of silence, the all-seeing, all-knowing algorithmic overlords decided to let me off with just a warning. What the actual offence was, I genuinely have no idea — but hey ho, I’m back.

As much as I’d love to bin it off, Facebook remains a necessary evil for pushing this show and keeping the Link2Wales network alive. That said, I had to dust off my old personal account to get going again, which came with its own set of emotional baggage — mainly because it had a grand total of about ten friends on it and absolutely zero reach.

Even worse, my timeline was an absolute cesspit. And I mean utter bollocks. Just endless drivel. No wonder people quit the platform — if you don’t put the time in to sort your feed, all you’ll see is a constant stream of garbage.

A few years ago, I actually dedicated an entire weekend to cleaning the place up. Properly curating my timeline, unfollowing the nonsense, and turning it into something halfway decent. These days, it reads more like a music magazine — full of quality, interesting content, and barely toxic at all.

So yeah, it’s good to be back... albeit on Facebook.

Catch the show, tell your mates, and let’s keep the signal strong.

Pete Bentham & The Dinner Ladies - Holy Pictures
Slutch - Wake Up
AMASS - What’s The Government Scared Of?
BType - You Wanna Know Me?
The Unknowns - I Know That You Know
AKU - Aku Stomp
Awkland - Dead Air
CoVid 21 - Quid Games
Anti Vigilante - Skoliver
Cress - Travellers
Permanent Revolution - Brisbane City Skinheads
Petrol Hoers - You Can Give A Horse A Buckfast
ChePaa - Jovial Song
Burning Flag - Pay Me
Pete Bentham & The Dinner Ladies - Is There Life In Rhyl?
The Walk Offs - SATX
The Sporadics - Used To Be A Punk
Fight The Bear - El Toro
Inferno - El Toro
Split System - Forcefield (Live In Stockholm)


Pete Bentham & The Dinner Ladies

Slutch

  • “Wake Up” is a track from their No Way Out 7″ EP released on First Strike Records (Side B) in mid‑2025 Alans BMX+1SLUTCH+1.

AMASS

The Unknowns

AKU

CoVid 21

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Fire Dance Festival 2025: my 18 hours

 

Fire Dance - Girsby & Over Dinsdale Village Hall

Amass, through the lens of my shit phone


You should never let any day, let alone weekend pass you by… so weekends like Fire Dance should be compulsory.

Set in the peaceful green belt between Girsby and Over Dinsdale in North Yorkshire, this little DIY festival is one of punk, techno, and full‑throttle weirdness among like-minded people and it was superb—even if I only caught half of it.

Originally, my plan was to rock up Friday evening with my lad Charlie, pitch the tent, and dive straight into a night of punk rock and pulsing beats. But life, as ever, had other plans. A work colleague suffered a freak accident involving a sock (yes, really—don’t ask), which kept me in North Wales at the last minute. So instead of driving north towards festival fields and furious feedback, I was being polite to the buying public and wishing my life away to 5pm. Too late to start a four hour drive, so it was an early night in prep for an early dart in the morning.

By Saturday lunchtime, we were finally on the road back up. And while I missed some killer sets—including a reportedly storming show by anarcho legends The System (a band I used to write to as a teenager, back when punk records had mailing addresses and you'd trade stickers for stamps)—I did arrive just in time to play a part in the fun and games myself.



Drafted into Drop A#

I'd been called in on a last-minute favour by Emissaries Of Syn, my gnarly grind/crusty neighbours (and alleged friends) from North Wales. Kev, their fifth(!) guitarist couldn’t make it, and somehow, I stupidly agreed to be the emergency stand-in. Or guitarist 5.1 as they called me.

If you’re a guitarist, you’ll feel the sweat forming already: EoS tune down to Drop A♯. That’s not just low—it’s tectonic. Most bands settle for Drop D or C if they want heaviness, but these crazy fools go full sonic earthquake. I had to track down the thickest strings I could find and learn the material more by feel than sound—my slightly deaf ears couldn’t make sense of the recorded tracks at that tuning. So I memorised the shapes and hoped muscle memory would carry me through.

Miraculously, it worked. We had a blast, pure and simple. Chaotic fun? Totally. We got away with it, and the band sold records and t-shirts.

A Tent-Side View



After that, it was time to soak up the rest of the festival with a very tired 11-year-old in tow. We didn’t make it to the front for the last two acts, but from the warm sanctuary of our tent (strategically close enough), we caught some incredible sounds:

  • The Sporadics tore it up with their punk-ska fusion, a bouncing frenzy of skanking beats and vocals that channeled Dick Lucas–style urgency (think Culture Shock with a horn section).

  • Petrol Hoers—what even are Petrol Hoers? An offshoot of the gloriously unhinged Petrol Bastard, this was less a gig and more a surreal fever dream about the darker side of horses. It’s punk performance art at its most twisted. And brilliant.

    Yeah, those two were listened to - these three were seen and heard...

  • B-Type brought a refreshing dose of quirky techno-hop, all bounce and basslines and weirdness. Somewhere between a rave and a puppet show. In the best way.

  • Cress, now a stripped-down two-piece on stage (though a trio on record), delivered their brand of  anarcho-punk, plenty of space in the songs as the visuals added to the message, and menace.

  • And AMASS, featuring our brilliant hosts Andy and Marnie, closed out my night with a blistering set. Heavy, full-on and ferociously tight. An absolute highlight and seriously lapped up by all those present.



The Spirit of Fire Dance

What really made Fire Dance special wasn’t just the music (though that was excellent across the board)—it was the atmosphere. The DIY ethos. The sense of community. The fact that in the middle of nowhere, people had come together to share a weekend of beers, music, laughs and love, surrounded by countryside, midges and low flying aircraft.

There were crusties and punks, ravers and a few kids, dogs, tents, dogs in tents, and possibly a few demons summoned during the noisier sets. And while the village hall and camping field might not seem like much from the outside, inside was a different world—one where anything could happen, and probably did.

Until Next Time…

While I only got a taste of the weekend this time, I’m already planning to do the full Friday-to-Sunday stretch next year. Hopefully without any sock-related emergencies.

Massive thanks to everyone involved—bands, organisers, punters, sound crew (Ash for lending the amp), and especially those random strangers who shared beers, banter and blistering music. It’s events like Fire Dance that remind me why this DIY community matters so much: it’s loud, it’s weird, and it’s alive.

See you in that field next year - if not before.

Drop A# baby


Monday, July 14, 2025

You'll get Reformed - All of you!

picture by 
wefail

There was a time when the name Nigel Farrow barely stirred the national pot. Just another man in a striped tie with a fondness for flags and flat beer. But in a country starved of conviction and drunk on nostalgia, he became something far more dangerous.

And the BBC gave him the match.

They lit the podium for him - polished it, buffed it, and turned the camera so the light caught just right on his brass cufflinks and uncooked grin.

He first appeared on Question Time in 2009, surrounded by suits with more nuance and less bile. He was a curiosity then—a red-faced relic from an imagined Britain. He admonished Bulgarians he’d never met and pints that were ‘too European.’ The audience laughed.

The producers noticed.

By his third appearance, they booked him intentionally. He was good for ratings—people tweeted in rage, tuned in for outrage. Every Thursday became a Farrow spectacle. Five panellists and a populist. Five experts and him. He never changed his answers; only the questions did.

Soon, viewers stopped remembering the other guests. They called it ‘the Farrow show.’

By his tenth time, the audience clapped for the punchlines that once horrified them. ‘Why shouldn’t we leave the EU?’ he’d bark. ‘They want to ban kettles!’ Roars of laughter. Half the crowd, planted. The other half, placated.

A young woman once challenged him:

‘Why do you stoke fear? Why do you scapegoat migrants?’

He paused. Smiled.

‘Because it works.’

The crowd howled. The producers smiled. The camera did not cut away as security removed the young woman for ‘shouting.’


As the years ticked on, Nigel Farrow’s face became more familiar than the Queen’s. More permanent. A fixture of British reality like drizzle and derelict high streets. Question Time didn’t just platform him - it bowed to him.

He’d be invited back again.
And again.
And again.
He became the most frequent guest in the show’s history. 35 times. Then 50. Then 77. No government minister matched his tally. No opposition dared question it.

‘It’s balance,’ they said.
‘It’s democracy,’ they lied.

A spineless Director-General once joked:

‘Well, he’s not wrong all the time.’
That man was later knighted.


Then came the ‘Incident.’ A year of strikes. Food queues. A ferry of asylum seekers sunk off the Kent coast.

Farrow went on Question Time the next night. He called it a ‘regrettable necessity.’

‘We are not a dumping ground,’ he said.
The audience clapped.

When one panellist - a mild-mannered lawyer - called the tragedy a ‘crime against humanity,’ the feed mysteriously cut. When it returned, Farrow was smirking, the lawyer gone.

‘Technical glitch,’ the BBC apologised.


He never left after that.

The news desk dissolved into his personal mouthpiece. ‘The Nigel Farrow Update.’
BBC Parliament became ‘The National Broadcasting Centre.’
The Corporation’s charter was rewritten overnight. The word ‘impartial’ was replaced with ‘patriotic.’

Question Time, once a place of scrutiny, now opened with a choir:

‘One nation, One Nigel.’

The panel? Gone.
Now just him.
Every Thursday, for an hour, Nigel Talks To The Nation.

He spoke from the same podium, now carved from English oak and draped in his own crest: a lion strangling a dove. He wore the same striped tie, and when he smiled, you could feel the country stiffen.


The opposition disintegrated. What was left of it lived underground, scrawling slogans on brick walls.

‘There’s a swastika on your chest,’
read one.
‘Y O U R E A F A S C I S T C U N T,’ read another.

They were painted over by morning.
The BBC called it ‘urban decay.’
Nigel called it ‘anti-British vandalism.’

People disappeared. Poets first. Then professors. Then punk bands.

Universities were renamed after Farrow.
The National Curriculum included a weekly Question Time history lesson:

‘Lesson One: The Great Betrayal.’
‘Lesson Two: Why We Had to Take Control.’

Statues of Churchill were replaced with statues of Nigel holding a pint and pointing somewhere ominously.


One day, he stopped doing Question Time.
There was no need.
There were no more questions.
Only time.

He spoke from the balcony of his Thames Palace, beneath red and black flags, and told the nation:

‘You asked for this.’
‘You voted for this.’
‘You cheered for this.’

And they had. Not all. But enough.
They had laughed when he joked.
Clapped when he scapegoated.
Voted when he fearmongered.
And sat silent as he rose.


They made a podium for him.

And from that podium, he built a nation in his image: sneering, small, and afraid.

And on every wall, every screen, every Question Time rerun, his face remained. Smiling.

Forever.


Tuesday, July 08, 2025

Croatia Calling

 

Friday, July 4th – The Great Escape Begins


The latest adventure kicked off dark and early. I picked up Tim and Carlos in Henryd at 4am, and we headed to Steve’s place in Rhyl, where Elwyn joined the crew. Just a mile into the journey, Mic suddenly leapt up from the back of Steve’s van, where he’d been secretly stashed away like a gremlin. Classic Michael. Absolute chaos broke out — a rude, but very funny awakening.

Steve — who drives like he’s got a seat at Red Bull Racing — floored it to Manchester Airport, all while somehow avoiding a speeding ticket. It’s uncanny. Either the man has diplomatic immunity, or speed cameras just respect his style.

Once on the plane, I opened This Is My Everything by Christian Splath (Earth Island Books), but barely made it a couple of pages before nodding off. The 2-hour-45-minute flight passed in what felt like twenty minutes. When I woke up, we were already descending into the furnace of Dubrovnik.




Arrival in Dubrovnik – Alleys, Marble & That First Wander

Our apartment was an absolute gem — tucked up a narrow, shaded alleyway right in the beating heart of Dubrovnik’s Old Town. Once again, full credit to Steve, our trip’s unofficial booking agent, who absolutely came up trumps.

Tim drew the short straw and had to share a room with me — but came prepared with earplugs to hold back the snoring tide. Smart move. Our doorcode was 123456# and this followed similar pattern for wifi codes in a lot of the Croatian bars.

Mic, who booked later, ended up a few alleyways up at Hostel Castello on Zamanjina Ulica, right off Stradun — the perfect launchpad for late-night mischief.

We unpacked with cool music playing from the JuiceBox, then stepped out into the city — straight into the searing, high-summer 36deg Croatian heat. The Old Town’s marble streets shimmered like polished glass beneath our feet — worn smooth by centuries of footsteps and glowing in the sunlight. It felt like walking through an oven built out of mirrors.




First Wanders – Irish Bars, Cliff Bars & Cold Beers

We began our first explore by weaving through the Old Town’s back alleys, ducking past sun-soaked cafés and artisan shops, stopping for a beer, until we found ourselves near the Dubrovnik harbour. The view was stunning — historic stone towers, bright fishing boats, and water so clear you could see the seabed.

We even stumbled upon the famous steps used in Game of Thrones — yep, those steps. Instantly recognisable, and oddly majestic in real life. We couldn’t resist a photo opportunity.


Along the way, we could not pass a couple of Irish pubs nestled just off Stradun:

  • Irish Pub Karaka, and

  • The Gaffe (plus Gaffe 2 just upstairs).

Both charming and buzzing… and both eye-wateringly expensive, as Irish bars tend to be, especially in tourist hotspots. €8 pints? Unfortunately it's law to drink in them on these trips, and drink in them we did.

We were also guided to the legendary Buža Bar — one of Dubrovnik’s worst-kept secrets. It’s a literal hole in the city wall, marked only by a small hand-painted sign. You squeeze through a stone doorway and emerge onto a cliffside ledge hanging over the Adriatic.

Cold drinks in hand, we watched brave souls dive from the rocks straight into the sea below. It’s pricey — around €6–7 for a small beer — and cash only. But the views of Lokrum Island, the swollen sea, and the sunlit cliffs were ace.




Dubrovnik Beer Factory – That Well-Earned Pint

By the time we’d melted our way back through the Old Town, we were in desperate need of shade and refreshment. We found salvation at the Dubrovnik Beer Factory, just outside the city walls.

Ice-cold pints. Blistered feet. Sizzling brains.
It wasn’t our first beer of the day — but it was the first one that felt truly earned.

And as we sat there, slowly rehydrating with various beverages and watching the world go by, it dawned on us — this trip was going to be unforgettable… and yeah, probably expensive.

When I say unforgettable, well... I don't really remember the evening!



Saturday, July 5th – Sunburnt, Sea-Soaked & Slightly Brain-Dead

We woke into a furnace. The heat hit us like a curtain of fire — over 30°C by mid-morning — and the Old Town’s marble streets were already shimmering like a mirage. There was only one solution: get in the sea.

We wandered through the cobbled alleys, out through Ploče Gate, and made our way down the steep stone steps to Banje Beach — Dubrovnik’s seaside town patch of coastline. Pebbly, loud, a little chaotic… but with crystal-clear water, a view of Lokrum Island, and the city walls rising behind us, it felt like swimming inside a movie set.

We spent hours there — swimming, floating, diving, frying, and generally reviving ourselves from Friday’s excesses. The beach bar offered cold drinks at warm prices, but we weren’t complaining. 


Sun, Shade & The Slide Toward Chaos

After the beach, we trudged back through the heat like slightly charred zombies. Showers, music, and another round of beers gave us just enough of a second wind to get going again.

The details of the evening are, frankly, gone. Lost to a haze of loud laughter, louder drinks, and possibly Mataxa-based poor decisions. But we definitely made it to 4am — don’t ask how. Or why.

The only memory I’ve retained is watching a boat that looked suspiciously like a pirate ship pulling out of the harbour under moonlight. There may have been cannons. There may have been music. Or maybe that was just the alcohol erasing hard drive space in real time.

As they say: alcohol kills brain cells… but only the weak ones.



Sunday, July 6th – A Liver of Steel & A Road to Split

After another 4am finish, you’d expect the morning to hit like a shovel. But weirdly… I felt fine. No hangover. No regrets. Either the Croatian lager is brewed with vitamins or my liver is made of something tougher than expected, or, more likely, I drank lots water alongside the beer.

We shuffled out for breakfast at Castello’s, near Mic’s hostel — the usual spot by now. Strong coffee, good eggs, shaded tables — perfect recovery setup.

After one last mooch across the marbled streets of Dubrovnik, we grabbed an Uber (bless it) and made our way to the bus station, ready to swap one ancient seaside town for another.


Bosnia, Briefly – Then Back Again

We hopped on a FlixBus bound for Split — a journey of just under 4 hours (Croatia is very long!), winding along the Adriatic coast. What we hadn’t realised was that the route dips into Bosnia & Herzegovina for a brief moment through the Neum corridor.

Cue an unexpected bonus country on the itinerary.

Our passports were checked as we boarded the bus. Bosnia gave us about 9 kilometres of rugged hills, a few roadside cafés, and then just like that, back into Croatia. Border-crossing fatigue? Minimal. Border-crossing bragging rights? 100%.



Bus With A View

Back on Croatian soil, the scenery kept getting better. The road hugged the coastline like a tightrope, winding past vineyards, tiny churches, and stone villages tucked into cliffs. The sea below was ridiculously blue — the kind of blue that makes you question every other shade you’ve ever called blue before.

Even the most hungover heads in the group sat up and stared.


Split by Starlight

Split met us with warm air, golden light, and an energy that felt easier somehow — more relaxed than Dubrovnik, more local, but still seriously stunning.

Dinner hit the spot — great food, and just a couple of beers for me. Then we headed out for some midnight sightseeing, and what we stumbled into was pure magic.

Inside Diocletian’s Palace, we found ourselves at the Vestibule — a vast, circular Roman hall with a gaping oculus in the roof, open to the sky.

We all lay down on the cool mosaic marble floor, staring up through the hole at a sky full of stars. Somewhere nearby, a busker strummed a slow, echoing tune that drifted in just right. It was quiet, surreal… almost spiritual.

And then, of course, someone jumped on Steve, and it turned into a full-on orgy-esq pile-on. Great laugh, and a male-bonded end to a long day.




Monday, July 7th – Rejected by Youth, Rescued by Rock ’n’ Roll

The morning in Split was just about as chill as it gets — lazy breakfast, a slow wander through the old town, and one last look at the shimmering Adriatic before we hit the road again. Back on a FlixBus, this time bound for Zadar.

The route took us north along the D8 coastal road — an absolute stunner. Think cliffside turns, olive groves tumbling toward the sea, and that perfect mix of rugged coastline and quiet villages. Mountains on one side, the Adriatic on the other. Even with a bus full of half-dozing tourists, the view demanded attention.


Too Old to Hostel, Too Stubborn to Care

We were booked into a hostel in Zadar’s Old Town, taking the budget route while Steve, Elwyn and Carlos went full luxury with a fancy apartment. Only problem? On check-in, the receptionist looked us up and down and delivered the fatal line:

“Sorry… you’re too old.”
Apparently the place had an age limit of 45. Arse!

Mic, Tim, and I looked at each other — battle-worn, sunburnt, and a combined age closer to 145 — and didn’t even argue. Time to pivot.

Church of St. Donatus and the Bell Tower of St. Anastasia Cathedral in Zadar, Croatia.



The Lotus Bar – Redemption, €3 at a Time

We regrouped at the nearby Lotus Bar — A cool, alternative spot just off the promenade, it’s known for its hard rock and punk vibe, affordable drinks, and friendly, cash-only service, barely marked, and exactly what we needed. The bartender, a total legend, greeted us with a grin and two magic words:

“Beer’s €3.”

She played Motörhead, AC/DC, Sabbath, and other glorious hard rock tracks that immediately restored our souls. We sat inside, cold beers in hand, feeling like the gods of midlife backpacking. I prefer it when things like this happen, it adds an edge to the trip.


Room at the Edge of Town

A quick scroll through booking apps turned up Hotel Porto or Hotel Bastardos as we called it, about 3 miles out of the Old Town on Nikole Jurišića — €20 each, three clean beds, and aircon, no judgment. We booked it, no hesitation. Until check-in, we dropped our bags at Steve’s apartment and headed back out.


Dinner with Katerina

Later, after taking in the sights, we found a spot to eat outdoors under street lights and narrow walls. Our waitress, Katerina, was a wild, hilarious Serbian woman who made fun of our accents, and took exactly zero nonsense from anyone. The food? Glorious. 


Dodging Disaster in Split

By some stroke of luck (or divine intervention), we completely missed the freak supercell storm that ripped through Split soon after we left.

Though it lasted only ten minutes, it packed hurricane-force winds over 140 km/h (87 mph), marble-sized hail, and sheets of rain. Trees were torn from the ground, cars were crushed, and parts of Poljud Stadium's roof were shredded. A Jadrolinija ferry broke free and slammed into a catamaran and a tour boat — sinking one, damaging the other.

Twenty people were injured, the harbour was chaos, and Marjan Park had to be evacuated by boat. Split looked like a war zone.

Meanwhile in Zadar, we were… ordering another round under blue skies at another bar. Completely unaware. Completely dry. Completely lucky.


Thunderstruck to the Suburbs

Dinner done, it was time for the wildest cab ride of the trip. The driver pulled up, AC/DC’s Thunderstruck was, on request screaming through the speakers, and took off like he was late for his own funeral.

He cornered like a man possessed, blasting through side streets. We held on, half-laughing, half-praying. By some miracle (and probably a few traffic violations), we reached Hotel Bastardos by 1am.

The receptionist greeted us like we were old friends:

“Ahh, gentlemen! We’ve been expecting you.”

The next morning, Michael, Tim and myself embarked on a 90-minute trek from the hotel back to the Old Town — in the blazing sun, dehydrated, but up to the challenge, almost relishing it. It felt less like sightseeing and more like a military endurance test. Each step squelched. Each breath felt like breathing soup.

Halfway through, salvation appeared in the form of a McDonald’s — not for burgers, but a desperately needed coffee stop. Never has a lukewarm flat-white tasted so heroic.



Eventually, we reunited with Steve, Elwyn, and Carlos, who led us — with ice creams dripping in our hands — to our final stop: the Sea Organ. Set into the stone steps along Zadar’s waterfront, the Sea Organ is a haunting, otherworldly installation where the wind and waves create music. Beneath the surface, a series of tubes and resonating chambers convert sea pressure into deep, breathy notes — like a ghost playing a church organ under the ocean.

We stood there letting the water compose its melancholy song. After all the noise, speed, and chaos of the trip — it was the perfect farewell. Our taxi driver to the airport later told us it plays different sounds in different seasons.

One last drink at Lotus Bar, where the orange juice and lemonade was cold, the music was pounding, and the bartender was, no exaggeration, one of the most stunning humans in Croatia.

It had been an eventful few days — full of mishaps, laughs, and surprises, plus Michael's chaotic charm never fails to entertain. From nearly missing his flight home to jumping out on us in the van. All great fun start to finish.

Sunset harbour at Zadar