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Pawe?
15-03-2005, 15.45.59
I'am amateur ornitologist and I would like to visit the delta of
DANUBE (Donau, Dunaj) during spring, summer for a 1 week
approximately for admire virgin nature and photography a little bit.

my question is:
Do anyone know anything about how to get there from Poland?
What is the most cheapest way to spend interesting time in delta of
Danube (maybe sleep in the tent?, is it possible? Is there people are
right?) and which exactly month will be the best for admire the birds
there?
Is anybody prepare to go there ?

regards,
Pawel from Krakow

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan

ferguson@pittstate.edu
18-03-2005, 01.16.01
I have been to the Danube Delta 2 years ago but don't know much about
the whole of it. You might want to talk to a Romanian travel agent or
go to some of the Romanian tourism sites for information.

No matter how you go into the delta you have to get to the city of
Tulcea. From Tulcea I took a boat to the most remote village in the
delta called Sfantul Gheorghe (Saint George). There is no road to that
village. You must go by boat and there is only one boat a day there. So
once you are there you cannot leave until the next day at least when
the boat comes again. All supplies, food, building materials, etc. are
brought in on that boat.

I stayed with a Hungarian family that had lodging to rent and the very
reasonable price included all meals-----a lot of fish but very good. A
travel agent in Cluj arranged the trip for me but probably any agent
could do the same. My host arranged for a guid to take me by boat for a
couple of hour tour of the delta. It is a protected preserve and only
those with special permits can go in there. You can't just get a boat
and go in by yourself. But the price was reasonable and bird life
plentiful. Not much to do there though as there is only 1 or 2 very
small businesses which are grocery stores. Not much going on. I walked
out as far as I could. I could see the Black Sea but it got very marshy
the last few hundred meters so I couldn't actually get to the beach,
but you could if you weren't afraid to get wet.

There is one small road that goes into the delta to a town called
Sulina and there are a few villages on that road but I know nothing of
that area. Can't tell you where the best birding is but I am sure lots
of people could tell you. Here is one site you might want to check out
as a starting point. http://www.students.missouri.edu/~romsa/romania/

Click on the Destinations link, then on Danube Delta. At the bottom of
this brief description of cities there is a link to travel agents. Try
that.

Have fun.

Dan