PARADOXES and EMOTIONS 
   What I find ostensibly 
different in Romania compared to other European countries – talking 
about the status of a capital city – is that almost all other countries 
have several big cities which could successfully - and equally - 
represent the country as a capital. At the same time, this is far from 
reality in Romania. Only the last few years have seen things starting to
 change. As far as I am concerned, Bucharest is not the most 
representative big city in the country. The fact that nearly the entire 
economy and labor market is clinging to Bucharest is a wrong direction 
that on long term brings harm to the entire country and population. As a
 fluent German speaker I found it impossible to get a job in other major
 cities for 10 years. Why? Because most of the foreign investors go 
directly to Bucharest. It is there that the central authorities lie, it 
is there that trends are being drafted, it is there that the largest 
clients crowd and that useful business connections are being made. I see
 Bucharest more and more like a state within a state in many ways. I 
hope this situation will change more visibly in the coming years. I 
think this issue should be a top priority for the authorities.
                  
   Back to the city, I find 
that the far from ideal political and administrative policy of the last 
25 years has unfortunately created not at all friendly conditions for 
the people living there. There are more stray dogs, cats and more 
vehicles than inhabitants; there are too few natural, green areas. And there is no architectural harmony anymore as nobody would had ever care to take care how the city will be designed and developed. Only the old residential zones still keep the flair and charm of the city which time ago was known as ”The Little Paris”.
 I used to go across Bucharest by bike, although the city is not at all
cycling-friendly. But this is a different topic. Anyway, starting in June 2009
I gave up using the public transport network. Towards the end of 2011 I started
running and from 2012 up to April 2014 I ran in all of the city parks,
sometimes for an entire day, running from one park to another one along an
approximately 35 km. long route. Such experiences have given me a different
perspective on the city I was born in. Depending on the time of the day and season,
Bucharest can be quite a lovely city. For instance, wake up on a Sunday morning
and go through the city, when only a few cars are in the streets and only a few
people walk around. Running through the almost deserted city, devoid of cars
and people has given me a different feeling and perspective on Bucharest. I
could discover a special, certain flair in the city that, after all, has its
share of interwar history.
 In the end of
the day, what can I say? Depending of what is important for the visitor, I am
sure he / she can find there some interesting corners, some emotions. 
   I for one
like Bucharest: 
- in springtime (from March to mid May);
- in springtime (from March to mid May);
- during dry,
cold and freezing week-ends, when most of the people stay inside, allowing me
to enjoy a long bicycle ride or run through Herăstrău or Carol parks;
- on a cold
Sunday morning in mid winter, when the thick layer of snow is frozen and the
white frost gives one a fairytale feeling;
- on a cloudy
day
Written by myself at the request of an dear old friend who published it on his own exceptional blog about Bucharest, here you are invited
 to surf into it and to find touristic and non-touristic information 
collected by a passionate traveler who loves Bucharest very much.
Anka Berger
Vienna, May 1,
2015


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