Travel Guide OOaj Ooaj Travel
online
Mean pula?

List of countries
Travel news
Phrasebooks
Travel in Europe
European union
United States
North America
Central America
South America
Travel in Africa
Travel in Asia
Middle East
Australasia

Travel in Europe :
Travel in France
United Kingdom
Travel in Belgium
Netherlands
Sweden
Travel in Finland
Travel in Germany
Luxembourg
Austria
Hungary
Monaco
Italy
Greece
Portugal
Spain

Travel in Asia :
China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Maldives
Mongolia
Nepal
North Korea
Russia
Taiwan
Thailand
Vietnam
Hong Kong

Travel in America :
Bahamas
Canada
Cuba
Haiti
Cuba
Mexico
Panama
Colombia
Brazil
Argentina
Venezuela

Pula

Ooaj Travel Guide, tourism, hotel reservation, residence, plane, cheap pension for you holidays in pula

Free Travel guide Ooaj.com A free travel guide for holidays. Hotels in pula, Bed and Breakfast!


Pula (Pola in Italian) is a nice town in the corner of IstriaIstria, Croatia.

pula Travel Guide :

Pula

Get in

There are buses from Rijeka, Trieste, and Venice. There is also a train station and a harbor.

Hitchhiking from Zagreb works very well. In Zagreb start from the petrol station after the "Billa" supermarket on the southside of the Sava river. In Rijeka ask people to drop you off at the little SOS stop after a pretty sharp right bend of the motor way around Rijeka.

Pula

Get around

For local transport the cheap taxis from CityTax (25/30 Kuna) can be a good alternative for the public buses (10 Kuna per person).

Pula

Language

There is an italian minority and almost all locals speak italian.

Pula

Stay safe

If you want to take a small backpack with you on an AUTOTRANS bus, first ask the driver if this is OK before buying the ticket. Otherwise you might be refused entry on the bus and your ticket will not be refunded, even if you have bought it off the driver just 2 minutes earlier. See http://croatia.indymedia.org/news/2004/07/363.php for details. (The Brioni company seems OK - onboard small backpacks are allowed, but you have to insist.)

Pula

See

<img src="http://photoforum.istria.info/data/media/17/pula.jpg">

  • The Arena, the 6th largest surviving Roman amphitheatre. Towering over the nearby buildings this huge structure was barely saved from destruction several times during its life, mostly by various Venetians with plans to take to to Venice stone by stone as demonstration of the might of the Venetian empire. Many stones were taken to build houses and other structures around Pula, but fortunately this practice was stopped before the whole structure was destroyed. Entry gives you access to wander the inside of the Colosseum and visit the caverns beneath. The audiotour is very worthwhile.
Pula

Sleep

Tourist information can provide you with a list of accommodation in Pula, although they will not make reservations for you.

  • Hotel Riviera (1-star). Fabulous hotel built in 1907 for the high-ranking officers in the Austro-Hungarian army. Never properly refurbished since then it is now showing its age, but structurally it is impressive and looks oh-so-grand from the outside. There aren't many places you can stay at these prices where your ceiling is so far away from your floor. The rooms are currently decked out with 1960s/70s fittings (orange bedcovers, brown wooden panelling, lime green phone), with the sparseness showing the lack of funds for upkeep. Having said all that, it's clean, tidy, and comfortable. No doubt within a few years someone will make the investment to bring it back to its former glory, and prices will rise to match.
Pula

External links


Biggest country to travel: Biggest cities to travel: Islands in the top travel 40: World Travel guide Random travel link:
Indonesia
Argentina
United Kingdom
Indonesia
Jakarta in Indonesia
Karachi in Pakistan
Tehran in Iran
Rio de Janeiro in Brazil
Virgin_Gorda
French_Polynesia
Maine
Maui
Zanzibar
British_Virgin_Islands
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Lesotho
British_Virgin_Islands
Honshu in Japan
Travel in Colombia
Netherlands
Stockholm
Singapore Travel

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0