You are in Print View

Use this view to read  our guide to
or click here to PRINT now


Continue browsing the Rest Romania guides
 


Thank You For Choosing Rest Romania!

We work hard to keep our Romania's best travel guide up-to-date and ready for your trip!

How to Print Our Full-Page Guides:

All of our full-page guides are available for easy reading in our print view free of charge to all registered travellers.

Our special easy-to-read print format is available to all members of the Rest Romania Travellers Club.  Members may print out all of our full-page guides (over 100 and counting!)  or save as PDF format for easy e-mailing to friends and relatives. 

Just visit restromania.com/register to register now!

Rânca in the Pârang mountains is one of the premier ski resorts in the region, and County Gorj is ringed to the north with wondeful peaks, the beauty of the Târgu Jiu and region undeniable!
 
The new Rest Romania Gallery has photos from our contributors showing the best of Romania!
Click when u see something you like!
Check out the latest in our Gallery Now!
Gallery Terms  Privacy Policy
Advertise with Rest Romania!
Need be seen by thousands of English-speaking tourists? ADVERTISE WITH REST ROMANIA and be part of the best of Romania!

Link to Us, Link to Romania!

Like Our Work? Please help us continue with your kind donation now!
 WE THANK YOU!
All Transactions are Secure using PayMate in USD
Our Privacy Policy

 

 

READ ON ROMANIA!

Guidebooks

Yes, it's difficult to put a website into your back pocket, so we'd like to recommend to you  our top picks for  guidebooks about Romania!
Rough Guide to Romania
Order New (or Used):
 
USA   UK
  CANADA
Lonely Planet
Order New (or Used):
 
USA   UK
  CANADA
Language and Travel Guide
Order New (or Used):
 
USA   UK
  CANADA
 

 

We Help YOUR Business!

 
Click here to see ALL our current guides!
REGIONS

County Gorj

 

County Gorj
In Oltenia

Powering Romania!

Electricity is the main export from County Gorj, with power plants using the regions natural thermal vents for thermo-electric generation, hydro-electric generation from dams and rich seams of coal.

But not all is from the black riches in this often-forgotten little corner of Romania, which is also home to the white riches of the new ski resorts in the Parâng mountains, formed out of the Carpathians by the mighty Olt and Jiu rivers.

The two main towns in Gorj are the county seat of Târgu Jiu, and halfway towards Dobreta-Turnu Severin from Târgu Jiu, the little city of Motru

There are also six major towns, Rovinari, Bumbeşti-Jiu, Târgu Cărbuneşti, Novaci, Ţicleni, and Tismana, along with 62 communes in County Gorj, with Rânca in the Parâng mountains receiving thousands of avid skiiers each winter and hikers in the summer months, all enjoying the breathtaking views and happy vistas.

 

The Kiss Gate

 
We are adding more information to this page and reviewing the content over this month.  Have a look later if you'd like!  E-Mail Us for More Info!
 
 
From the Rest Romania Website at
Brâncuşi's Table of Silence

 

Târgu Jiu

 

The Brâncuşi monuments

 

The Tismana Monastery

 

The Parâng Mountains

 

The Polovragi Monastery

 

 

Târgu Jiu

Târgu Jiu is the county seat of Gorj County in the Oltenia Region. It is situated in the sloping foothils of the Southern Sub-Carpathians, it benefits from the river Jiu flowing from the mountains.

It was first mentioned in documents around 1406, although the region had been continually inhabited since Dacian and Roman days, when the region was part of the Roman Dacian provinces.   Târgu Jiu today has 98,000 inhabitants, down slightly from the previous decade as Romania's population continues to rationalise.

Mighty Coal

Starting with the 1960s, coal surface mining contributed to a rapid population growth. Other local industries include wood, machine building, textiles, glassware and construction materials (cement).
During World War II, a detention camp for political prisoners (especially members of the Romanian Communist Party) was located near the city.

Brâncusi

Constantin Brâncuşi has several large sculptures displayed in Târgu Jiu: The Table of Silence, The Gate of the Kiss, Chairs' Alley and The Endless Column (used above in the town crest). The main soccer team of the city is Pandurii Târgu-Jiu who own the stadium Stadionul Municipal (Târgu Jiu).
 

Novaci

Stone-age settlements have been found in the foothills of the Parâng mountains, around the 600m mark, near the Gilort river springs about 45km from Târgu Jiu near Novaci. 

Although the town was only mentioned in historical documents in 1502, it has been inhabited since Dacian and Roman times.  A quick stop in Novaci is well worthwhile, with the cool water of the Gilort river, as did the shepherds for generations, looking up into the mountains to where Rânca is today. 

 

Rânca

Rânca is a Romania's newest and highest mountain resort complex, located at 1,600m to 1750m with dozens of new chalets (pensiunes) recently built. 

Newly added flights now serve the  regional capital at Craiova, which is just over 100km south, and with Sibiu also about 2 1/2 hours by car to the north offering direct connections to Vienna and other European capitals. With these easier connections, Rânca is expected to be more and more an international destination.  With it's very competitive prices and new status, Rânca is well-positioned to be included in package ski holidays and summertime hiking offers too.   Check out flying to Gorj below, or see more on Air Travel in Romania here.

Driving to Rânca

The road leading up from Novaci into the the Parâng Mountains is quite similar to more famous and equally well-maintained Transfăgărasan highway, running 18km to Rânca (the Transalpine DN 67C).
Getting up to Rânca is fairly straightforward, taking the road going from Târgu Jiu to Novaci, and then another 18km north from Novaci to Rânca.
The resort town is situation on a southern ridge of the Pârang Mountains at 1600m.   Quite a few trails lead off from Rânca, which is a where several of the mountain roads also converge.

Skiing Rânca

With runs up to the 1800m mark, and good snows between September and May, the only other exceptional fact about Rânca is that it failed to develop earlier as a skiing destination!  The slopes at Rânca offer low and medium difficulty, with a slope well-lit for night skiing.

 Check out our Ski Guide to Romania for more slopes and resorts!

The Parâng Mountains

Rânca offers a stunning view of the Parângu Mare peak, and when the weather is good, you can even see far over the mountains the Peleaga peak of the Retezat Mountains.

  Big Parângu peak towers 2,519m high as king of the Parâng Mountains group, still formidable even though the resort town is already halfway up this mighty branch of the great Carpathian mountain range (see more on Mountains in our Geography Section)
Click here to see more about this great primer for anyone travelling to Romania!From Mike Ormsby's new must-read book 'NEVER MIND THE BALKANS, HERE'S ROMANIA!', with a laconic English perspective on life in Romania and the Romanian people
Read More Here

In the Cindrel Mountains

We reached our destination at 6 p.m.  We are high in the hills of Transilvania, 25 km southwest of Sibiu.  The land undulates all around us in grey blue waves, like an ocean.  There is no sound except for birdsong on a breeze.    
I'm back in Transilvania: the heart of the nation, some say.  I gaze around me, trying to imagine the countless individuals who have trekked these hills over the millennia: warriors and shepherds, peasants and poets.  I feel warm, optimistic and completely knackered after a nine-hour hike in sun and rain. 
But I made it.  Along with my long-time buddy George, his wife Alina and little Catrinel, eight-years old and keen as mustard.  Then another surprise: the land suddenly dips at an angle of 45°.  It's hair-raising.   
Below us, at the bottom of the slope, sits a perfect post-glacial lake, like water in a saucer: Lacul Iezerul Mare.  It shimmers under the mid-morning sun.  Bushes protrude from the sheer rock above, like blotches of green paint daubed by a child.
The shepherd tramps away over a ridge and is swallowed by the land.  I watch his little black hat dip into the grass, like a submarine sinking into a green ocean.  He seems perfectly at ease in this wild and inhospitable spot, a son of the ancient soil.  I am suddenly struck by the difference between us.  Out here, he is at home and at work.  All he needs is a few dogs, a stick, and a cigarette.  The rest of us need offices and computers, cars and mobile phones.  
We settle under a sturdy tree, take off our boots and dump our rucksacks, breathing hard.  The sun is high and hot, but the wind keeps us cool.  We take our rest, watching the blue sky where white clouds drift, fat and fluffy. 
We eat goat's cheese, green peppers, olives and crusty bread.  The spring water in our bottle is still icy despite the midday heat.  Rolling blue-green hills stretch for endless miles in each direction, as far as we can see.  I feel lucky to be here.  It's almost too good to be true.
-- from the tale "People from Bucharest" and "Too Good to be True"
 

 

Trails of the Parângs

If you are doing a one-way hike, perhaps down the mountain from the Rânca Cabin either through the Gilort river valley (Valea Gilortului) along forestry roads for about 7 hours or via the quicker Deer Mountains (Munţele Cerbu) trail marked with red triangles (about 5 hours maximum).    You can also take off from the Rânca cabin through the Curd Mountains (Munţele Urdele), Mountain Lake Valley (Valea Iezerul) and on to the Bandits' Hideout Cabin, about seven hours, marked with both the red line and the red triangle markers.
The red triangle trail continues from Cimpa to Caban Voievodu on forestry roads for a couple of hours, then on to Wifely Meadows (Poiana Muierii) and onto the Bandit's Hideout Cabin, about 6 hours.   From the cabin, the red triangles continue through Dry Gulch (Groapa Seacă), Goat Peak (Vârful Capra), Wifely Meadows (Poiana Muierii), and Overlord's Cabin (Cabana Voievodul), about 10 hours if you did it all in one go. 
 
The red line trail also takes off from the Rânca Cabin going to the Papusa Mountains, Mohor Peak, Taiata Rock and Lake Calcescu, about 6 to 7 hours, combined with the red triangle trail for parts.   The red triangle trail veers off at Papusa Peak to the Oltet Curmatura, about 5 hours.  
Lacul Calcescu - Piatra Taiata - Varful Mohorul - Muntele Papusa - Cabana Ranca. Marcaj: banda rosie, triunghi rosu, sosea. Timp de mers: 6-7 ore.
 

 

Find out more trails and tips in our Hiking Guide now
From the Rest Romania Website at

Motru

Localities in the Plain area:
Rovinari  Motru -  Roşiuţa  Mătăsari  Fărcăşeşti  Drăgoteşti  Miculeşti  Negomir  Silvileşti  Samarineşti  Văgiuleşti  Bolboşi  Corcova  Borăscu  Murgeşti  Turceni  Bâlteni  Ţicleni  Urdari  Plopşoru  Peşteana-Jiu  Creţeşti  Socu  Bărbăteşti  Săuleşti  Bibeşti  Jupâneşti  Vierşani  Vladimir  Bârzeiu  Licurici  Berleşti  Logreşti  Hurezani  Rădineşti  Stejari  Aninoasa  Broşteni  Brăneşti  Căpreni  Turburea  Stoina  Spahii  Floreşti  Dănciuleşti  Slăvuţa  Tălpaşi  Cruşeţ

For other towns in OTHERREGION, please see our OTHERPAGENAME section!

  See More About the Oltenia Region Here

 

Listed below are some local agents who can help you with bookings and organize local tours in the Gorj area.

Romania Gorj Aventura, Bd.Victoria nr.7A in Târgu Jiu
+40 (253) 222555  FAX: +40 (253) 221555 
Gorj Tourism Romania, B-dul Republicii, Bl.24, Parter in Târgu Jiu
+40 (253) 227435  FAX: +40 (253) 227436 
Guardo-Tours, Str. Tudor Vladimirescu nr.17 in Târgu Jiu
 +40 (253) 223081  FAX: +40 (253) 223081 
Complex Hotelier Gorjul, Str. Eroilor nr.6 in Târgu Jiu
 +40 (253) 214010  FAX: +40 (253) 214010 
Carotours, Str.Victoriei nr.18 in Târgu Jiu
 +40 (253) 222399  FAX: +40 (253) 206399 
Agentia de Voiaj Tirgu Jiu, Str. Unirii, bloc 2, parter in Târgu Jiu
Informations,tickets
 +40 (253) 211924  
 

 

Click on the map for details of each location shown,
or Click Here for a Larger Version with more detail
==> Gorj ==> Dolj ==> Gorj ==> Mehedinţi ==> Vâlcea ==> Hunedoara ==> Caraş Severin ==> Vâlcea ==> Drobeta Turnu Severin ==> Motru ==> Târgu Jiu ==> Petroşani ==> Vulcan ==> Gorj

Geography

County Gorj is bordered by fellow Oltenian counties of Vâlcea to the east and north-east, and Mehedinţi and Dolj in the south-west and south.  Over the rise in Banat is County Caraş-Severin to the west, and in Transilvania over the Carpathians, is County Hunedoara.
With a total area of 5,602 km˛, County Gorj consists of various mountains from the Southern Carpathians group on it's northern border with the Transilvania region. 
In the west to Banat are the Vulcanului Mountains, and in the east there are the Parâng Mountains and the Negoveanu Mountains.  The two groups are split by the main river and catchment basin of the region, the Jiu River. 
 The Parâng Mountains (Munţii Parâng) include the Şureanu Mountains (Munţii Şureanu/M. Sebeşului), the Cindrel Mountains (Munţii Cindrel/M. Cibinului, which are more towards Sibiu), the Lotru Mountains (Munţii Lotrului; literally: Mountains of the Thief), and the Căpăţâna Mountains (Munţii Căpăţânii; literally: Mountains of the Head or Mountains of the Skull). 

In the South of County Gorj, the heights decrease through the hills to a high plain at the Western end of the Romanian Plain. 

Transportation

Flying to Gorj

Gorj is developing it's international tourist profile, and the scheduled air services beginning in 2007 into the regional capital of Craiova has helped to link Gorj with the world.

Maxi-taxis reliably run the main routes between the airport in Craiova and Târgu Jiu at least hourly during peak periods, and your transportation options from Târgu Jiu up to the mountains or along the rich alluvial plains of County Gorj vary depending on your abilities and proclivities.  

Maxi-Taxis and Busses

As the county seat, all roads lead to Târgu Jiu, which is fortunate as the town contains some of the world's finest sculptures in it's public parks and museums.  

The densest hubs for the maxi-taxi trade is at the main train station in Târgu Jiu.  From here, the little 10 to 20 seat vans can take you and your luggage (a tip always helps) along all of the main routes from Târgu Jiu to Motru and Dobreta Turnu Severin on the Danube,  up through the mountains along the Jiu river to Hunedoara, and over to Râmnicu-Valcea along the Olt River, as well as less touristy routes onto the fertile plains and the farming communities to the south-east.

 

Driving around Gorj

Whether you rent a car, or hire a driver to take you around the county, you can greatly benefit by the flexibility of setting your own times and your own destinations.

In some ways, it's sort of sad that you can hire a reliable guy in Târgu Jiu to take you where you'd like to go.   If you're into hiking or skiing, there are plenty of university students who would love to take some times off, practice their English, get in some time on the slopes or trails, and drive around the crazy Americans (or Australians, or Canadians) for a few days in their car or one they borrow from their mother.    Check out our Driving page for more info on how to go about this.

 

Expectation Management

If you are anticipating a trip to Romania, we assume that you already know their culture is fundamentally different in many ways to those of English-speaking countries.

Frankly, most English speakers simply have not developed the sort of negotiating skills which Europeans, and Romanians in particular, take for granted when entering into a business arrangement.  To Americans, Canadians, Australians, New Zealanders and the English, the various stages of bargaining to set prices and performance are indeed a little foreign.  

The Deal Will Change

Whilst most English speakers will assume that a deal is done once a price is named and someone says "okay", in Romania, you must be aware that deals are rarely fully closed.   With a driver, translator, guide or other service provider in Romania, as conditions and performance requirements change, you'll find that the expectation for you to pay more will also similarly change.   Never mistake this expectation as being dishonest, because by the Romanian culture and accepted norms, it is not.   It is only a factor you must be aware of and also expect to encounter during your rewarding and enriching relationship with your Romanian host.

Memory:  Your Best Ally

Generally speaking, if your new Romanian friend suggests that you need to pay more for something, they're probably not scamming you.  99% of guides are scrupulously honest and it's more a matter of YOU the tourist not really understanding THEIR expectations.   It's usually very effective to remind your Romanian about the previously agreed to deal when "new" costs arise.   You'll be met with one of two reactions generally -- either the accepting shrug, or a loud protest.   Pay attention to the loud protest and accede to their request with grace.   The shrug will tell you that you were sort of being tested to see where your limits lay -- mainly so your Romanian can know better your expections.

Don't Sweat It

One card trumps all in Romania, and that is the fact that you are the boss, sometimes amusingly referred to as "bossu" in Romanian, a derivation of "sefu", or "chief", much like the French word "chef".   And if you're paying, your word goes.  So never fear playing it slightly imperious or, if you are a keen observer of Romanian behaviour, disdainfully snobby.   But do have the good sense to listen to the advice of your Romanian host, who after all, has at least a financial interest in meeting your expectations as much as possible.

 

Demographics

In 2002, it had a population of 387,308 and the population density was 69/km˛, of which over 98% are Romanians, with the biggest minority being the Rromas. 

Economy

The predominant industries in the county are in mining equipment , food and beverages, textile , mechanical components , glass, and timber felling and milling. 
Coal is found and extracted near Motru and Rovinari.  There are two big thermo electrical power plants at Rovinari and Turceni, and some hydro-electrical power plants.  The county is the biggest electricity producer in Romania with 36% of the country's electricity. 
Due to the decrease in mining activity the county has one of the greatest unemployment levels in the country. 

Towns

The two main towns in Gorj are the county seat of Târgu Jiu, and halfway towards Dobreta-Turnu Severin from Târgu Jiu, the little city of Motru. 

There are also six major towns, Rovinari, Bumbeşti-Jiu, Târgu Cărbuneşti, Novaci, Ţicleni, and Tismana, along with 62 communes in County Gorj.

Car license plates start with GJ and the telephone area code for the county is (x53)

Nice place in a quiet town

 

Listed below are some local hotels, guesthouses (B&Bs) and other accommodation in the Gorj area.

Pensiunea Intim, Str. Severinului, nr.2 in Motru
(253) 410270  
Cabana Rânca, Rânca in Rânca
(251) 437187  
Vila Share, Str. Gilort, nr.10 in Rânca
722 140268  
Vila Diana, Rânca in Rânca
740 431551  
Pensiunea Panoramic, Rânca in Rânca
722 281990  
Hotel Onix, Rânca in Rânca
(253) 235011  
Pensiunea Căprioara, Rânca in Rânca
(253) 223822  
Pensiunea Alina, Rânca in Rânca
741 230222  
Vila Ramona, Rânca in Rânca
740 165161  
Pensiunea Chesa Montană, Rânca in Rânca
728 283891  
Pensiunea Papuc, Str. Gilort in Rânca
744 216919  
Cabana Ciuperca, Rânca in Rânca
(253) 235032  
 
The Endless Column in Târgu Jiu

 

 

 
From the Rest Romania Website at

Thanks for Reading our Information about County Gorj, Târgu Jiu, Rânca and the Pâranag Mountains!

Apăsaţi aici pentru o traducere neoficială a Licenţei GNU pentru Documentaţie liberă  în limba română. Versiunea oficială este the "GNU Free Documentation License" în limba engleză