I found out that today, or rather yesterday, that May 26 is World Dracula Day. It is celebrated to remember the day that the famous novel Dracula by Bram Stoker was published (1897). For most of you I am posting this one a day late. However, I found out about it a bit late. Check out VAMP JENN’S CORNER.
It reminded me of our trip to Romania and Transylvania in 2008. During that trip my son and I were inducted into the covenant of Dracula as special protectors of Dracula. Perhaps you could join as well? Viking Blood tastes pretty good and you can buy it at Specs. More on that later. (Photos by me).

First a little bit about Dracula. Prince Vlad “Tepes” Draculea (Vlad the Impaler) known as Dracula was born in Sighisoara, Transylvania, Romania, in 1431. He was the second son of Vlad Dracul (Vlad the Dragon), who became the ruler of Wallachia in 1436. Wallachia is the province to the south of Transylvania. He got the nickname Vlad the Impaler because his favorite method of execution was to impale people, and he is rumored to have impaled tens of thousands. In 1442 the Ottoman Empire tried to invade Transylvania and Vlad Dracul and Vlad Tepes Draculea were imprisoned by the Ottomans. They were able to flee, and Vlad Tepes became the Voivod (ruler) of Wallachia, defender of Transylvania and ultimately the defender of all of Europe. For this reason, Vlad Tepes alias Dracula is a local hero, despite his impalement activities and being rumored to be a vampire.

It was a Water polo team trip. In addition to the kids on the team, including my son Jacob, there was the coach Mihai, and two chaperones, me, and Jim Smith. We arrived in Bucharest (Wallachia) where the boys played water polo against other teams, and we also visited various tourist attractions such as the enormous Palace of the Parliament erected by Communist Dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. We also visited the Snagov island and the Snagov monastery located not far from Bucharest. The Snagov monastery is where Dracula’s grave is located and it is tended to by a monk, Dracula’s monk, and he was extremely happy to welcome us. He had been waiting for us.




Next the monk took us to Dracula’s well and he asked us if we were willing to join the covenant of Dracula as protectors of Dracula. I am not sure if that is the same as the order of the Dragon, the order that Dracula was part of. The monk said that my son was very special. He was the incarnation of the arch angel Gabriel and a special protector of Dracula. I am not sure if that had anything to do with me giving him a good tip earlier. I asked whom I was an incarnation of. The monk answered, no one special, you are just Pedro. I don’t know who Pedro is. Anyway, we drank from Dracula’s well and got inducted into the Dracula’s covenant.

Next, we headed off to Transylvania where we visited the cities of Brasov and Sibiu and the town of Sighisoara. We stayed at a hotel “Casa cu Cerb” built inside the three-story house, at “Piata Muzeului” number 6, where Dracula was born. It was an interesting experience and we got to know the owner well. It is a famous small hotel with only ten guestrooms. We also ate at Dracula’s restaurant next-door. We had brain, not human brains, but cow brains, we aren’t zombies.






We also climbed the Transylvanian mountains and visited the Bran castle. The Bran castle is allegedly Dracula’s castle, but it is not really true. It is more of a tourist trap. The Poienari Castle, which we also visited, was on the other hand built or rather renovated by Dracula.







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Finally, if you would like to learn more about my book and find out where to buy it, click here or here. You can also click the image below to buy it from Amazon. All royalties are donated to the Leonberger Health Foundation International.

39 replies on “Joining the Covenant of Dracula in Transylvania”
This is so cool! I’d love to visit there.
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Thank you Sara. Yes it was a very interesting trip. The Dracula stuff was of course a tourist thing, but it was never crowded, very country side and old fashioned, and not very commercialized which made it feel real, well unless it was. Maybe we really are in the vampire coven?
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Maybe you were. 😂
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Looks like a fascinating tour. Whoa 19 percent mead, that’s strong!
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Thank you Priscilla. I don’t recommend drinking it by yourself like I did. But I slept well that night.
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Too scary for me! I am glad the stray dogs looked pretty healthy.
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Yes the stray dogs around tourist spots were well fed. They just walked up to you and stared at you and then you gave them food, and they were off to the next table. We even bought food to give one of them.
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Hi Thomas, what a great tour of the Dracula related tourist spots you had. Dracula by Bram Stoker is probably my favourite book. Of course, there is speculation that it was Countess Elizabeth Bathory who was considered to be the inspiration for the myth of Dracula. She was a lovely woman who was accused of killing 400 young girls and bathing in their blood.
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I haven’t finished Bram Stoker’s book yet but it is a good book. About Countess Elizabeth Bathory, I’ve heard about her and that is such a horrible story.
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It is amazing to me how people can become so cruel
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Yes it amazes me too
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Wow, this was a fascinating post! I haven’t done much research on Dracula’s origins before, so I definitely learned a great deal. The scenery, courtyard and buildings are beautiful, and the food looks good, too! Thanks for sharing your adventure.
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Thank you so much Damyanti. He is a mysterious and fascinating historical figure. It is hard to know what is myth and what is real. It is strange how different we view Dracula compared to the Transylvanians. That monk who guided us around the monastery really viewed him a great historical figure and a hero. But honestly, I have a hard time viewing it that way.
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This sounds like an amazing journey and I would love to visit Snagov Monastery one of these days. I don’t know much about the Romanian language, but I wonder if, like in Spanish, Pedro is Peter. Peter literally means rock. So it might mean the monk was equating you with the Apostle or perhaps he was saying you were a rock, a foundation for your son. Both of which would be pretty neat. Since he said “no one special” I’m guessing he had somethingcloser to the latter meaning in mind.
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Thank you, yes it was an amazing journey. Everyone visits the Bran Castle, but it is commercialized and touristy, almost like a haunted house or museum at Disney World. It is a medieval castle, but they modernized it and turned it into something that it did not use to be, and Dracula may never have been there. The places that are uniquely Dracula and where you’d likely be alone are the Snagov Monastery, the Poienari Castle, and Sighisoara wasn’t very crowded either. You have an interesting and flattering theory. But considering how happy he seemed to be with me and my son it is plausible. You could only get to the Snagov island via a small rowboat and three of us, me, my son, and a teammate arrived first. While we waited for the others the monk gave us a tour, gave us a history lesson, in quite bad English, and he took a photo of us, and I gave him a tip, 100 Leu, worth about $20.00, which he apparently appreciated very much.
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Admittedly, my theory’s just a guess, but from what you say, it’s clear his reference to “Pedro” was good-natured. I hope you’ll excuse my typo in the previous comment — running together “something closer” — I was making my comment and looked up at the time and realized it was time to leave for a meeting and I managed to hit “Post” before proofing what I’d said!
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I certainly don’t mind typos in comments and I do them all the time. Well unless you sell them on Amazon. I think you might be right. He was not trying to be mean.
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Indeed! Of course, Amazon will actually let you fix typos in your books, so I’m usually happy to go back and correct an issue in the books I’ve published if it’s pointed out.
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I can assure you I have never seen any but I just meant to say that comments and social media are not as important, and personally I don’t care.
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What a great trip and a lovely post. I have to admit, I’m going to have a hard time not calling you Pedro now. 🙂
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Ha ha I guess I am Pedro. Yes it was a great trip. Thank you Denise.
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It was a great tour for you. Thanks for sharing it as also for Dracula story and day.
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Thank Kashual, it was a fun trip.
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I love the pictures! Article very well written.
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Thank you so much Helena
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It must have been an incredible experience. Thank you for sharing it!
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Thank you Jennifer. Yes it was a quite different trip. Mihai, the coach is a local, and that made a big difference.
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I wonder what brain food taste like, hehe! This is such a memorable spooky adventure. I would love to experience this someday! Those are cute doggos!
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Thank you! The brain food was maybe not my thing, but it was a different food culture from what I grew up with (Swedish food). However, they had a lot of potatoes and eggplant.
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What a fascinating trip filled with amazing experiences! I hope to visit Transylvania one day.
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Yes I think it might be a perfect trip for you if you have a local guide, or a guide who understand the subject.
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What a fascinating trip that must have been! Thanks for sharing it online. The legend of Dracula has always intrigued me. Also, I recall a fun movie called “Transylvania 6-5000”, which was filmed in eastern Europe. 🙂 And you have featured the perfect brews. Cheers!
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Thank you so much Debbie. I will lookup that movie. Cheers Debbie.
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Beautiful you sharing you & your families Dracula trip. Wonderful place. All photos are beautiful. Nice photography.
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Thank you so much Mumbai
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You are most welcome!
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Beautiful
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Thank you Vijay
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Oh what a fun and educational post this has been to read Thomass.. Loved the castle and ALL of your photos… We too in England have Whitby where Bram Stoker was inspired to write his novel Dracula.. I have walked up and down the 199 steps to the Abbey many a holiday break in the coastal Yorkshire town of Whitby…
Loved all the information you provided…. What a beautiful part of the world you took your readers too.. 🙂
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