Transylvania

Carpathian wolf.
© B&C Promberger
© B&C Promberger
There are not too many places that evoke spookiness more than Transylvania, the fictional lair of Count Dracula, werewolves and blood-sucking vampires.
But contrary to popular belief, there is no Dracula (although the literary character may have been based on 15th century Romanian prince, Vlad III, the son of Vlad Dracul), no werewolves (just wolves) and no vampire bats (more like small harmless church-roosting bats).Actually, Transylvania, in western Romania along the Hungarian border, is one of the most beautiful natural regions in Europe surrounded by the forests and streams of the Carpathian Mountains.

Land across the forest
Transylvania, translated from Latin, means "the land across the forest”. The land they are talking about are the green forests of the Carpathian Mountains.Arching across 7 countries - from the Czech Republic, across Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine and Hungary, and down to Romania and the tip of Serbia - the Carpathians are Europe's last great wilderness area.
Here one find's half of Europe's populations of bears, wolves and lynx, and is home to one of the last remaining stands of old growth forests.

Vampire bats
I've come to suck your blood...
- Vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) do exist but they don’t live in Transylvania or anywhere close. They live in Central and South America.
- Vampire bats have a wingspan of about 20cm and a body about the size of an adult's thumb. Because of their small size, they only drink about a tablespoon of blood each night.
- Vampire bats feed on the blood of large birds, cattle, horses and pigs. They don’t actually "suck" blood but use their blade-like upper incisors to make tiny cuts in the skin of a sleeping animal.
