Hungary

  • On the puszta, men still ride standing on five horses

    On the puszta, men still ride standing on five horses

    On Hortobágy, Europe’s last great steppe, a way of life persists that exists nowhere else on the continent. The csikós riders in their deep blue shirts, the grey Hungarian cattle with horns wide enough to span five feet, and the racka sheep with their spiralling corkscrew horns — all of it is still here, not as a museum exhibit, but as ordinary work.

    Nature · Hungary

    It is half past seven on an October morning, and I am standing on the Nine-Holed Bridge in Hortobágy. In front of me the puszta stretches out, flat and infinite, until sky meets grass with not a single tree on which to rest the eye. A single rider appears in the distance — first a dark dot, then a silhouette in deep blue shirt and a wide-brimmed hat. He is moving a herd of grey cattle towards a gémeskút, one of the traditional shadoof wells still in use on the plain. It is not a performance. It is his work.


    Europe’s last real steppe

    Hortobágy National Park sits in eastern Hungary, between the Tisza river and the city of Debrecen, and covers 800 square kilometres. It is Hungary’s first national park — established in 1973 — and since 1999 a UNESCO World Heritage site, classified as a “cultural landscape”. It is Europe’s largest semi-natural grassland and the westernmost reach of the 8,000-kilometre Eurasian steppe that runs all the way to eastern China.

    That matters for how you experience the place. When you stand on the puszta, you are in the same kind of landscape that pastoral peoples have moved through for more than four thousand years. UNESCO inscribed the area not because it is untouched nature — it isn’t — but because it is a working cultural landscape, where humans and animals have lived together so long that their way of doing things is part of the land itself.

    It is a rare classification. It says: this is not wilderness, but neither is it agriculture. It is something third, older, and almost gone from Europe. Only here, on certain Spanish dehesa lands and Romanian mountain steppes, does anything similar still exist.


    The men in blue

    Csikós is the Hungarian word for horse-herders — the men who have traditionally watched over the horse herds on the puszta. Their uniform is not a tourist construction: it is working dress that took its form over centuries. The deep blue shirt and loose blue trousers, the black velvet waistcoat, the wide-brimmed hat with a crane feather in the band — all functional, all from the landscape they work in.

    The most famous riding feat is the Puszta Five. A horseman stands upright on the backs of two rear horses while driving three lead horses ahead of him — five horses, one man, no reins, only voice and whip. It was developed in the nineteenth century, but its origin is the so-called betyár tradition: the highwaymen who lay flat with their horses on the plain to evade the gendarmerie. When you lie flat in tall grass on a flat puszta, you are quite literally invisible.

    Today the Puszta Five has become a performance, but the technique is the same. And when you watch it done by a rider who learned it from his father, who learned it from his father, you feel the difference between an act and an inheritance.


    Animals that almost disappeared

    Hortobágy is home to four breeds, each of which came close to extinction in the twentieth century, and each of which is preserved here by deliberate choice.

    The Hungarian Grey Cattle — szürke marha — is an ancient breed with horns spanning up to a metre and a half, and a silver-grey coat that makes them look like ghosts in the morning mist. They were near extinction in the 1960s; today the herd is over 30,000. They gave the world the word for Hungarian goulash — gulyás means cattle herder.

    Racka sheep are Hortobágy’s other emblem: small, white, with striking spiralling horns that twist upwards like corkscrews. The Nonius horse, originally bred for the Austro-Hungarian cavalry, is now primarily a working horse for the csikós. And finally: the Przewalski’s horse, the only truly wild horse species in the world, was reintroduced here in the 1990s. About 25 animals live freely in a fenced area of the park.

    It is these four animals — the cattle, the sheep, the working horse and the wild horse — that make Hortobágy more than a nature reserve. It is a living catalogue of breeds that ordinary agriculture pushed out long ago.


    The Nine-Holed Bridge and the eighteenth century

    In the middle of the park, where the road between Debrecen and Budapest crosses the small Hortobágy river, sits Kilenclyukú híd — the Nine-Holed Bridge. Built in 1827–1833, it is Hungary’s longest stone road bridge of the nineteenth century, with nine arches mirrored in the still water of the river below. It is one of the most photographed motifs in all of Hungary — and a fully functional piece of infrastructure that cattle are still driven across on market days.

    Right beside it stands Hortobágyi Csárda, an inn from 1781 where salt caravans paused on their way from Transylvania to Vienna. Today it is still a working tavern serving Hungarian goulash, slambuc (a shepherd’s dish of potatoes and bacon cooked in a single pot) and pörkölt. It is not a gourmet experience. It is an experience of what the puszta has eaten for two hundred years.


    The quiet of the morning, the birds of autumn

    Hortobágy is one of Europe’s most important areas for migratory birds. More than 340 bird species are recorded here, and every autumn — particularly from September to November — up to 100,000 cranes gather in the park’s shallow lakes on their way south. It is a sound so distinctive that locals still rise in the dark to witness the arrival. Trumpet-like calls from thousands of birds settling on the water at dusk.

    The bird season is one of three real reasons to plan a journey to Hortobágy. The other two are spring’s birthing season, when the grey calves are released onto the plain, and the annual Hídi vásár — the bridge market — in August, when the puszta’s herders bring their animals to town in a tradition unbroken since the Middle Ages.


    Where to stay

    Hortobágy is not a place of large hotels, and that is part of the point. Hortobágyi Pásztormúzeum Vendégház in Hortobágy village itself is a small guesthouse run by a family with csikós ancestry, where you can be shown around by people whose grandfather rode horses on these fields. Epona Lovas Hotel in Máta, next to the main stud farm, is built specifically for horse-minded guests — rooms overlook the paddock, and riding programmes cater to both beginners and experienced riders.

    For those who want a little more comfort and a working city next door, Aquaticum Hotel in Debrecen, forty minutes away, is a good choice. Debrecen is Hungary’s second city, has one of the country’s best university atmospheres, and combines well with day trips into the puszta.


    Avoid

    The short bus excursion from Budapest with fifty other passengers and ninety minutes on the puszta before being driven back. The puszta only works when you give it a full day — preferably two. The light at dawn and dusk is what makes the place extraordinary; midday in July is just a flat landscape in 35-degree heat.

    Skip high summer in general if you can. May–June and September–October are the right seasons. Spring for new animals and flowers, autumn for the migratory birds and the deep golden light.

    And finally: don’t treat the csikós shows at the Máta stud farm as the main event of the trip. They are good, but the real life of the puszta happens outside the performances. Book a private carriage ride or an outing with a local csikós, and you’ll come much closer to what you came for.


    Arrivals from the Nordic capitals

    TravelTalk is a Nordic publication. Here is how Nordic readers reach Hortobágy.

    From Copenhagen: Direct to Budapest with Wizz Air, Ryanair and LOT, around 2 hours. From Budapest it is a two-hour drive to Hortobágy along the motorway towards Debrecen. Train from Budapest Keleti to Hortobágy via Füzesabony takes about three hours.

    From Oslo: Direct to Budapest with Norwegian and Wizz Air, around 2 hours 30 minutes. Norwegian travellers may notice that Hortobágy’s flat landscape is the absolute opposite of Norwegian nature — and precisely for that reason, an experience that lingers.

    From Stockholm: Direct to Budapest with SAS, Wizz Air and Ryanair, around 2 hours 15 minutes. Sweden has a long tradition of horse breeding and equestrian culture, and Hortobágy gives Swedish travellers a rare chance to encounter a European horse tradition fundamentally different from the Nordic one.

    From Helsinki: Direct to Budapest with Wizz Air and Finnair, around 2 hours 30 minutes. For Finnish travellers there is a linguistic curiosity worth noting: Hungarian and Finnish are distant relatives in the Finno-Ugric language family. Many Hungarian words sound oddly familiar to Finnish ears — not enough to understand, but enough to notice.

    Local transport: A rental car is the best solution. The puszta is large, and distances matter. Hertz and Sixt have desks at Debrecen airport (DEB), which has seasonal flights from several European cities.


    Factbox: practical Hortobágy

    Season: May–June for green plains and births. September–November for migratory birds and the golden autumn light. August for the Hídi vásár market at the Nine-Holed Bridge. Avoid July and the first half of August — the heat is too hard, and the light is flat.

    Language: English at the better hotels and tourist facilities. Hungarian is not easy to pick up on the fly, but even a “köszönöm” (thank you) is met with warmth.

    Currency: Hungarian forint (HUF). Check current rates when planning — it has been volatile in recent years.

    Hotels mentioned: Hortobágyi Pásztormúzeum Vendégház (Hortobágy village). Epona Lovas Hotel (Máta). Aquaticum Hotel (Debrecen).

    Máta Stud Farm: Tours daily from spring to autumn. Horse shows at 10am and 2pm. Book at the entrance or online.

    Hortobágy National Park visitor centre: Petőfi tér 9, Hortobágy. The best overview of the entire area, and the place to arrange private tours with csikós guides.



    This article is for: Nature · Culture · Hungary · Central Europe · UNESCO · Horses · Pastoral heritage · Slow travel

  • Visit Budapest, Hungary

    Visit Budapest, Hungary

    Budapest — one of Europe’s great city break destinations

    Budapest is one of those cities that earns its reputation. Divided by the Danube into hilly Buda on the west and flat, energetic Pest on the east, it offers a rare combination: grand imperial architecture, a thriving food and bar scene, thermal baths with centuries of tradition, and a river setting that ranks among the most dramatic in Europe.

    Budapest in a new chapter

    In April 2026, something happened that many Hungarians had stopped daring to hope for: an election that changed everything. After 16 years, Viktor Orbán left power — and Budapest celebrated the way only this city can, with music by the Danube, tears on the bridges, and a sense that the country is pointing somewhere new.

    Budapest has always been beautiful. But there is something special about visiting a city that has just found its courage again.

    What to see in Budapest

    Budapest rewards time. The major sights are genuinely world-class — not just “impressive for Eastern Europe” but impressive by any standard. Here are the highlights.

    The Hungarian Parliament

    One of the most beautiful parliament buildings in the world, full stop. The neo-Gothic structure sits directly on the Danube embankment and is best viewed from the Pest side at dusk, when the facade glows. Guided tours take you inside to see the grand staircase, the ceremonial hall, and the Hungarian Crown Jewels.

    St. Stephen’s Basilica

    The largest church in Hungary and a landmark of Budapest’s skyline. The neo-classical interior is striking, and the small chapel holding the mummified right hand of Hungary’s first king — Saint Stephen — is one of those genuinely strange and memorable sights. The gardens around the basilica are a calm retreat from the city.

    The Hungarian State Opera

    One of the finest opera houses in Europe, built in the late 19th century and restored to its full glory. Even if you’re not attending a performance, the guided tour is excellent. Ticket prices for actual performances are remarkably reasonable compared to Vienna or Prague — and the quality is world-class.

    The Hungarian National Museum

    A deep and well-curated collection tracing Hungarian history from prehistoric times through the 20th century. The sections on the 1956 uprising and the communist era are particularly powerful — essential context for understanding the country you’re visiting.

    Dohány Street Synagogue

    The largest synagogue in Europe and the second-largest in the world, built in 1859 in a striking Moorish-Byzantine style. The memorial garden behind the synagogue — with its weeping willow sculpture commemorating Jewish victims of the Second World War — is one of the most moving sites in Budapest.

    Fisherman’s Bastion

    Seven neo-Romanesque towers on the Buda hillside, offering one of the finest views over the Danube and Pest. Arrive early morning to avoid crowds and catch the city in low light. The bastion sits directly beside Matthias Church, so the two are easily visited together.

    Matthias Church

    A Gothic church dating to the 13th century, famous for its geometric patterned roof tiles and richly decorated interior. One of Budapest’s most iconic landmarks and a fine example of Hungarian Gothic architecture at its most ornate.

    The thermal baths

    Budapest’s thermal bath culture is not a tourist gimmick — it is genuinely woven into the city’s daily life. The Széchenyi baths in Városliget Park and the Gellért baths on the Buda side are the most famous, both housed in magnificent early 20th-century buildings. An afternoon in a thermal bath is one of the great Budapest experiences.

    Gellért Hill Cave Chapel

    A small chapel carved directly into the rock face of Gellért Hill — quiet, free to enter, and easy to miss. Combine it with a walk up the hill to the citadel for one of the best panoramic views of the city.

    The ruin bars

    Budapest’s ruin bars emerged after 2001 when artists began converting crumbling buildings in the old Jewish Quarter into improvised venues. The result is a nightlife scene unlike anything in Western Europe: multi-courtyard complexes filled with mismatched furniture, street art, and concert stages inside buildings that look deliberately unrestored. Szimpla Kert on Kazinczy Street is the original and most atmospheric — it operates as a bar and live music venue by night and hosts a Sunday farmers market that draws local families as much as tourists. An evening that starts in Szimpla and moves through the VII district covers more ground than any guided tour.

    Where to eat

    For traditional Hungarian cooking, Kárpátia on Ferenciek tere occupies a 19th-century hall and serves goulash and chicken paprikash without self-consciousness. Gundel in City Park is the historic grand restaurant — the Hungarian equivalent of a national institution. For a quick lunch, the lángos stands near the Central Market Hall are mandatory: fried dough with sour cream and cheese, cheap and genuinely good.

    At the top end, Costes on Ráday Street was the first Hungarian restaurant to receive a Michelin star. Borkonyha Winekitchen — also Michelin-starred — pairs modern Hungarian cuisine with an exceptional wine list. Both offer tasting menus at prices well below equivalent Michelin-starred restaurants in Paris or London.

    Where to stay

    The Four Seasons Hotel Gresham Palace occupies a restored Art Nouveau masterpiece directly on the Chain Bridge approach — one of the most architecturally significant hotels in Europe, at rates lower than equivalent Four Seasons properties in Western capitals. The Aria Hotel Budapest on Hajós Street is a music-themed boutique property consistently ranked among Europe’s top small luxury hotels, with a rooftop bar overlooking St. Stephen’s Basilica. The Kempinski Hotel Corvinus combines a central Pest address with serious facilities and one of the better hotel restaurants in the city.

    When to go

    April, May, September and October are Budapest at its best — mild temperatures, manageable crowds, and the city in full cultural season. The Christmas market from late November through December transforms Vörösmarty Square into one of Central Europe’s finest festive settings. July and August are busy and hot; January and February are cold, quiet, and cheap — the opera is in full season and the major sights require no advance queuing.

    Day trips from Budapest

    Budapest sits within reach of three destinations that extend any trip well beyond the capital. Szentendre, a Baroque artists’ town on the Danube bend 20 kilometres north, is 40 minutes by HÉV suburban rail from Batthyány tér. The town has a working Serbian Orthodox church community dating from the 18th century, a concentration of small art galleries, and a riverside main square that earns its reputation without much effort. It is a half-day, not a full day — arrive by 10:00 to have the streets before the tour groups, leave by early afternoon.

    Eger, 130 kilometres northeast, is the centre of Hungarian wine production — Egri Bikavér (Bull’s Blood) and the white Egri Csillag are made in the valleys here. The town has a castle, a well-preserved Baroque centre, and a valley of wine cellars cut directly into the volcanic tuff (the Szépasszony Valley) where you can taste production from a dozen producers in an afternoon. Direct trains from Keleti station take under two hours. If Budapest is the context for Hungarian wine, Eger is the source.

    Lake Balaton — Central Europe’s largest lake, 80 kilometres southwest by train — works best as an overnight rather than a day trip, though the southern shore towns are 90 minutes from Keleti on the fast InterCity service. The northern shore is more interesting: volcanic hill country, old-vine Olaszrizling from the Badacsony appellation, and a slower pace that contrasts sharply with the capital. In summer, the lake is the weekend destination for every Hungarian family within range. In September, it empties out and the wine harvest begins.

    Getting around

    Budapest has one of the most functional public transport systems in Central Europe. The M1 metro line — the oldest on the continent after London’s Underground, built in 1896 and still operating its original shallow route under Andrássy Avenue — connects the city centre to Heroes’ Square directly. The M2 and M3 lines cross the city east-west and north-south respectively. Trams 2 and 2A run along the Pest riverbank with views of the Buda Castle district that no bus tour can replicate — ride them after dark. A 24-hour travel card covers all metro, tram, trolleybus, and bus lines within the city boundary and costs around 1,650 HUF (approximately €4). Bolt and Uber both operate and are reliable; taxis from the official Főtaxi rank at Keleti station are metered and honest. Walking between inner Pest neighbourhoods is nearly always the best option — the VII district ruin bar area, the Great Market Hall, Vörösmarty Square, and the Chain Bridge approach are all within 20 minutes on foot of each other.

    Budapest in brief

    Budapest is Hungary’s economic, historical and cultural capital with around 2 million inhabitants and 2.7 million visitors annually. The city’s unique character comes from its dual nature — the monumental and the intimate, the imperial and the neighbourhood — and from a history that has made Budapestians resilient, ironic, and exceptionally good at enjoying themselves.

    Factbox: Hungary

    Capital: Budapest
    Currency: Hungarian Forint (HUF)
    Population: approx. 9.7 million
    Prime Minister: Péter Magyar (from May 2026)
    Language: Hungarian
    EU member: Yes, since 2004

    Travel to Hungary

    Direct flights to Budapest operate from major Scandinavian airports year-round. Hungary is well suited to independent travel — Budapest is compact and walkable, and the rest of the country is easily reached by train or hire car.

    See our complete guide to Hungary here

    Learn about Hungary wines on Winetalk.dk