From Huedin, a minor road heads 9km south to the village of
Calata
(Nagykalota), where on Sundays the Magyar population still wear their home-made
folk costumes
, and on to the nearby village of
Calatele
(Kiskalota), where you'll see carved wooden homesteads. Sixteen kilometres beyond (connected to Huedin by daily three buses) is
BELIS
(Jósikafalva), where a resort (tel 064/116 905) is sited beside the artificial Lake Fântânele: it comprises two identical two-star hotels (the
Bianca
and the
Radu
; both tel 064/432 242 or 254 183), and a handful of homestays (bookable through Antrec in Cluj). Youth hostel accommodation is also available (May-Sept) at the
Popas Turistic Bradet
(tel 064/147 206; under $6), right next to the resort; there's no campsite but the hotels will allow you to pitch a tent. The new
Cabana Mihat
(under $6) is a couple of kilometres north at
Dealul Negru
.
MANASTIRENI
(Magyargyeromonostor) lies to the southeast of Huedin, on a minor road south from the DN1. The village has a lovely thirteenth-century walled church whose gallery, pews and ceiling were beautifully painted in the eighteenth century; homestays can be arranged here through Green Mountain Holidays. Just west of here is
Valeni
(Magyarvalkó), where many of the houses have decorated mouldings. Its thirteenth-century Calvinist church has a wonderful hill-top setting and a collection of typically Magyar carved wooden graveposts.
In the valleys to the north of Huedin there are half a dozen villages with striking
wooden churches
- examples of the Gothic-inspired wooden churches which once reared above peasant settlements from the Tisa to the Carpathians. The most spectacular, and the nearest to Huedin, towers over
Fildu de Sus
(Felsófüld), a small village reached by a 10km track west from Fildu de Jos (Alsófüld) on the Huedin-Zalau road; two buses a day run from Huedin to Fildu de Sus, and Huedin-Zalau buses pass through Fildu de Jos. Built in 1727, the church was painted in 1860, with scenes of Daniel in the den with some wonderful grinning lions. The oldest of the wooden churches, erected during the sixteenth century, is at
Zimbor
(Magyarzsombor), a further 20km north along the Huedin-Zalau road. Later churches show developing flourishes, such as the purely decorative arcades at
Sânmihaiu Almasului
(Almásszentmihály), 5km north of Zimbor. From here a minor road heads north to Jibou, passing through
Hida
(Hídalmás) after 4km, and
Racâs
(Almásrákos), a further 6km north, whose churches are distinguished by carved columns and old murals.