Révfülöp is the kind of place that can be loved in silence. It doesn’t advertise itself, it doesn’t push itself on billboards, but once you find it, you don’t want to leave. For me, one of my best summer afternoons was spent here – sitting on an endlessly long pier with a cold Italian Riesling, a guy playing guitar behind me, and the lake and the sunset in front of me. No one spoke, no one bothered me. Everything was in place.
The beach wasn’t particularly developed, but that’s what made it so natural. There are no beach clubs here – more like little wine bars, little terraces where you can sit down for a splash and be stuck there until the evening. The people are different here too: calmer, friendlier. If you strike up a conversation with someone, it becomes something – not just a polite circle.
In Révfülöp there’s no rush. Here you learn again how to slow down. Nothing can happen for days, but everything happens. Conversations, encounters, good food, evenings on the pier, fine wine, soft music. And maybe that’s what’s so good about it.