I'll answer in English; I'll hope you'll understand.
I have the same problem, and what I do is to group intransitive/transitive pairs according to their pattern (-iro -> -osu, -eru -> -asu, -eru -> -yasu. -u -> -asu, etc.), and then I learn them together, as a pair. There's maybe a dozen patterns, but you still have to learn them. It's like learning strong verbs in English, you need to learn all three forms. There's no simple rule.
Some webpages have lists of some verbs and the patterns, e.g.:
http://thejapanesepage.com/w/index.php?title=Intransitive/Transitive_verb
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Japanese/Grammar/Transitivity
but I make up my own lists as I learn new verbs. If you have an electronic dictionary that allows to look up words by initial kanji, finding pairs is easy.
One shortcut is that verbs ending in -su are always transitive, but that still doesn't tell you which pattern to use to find the intransitive partner.