For The Love of Travel

My favorite places, photos and stories

August 28, 2023
by Lids
Comments Off on 27/8/2023 Split to Mostar (in Bosnia-Herzegovina)

27/8/2023 Split to Mostar (in Bosnia-Herzegovina)

First stop, the medieval Fortress of Klis, situated above a village bearing the same name. From its origins as a small stronghold built by the Illyrian tribe, becoming a royal castle that was the seat of many Croatian kings, to its final development as a large fortress during the Ottoman wars – Klis Fortress has guarded the frontier, being lost and reconquered several times throughout its more than 2,000 yr old history.

Had a fair wait at the Croatia/Bosnia-Herzegovina border at both the Customs and Police booths….hundreds of cars lined up and only one booth operating. Arggh!

Next to Kravica Waterfall, in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Its a large tufa cascade on the Trebizat River, about 28 metres high with a 120 metre radius lake. Unlike Plitvice, swimming is encouraged! And the water never heats up to more than 20 degrees, so super refreshing on a day like today of 35 degrees!!

Drove past Medugorje village and didn’t stop…its been an unofficial place of Catholic pilgrimage since the Virgin Mary allegedly appeared on Apparition Hill in 1981. Reminded me too much of Lourdes. Ask me about that story one day!!

Arrived in Mostar and I’m staying in the Old Town area again, just a hop, skip from the Mostar Bridge. More about that tomorrow.

August 28, 2023
by Lids
Comments Off on 26/8/2023 Brac Island

26/8/2023 Brac Island

Brač is a Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea. Supetar, the island’s main town, offers a horseshoe-shaped beach and ferries to and from Split. A 50 minute journey with large gulls riding the thermals, accompanying us across.

My first stop is at it’s best known white-pebble beach Zlatni Rat (Golden Horn), a favoured windsurfing site outside the resort town of Bol. The Golden Horn is the most spectacular of all Croatia’s beaches. It’s not just its shape that makes it so beautiful and unique. The pebble beach is surrounded by crystal clear sea, that goes from turquoise blue to dark blue in just 10-20 meters. Like a tongue, it extends almost half a kilometre into the blue sea, and grows by the application and deposition of small gravel pebbles around the submarine reef, and it’s top changes it’s shape, adapting to the rhythm of the waves and sea currents.

Next stop in Bol, is the Dominican monastery, which houses Tintoretto’s ‘Madonna and Child’.

Founded in 1482, this monastery was damaged by the Turks in 1571 and later fortified with a tower. Palms, orange trees, hydrangeas and lavender bloom in the cloister garden, and there’s an interesting little museum packed with fossils, ancient Greek inscriptions, Greek and Roman coins, and beautiful religious icons dating from the 16th to 18th centuries.

Bol’s little port is rather picturesque….with a Renaissance-baroque palace with an art gallery, a square and a castle, and a complex of houses of original folk architecture lining the hillside.

On the recommendation of Trip Advisor customers, decided to pop in for lunch at the Kopacina restaurant, in Donji Humac. Glowing reviews about its Brac cuisine, especially lamb. A lovely terrace setting as well. And you know how I (guiltily) love lamb! Well I must say the sous-vide lamb was extraordinary 😱. So delish!! And no need for dinner after that helping!

Last stop, the pretty harbour of Bobovisca with crystal clear water, that was originally built for the ships of the Emperor Diocletian.

A fantastic day, really loved that little island.

August 26, 2023
by Lids
Comments Off on 25/8/2023 Split

25/8/2023 Split

Another early morning start to beat the heat and crowds….to see the main draw card in Split – Diocletian’s Palace. It’s an ancient palace built for the Roman Emperor at the turn of the fourth century AD, which today forms about half the old town of Split. While it is referred to as a “palace” because of its intended use as the retirement residence of Diocletian, about half of it was for Diocletian’s personal use, and the rest housed the military garrison. Gaius Aurelius Valerius Diocletianus (nickname “Jovius”), was known for restoring government efficiency after the near anarchy of the 3rdC. His reorganisation of the fiscal, administrative, and military machinery of the empire, laid the foundation for the Byzantine Empire in the East and temporarily shored up the decaying empire in the West.

I particularly liked the shape of the vestibule (in a rotunda form), which was once the first section of the imperial corridor in the Palace that led to the Imperial apartments.

Diocletian was adamant in appropriating the Egyptian custom of having a sphinx, the guardian of holy grounds, guarding the entrance to temples and tombs. On his orders, 12 sphinxes were shipped from Egypt to adorn the palace facades. 

Last stop for the day, the Mestrovic Gallery. Ivan Mestrovic, 1883-1962, displayed a carving talent from a young age. He studied formally at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and his graduation iin 1901, marked the beginning of a brilliant artistic career, with subsequent exhibitions in Europe’s cultural centres. He traveled throughout Europe and studied the works of ancient and Renaissance masters, especially Michelangelo and French sculptors such as Auguste Rodin. 

The bible; folk epics; his incarceration by the Ustache in WW2 and his longing for peace and harmony, also formed the well of inspiration for his works.