Fast Times in Slovenia
Alpine Peaks, Amazing Caves, Mountain Villages
Story and photos by Lee Juillerat

High on Adventure, July 2017

 

       Alpine peaks and mountain villages. A totally charming, architecturally intriguing capital. Surreal cave systems. A sublime Adriatic coastal city.

Downtown Lubljana fun
Fun times in Ljubljana, Slovenia's capital

       Two weeks in Slovenia proved well beyond my high expectations, but two weeks was not enough. I didn't visit any wineries, spend time at its most visited lake or, disappointingly, climb the country's cherished mountain.

Slovenia's Julian Alps
The Julian Alps tower over the country

       Slovenia, formerly part of Yugoslavia, is one of Europe's least known countries. Ask most folks and they'll reply with a Where's Waldo? double-take.  I did. What I learned is that Slovenia is a country of two million. Geographically, however, Slovenia is only the size of New Jersey. It's bordered by Italy, Austria, Hungary, Croatia and the Adriatic Ocean. The mountains, part of the Julian Alps, channel Switzerland. Piran is a coastal city often called a little Venice.

  Boats cruise the Ljubljana River   Rainy day bicyclist   Ljubljana  
 
Boats cruise the Ljubljana River
 
Rainy day bicyclist
 
Old Town from Ljubljana Castle
 

       Ljubljana, Slovenia's capital and largest city, focuses around an Old Town with a hilltop castle, lively central market and distinctly different bridges that cross over the emerald green Ljubljana River. The city is also the home of Park Tivoli, delicious eateries and gracious historic buildings, obelisks and statues.

Mount Triglav Slovenia
Ragged, rugged Mount Triglav

       But Slovenia's focal point is Mount Triglav. At an elevation of 9,395, it's the tallest mountain in Slovenia and the Julian Alps. It's part of the national consciousness because it's visible from throughout the country. It's a mountain so embedded in Slovenia's persona that a former president declared it the duty of every Slovenian to climb it at least once in their life.

       Slovenians take it to heart. Trails to its summit - some challenging, others accessible by people in good fitness - are reportedly jammed, especially at the final elbow-to-elbow final section fitted with cables and pitons, in the peak climbing months of July and August. Most people I asked - male or female, young or old - had visited Triglav's summit, often several times.

  River slices through a deep gorge, Slovenia   Wooden bridge crosses the Soca River  
 
The River slices through a deep gorge
 
Wooden bridge crosses the Soca River
 
         
  Lake Bohinj, Slovenia   Hiking in Vrsic Pass  
 
Beautiful Lake Bohinj
 
Hiking in Vrsic Pass
 

       Much of my visit was spent touring Triglav National Park. Because it's not contiguous, Triglav seems like three or four different parks. Along with ragged, jagged, dramatically upthrust mountains, the park's highlands feature fields of gaily-colored wildflowers, lush green forests, plunging waterfalls, boisterously tumbling rivers and wooden bridges that teeter across gorgeous gorges.

Slovenia wildflowers   Slovenia wildflowers   Slovenia wildflowersWildflowers, including Lady's Slipper and Alpine Iris, brighten fields

       There's also a Heidi-like alpine village at Klek Pasture. Another park region features the Pocar Homestead. Pocar's highlight is a stone-built house with rooms filled with gritty reminders of past eras, including a hisna kamra, or bedroom, with the date 1775 inscribed on its ceiling, and a "black kitchen," with its walls and ceiling blackened and tarred by  years of grimy creosote.

  Klek Pasture, Slovenia   Black kitchen, Slovenia  
 
Klek Pasture
 
Black kitchen
 

       Unlike U.S. national parks, most of Triglav National Park is privately owned. Within the park are homes,  villages, farms, resorts and eateries. There are also downhill and cross country ski areas. Within or just outside its boundaries are churches and cemeteries with headstones, some dating back to the 1700s, others remembering men killed during the brutal World Wars I and II and other conflicts. There are villages like Trenta, populated with proud people like Marko Pretner, whose families have occupied the same lands for 10 generations or longer.

Cemetery near Tresta
Cemetery near Tresta

       People like Pretner, proudly tell tales of life past and present in the villages and mountains, of myths about unicorns and gold-horned goats, and stories about dragon-slaying Jason and the Argonauts. There are legends about places like the Tolmin Gorge, where the river's color is mellowed a soft blue from the limestone mountains, and about how it served as the setting for Ernest Hemingway's epic, "A Farewell to Arms," and is said to be the place where Dante found inspiration for his "Divine Comedy." Peter Skobernne, a former Triglav park director, said it doesn't matter if tales, myths and legends are factual. As he explained, "I don't care if the story is correct if it has a powerful message."

  Dragon at Dragon Bridge   Farmer's market  
 
Dragon at Dragon Bridge
 
Farmers market
 

       Other sorts of messages were heard or sensed in other areas of the surprisingly diverse country. Each of my four days in Ljubljana provided insights of its diverse charms. My hotel room in Piran overlooked  the Adriatic Ocean and was steps away from a plaza where a symphonic orchestra made an evening performance.

Postojna Cave, Slovenia     Postojna Cave in SloveniaPostojna Cave is surreal

Skoejan Caves, Slovenia
Skoejan Caves

       Slovenia is also a country bisected by caves. Postojna Cave is surreal. With an underground train accessing underground rooms with so many intricate features - chandelier-like stalactites and spaghetti-like stalagmites - it felt like Disneyland. Skojan Cave, its features shaped by a river that runs through it, might have inspired J.R.R. Tolkien's Hobbits. And Predjama Castle, a fortress carved into a steep hillside cave that was occupied by a Slovenian "Robin Hood," whose death is the stuff of legend, also reflects that Disneyland fantasy.

Predjama Castle, Slovenia
Predjama Castle

       Although Slovenia is a relatively young country - it gained its independence from Yugoslavia in 1991 - its history dates back to the 5th Century BC and a succession of rulers, from ancient Rome to the Ottoman Empire to Stalin and Tito. Through the centuries, generations of storytellers have passed along tales and myths, many of them with several variations.

       Based on my experiences, a version of one Slovenian legend personally rang true. It says that when God was creating the world he gave out land for all the people, then realized one small group wasn't included. So, to make amends, "God gave to Slovenia what he had planned to save for himself."

  Author on the ledge to the headwaters of the Soca River    Author wears Slovenian knight helmet  
 
Lee on the ledge to the headwaters of the Soca River 
 
Appearing Knight Lee

 

About the Author
       Lee Juillerat is a semi-retired newspaper reporter-photographer who lives in Southern Oregon. He is a frequent contributor to newspapers and magazines, including Southern Oregon Magazine, Alaska Beyond and others. He is the author of several books, including two about Crater Lake National Park, one about Lava Beds National Monument. He can be contacted at 337lee337@charter.net

     
 
 
 
     
     
 

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