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Related question «Excursions»
What else can you see?
Dear lovers of the Carpathians! Please tell me how far from Yaremche (we want to stop there) is the village of Lumshory, what mode of transport can be used to get there? I would very much like to visit Lumshory and plunge into a vat of mineral water, and then into a mountain river! And one more question: 1.5 years ago we rested in Yaremche, we liked everything very, very much. This year we would like to go again, but visit excursions that we have not yet been on. Of the proposed excursions, we have previously visited: Kolomyia (Museum "Pysanki"), the Museum of National Musical Instruments of Roman Kumlyk, Bukovel, "Manyavsky Skit", "Center of Europe", salt lakes Solotvino, waterfalls "Guk" and "Manyavsky", and, accordingly, attractions who met along the way. What else is interesting that we have not seen?
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2 subscribers  • asked 2011-04-2213 years ago
Answers  •  6
аватар jabetta
Another interesting and very beautiful lake is Synevyr.
аватар hatinka
Lumshory is far from Yaremche - 5 hours by car. 300 km. Yaremche-Rakhiv-Khust-Svalyava-Poroshkovo-Lumshory. Part of the road is of excellent quality, and part is of poor quality. In addition, if you already go there, then by any means you will pass through the village of Turi Remety. It's just not possible to miss it! In this village, traditional dishes are frog legs and turtle soup. And this is not a tourist place, but they really serve these delicacies in cafes. From local raw materials. Many in the village catch frogs (rare ones at that) and cook all sorts of dishes according to local recipes! March-April is the season!
So don't miss it ;-)
аватар hatinka
Synevyr is also far away, even though Google meps gives 3.5 hours. But having looked at the proposed ways of getting there, I will say this: there is no one road at all, a mistake, this is the Komsomolsk-Kolochava section. The second way is along rural mountain roads, it will be far from 3.5 hours, 5-6 hours, taking into account spring, it may not work out like that at all.
As for me, not a bad town of Ust-Chernaya. True, the roads there are also not so hot, but the town is beautiful, with an interesting history, located among the mountains. It was founded at the end of the 18th century by Austrian migrants from Tyrol. Until the middle of the twentieth century, the majority of the population were Austrians, after mass emigration at the moment there are practically none left. At the entrance to the village there was a sign with the former name - "Königsfeld". There are several signs in German. And that's it ;-)
аватар hatinka
To Ust-Chernaya about 3 hours - through Rakhiv, Teresva.
You should also climb Mount Hoverla (Yaremche-Vorohta-sport base Zaroslyak) - You have already seen almost everything in those places, it's time to take our highest peak ;-)
аватар hatinka
It is also worth trying a tour of the narrow-gauge railway in the Carpathians (1898). The train includes a locomotive, which has 12 places for tourists, where you can watch the driver at work, and 2 cars for different tastes of tourists: a closed car with comfortable seats, a cabriolet car, as well as an open platform for fun and photo hunting.
On the way, the guide will tell you about the history and greatness of the network of narrow gauge railways, their purpose and how it was possible to reconstruct the last narrow gauge railway line in the Carpathian region. The route includes stops near the bridge over the Mizunka River, mineral water springs "Goryanka", the hanging swamp Shirkovets, Oak Kut station and near the Mizunsky waterfall cascade. The Carpathian tram crosses four bridges.
Brings there groups of Yarko Kozak (Unique Ukraine) - I can give contacts, if anything.
This is Dolinsky district, Ivano-Frankivsk region.
In Ust-Chernaya, by the way, the narrow-gauge railway was dismantled quite recently, in 2004. The old rails themselves are still there, but they no longer work :-(
аватар hatinka
Yes, they call this narrow-gauge railway (which works and where groups of tourists are taken) - the Carpathian tram. Probably heard. This is the village of Vygoda, Dolinsky district, Ivano-Frankivsk region.
Also in the Carpathians there are many remnants of military operations of World War 1-2 in the form of pillboxes, bunkers, bunkers, trenches and military cemeteries. This, of course, is very amateurish, but there is.
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