m̌ ḫ's photos with the keyword: Velebit

South Velebit - view from Posedarje

Velebit - view from Stap (860m)

26 May 2021 154
STAP is a large grassy valley with a flat base, surrounded by scenic limestone rock and forests. The most beautiful view of the whole Stap valley can be seen from the rocky Čučavac and from Debeli kuk. Hiking shelter Tatekova koliba on Stap is a nice cottage at the edge of the Stap valley, on the Velebit hiking trail (VPP route) - an ideal starting point for a number of interesting shorter ascents in near surroundings, but also an important overnight shelter on the longitudinal route from Baške Oštarije to Struge. The name Tatekova koliba (Daddy's cottage) comes from the nickname of Slavko Tomerlin, who built and furnished the hut. Water is supplied from narrow cavern, about 30 m from shelter.

Velebit [panorama]

26 May 2021 164
Velebit (Italian: Alpi Bebie) is the largest, though not the highest, mountain range in Croatia. Its highest peak is the Vaganski vrh at 1,757 m. The important characteristic of Velebit is its simple, solid form, stiff cliffs, and the nakedness of seaward side and the wood-covered slopes of the Lika side. The basic geological characteristic of the mountains is karst; flora and fauna are abundant. The whole mountain range is protected as nature park.

Resting

26 May 2021 4 236
credits to Tejka

Where you can see the sea from the mountains

26 May 2021 8 2 304
This is taken on the edge of a picturesque flat karst valley of Stap mountain covered in grasslands. Located along the route of the Velebit Hiking Trail, it is an ideal starting point for a range of climbs in the vicinity, but also serves as an important facility for overnight stays on the trail leading along the mountain from Baške Oštarije to Struge. The meadow is also a very nice viewpoint, with a wide view oriented towards the sea, and the island of Pag.

Window in the mountains

Crow's eye plant

26 May 2021 165
A model of perfect plant symmetry, the four-leaved true lover's knot, in Slovak and Czech known under a popular name crow's eye, inhabits moist shady places, especially in deciduous forests. The plant catches the eye with its delicate, unusually symmetrical yellow-green flowers, which reign over a quartet of broad leaves placed at the top of the stem. Paris quadrifolia, the herb-paris or true lover's knot, is a species of flowering plant in the family Melanthiaceae. It occurs in temperate and cool areas throughout Eurasia, from Spain to Yakutia, and from Iceland to Mongolia. The plant flowers during the months of June and July. It has a solitary flower with four narrow greenish filiform (threadlike) petals, four green petaloid sepals, eight golden yellow stamens, and a round purple to red ovary. The flower is borne above a single whorl of four leaves. Each plant produces at most one blueberry-like berry, which is poisonous, as are other plant tissues. Poisonings are rare because the plant's solitary berry has a repulsive taste that makes it difficult to mistake for a bilberry. In such cases, narrow pupils, diarrhea, irritation of the kidneys are typical. The main poisonous substances of the plant are the saponins paridin and paristyphnine - violent poisons that are poorly absorbed in the digestive system. The medical uses of true lover's knot are already mentioned by the Italian botanist Matthioli in his commentaries on De Materia Medica, a 5-volume work on Dioscorides, a treatise on plants and the medicines that can be obtained from them. The plant is also mentioned in the work of the English botanist and healer John Gerard as an antidote for arsenic and mercury poisoning. This plant has also been used in the past as an anti-inflammatory (e.g. for inflamed wounds) and for headaches. It is now part of many homeopathic remedies.

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