Museums & History

Museums & History

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Museums And History

Kobarid Museum
Kobarid Museum

Unique demonstrations of fights and life during the 1st world war, the exhibits, the rich photo material, and the multi-vision projection tell the touching story of hard and bloody days next to the River Soča, which were also remembered by the famous Ernest Hemingway and Erwin Rommel…

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Kajznik House
Kajznik House

The house is a well-preserved example of rural architecture and was long the home of a typical middle-class farming family. Notable features include the escape room, the stonework door casing, as well as the frescoes of St. Florian and sundial on the exterior walls. The house is furnished with authentic period furniture…

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Liznjek House
Liznjek House

Liznjek’s house in the center of Kranjska Gora was built in the second half of the 17th century. Its design was one of the most advanced types of architecture in our country, and today it is seen mainly as a prototype of an authentic Slovenian Alpine house. The facade of the house is decorated with a fresco, sewn edges, and a tassel ornament…

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Museums & History
Slovenian Alpine Museum

The Slovenian Alpine Museum is a mountaineering museum in Mojstrana near Triglav National Park. It was opened on 7 August 2010 by the president of Slovenia, Danilo Türk. It has a rich collection of items with diverse historical stories, rich photographic and archive material, and a comprehensive professional booklet that give the visitor a chance to…

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Planica Museum
Planica Museum

The museum is located in the Planica Nordic Center. It contains the heritage of Slovenian Nordic skiing, through which you can learn about the heroes of the world’s jumping elite, the technical development of the ski jump, the equipment that was used in individual periods, and a lot of other interesting things about the development of ski flights…

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Russian Chapel
Russian Chapel

The chapel, dedicated to St. Vladimir, was built during the First World War by Russian prisoners of war who were in this area for forced labor – building a road over a mountain pass. It serves both as a war memorial and a symbolic link between Slovenia and Russia. Worth seeing …

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Vrsic Mountain Pass

Vrsic Mountain Pass

Life is a beautiful ride

Vrsic Mountain Pass

Reset Apartments
^
Kranjska Gora
^
Lake Jasna
^
Russian Chappel
Vrsic
Hard
!
Elevation: 818 m - 1.611 m
12.9 km
*
Height difference: 793 m
Asphalt road

MUST VISIT

Lake Jasna
Russian Chappel
Pagan Girl in the cliffs

WHERE TO NEXT?

Trenta and Soca Valley
Kranjska Gora, Slovenia

At 1611 metres above sea level, Vršič is the highest road pass in Slovenia and in the whole of the eastern Julian Alps, connecting Kranjska Gora with the Trenta Valley and Bovec. The road was built during World War I by Russian war prisoners, whose sacrifices are commemorated by the Russian chapel above the road between Mihov dom (Miha’s odge) and the Koča na Gozdu (Lodge in the Woods). The mountain pass itself, apart from being an important link between the Gorenjska and Primorska regions, is one of the most important starting points for hiking tours to the peaks of Mala Mojstrovka (2332 m), Velika Mojstrovka (2366 m), Planja (2453 m), Prisojnik (Prisank) (2547 m), Razor (2601 m), Šitna glava (2087 m), Slemenova špica (1911 m), Sovna glava (1750 m) and Suhi vrh (2109 m). There are several mountain lodges in the summit: Erjavčeva koča (Erjavec lodge) (1515 m), Tičarjev dom (Tičar lodge) (1620 m), Koča na Gozdu (Lodge in the Woods) (1226 m) and Poštarska koča (Postman’s lodge) (1725 m).

The Pagan Girl is a natural phenomenon that you really must see for its magnificence.

The Vršič Pass is named after the 1,737 m high mountain of the same name, located between the Poštarski dom (Postman’s lodge) and the pass. As already mentioned, the pass is an important starting point for excursions and hikes to the many peaks of this part of the Julian Alps. There is no shortage of possibilities. From the top of the pass, you can go on short hikes or longer and more demanding mountain tours.

Vršič as a starting point for excursions and hikes in the mountains

Before you set off, make sure you check the weather conditions and choose the best route for your equipment and skills!

  • Easy trails:
    • To the Pagan girl and Poštarski dom (Postman’s lodge)
    • The trail to Slemenova Špica
    • Route to the top of Vršič
    • Route to the shelter below Špiček
    • Route over Šitna Glava to Mala Mojstrovka
    • Route to Šitna Glava
    • Route to Sovna Glava
    • Route to Prednje Robičje
  • Medium difficulty trails:
    • South trail to Mala Mojstrovka
    • Route to Zadnja Mojstrovka
    • Route to Travnik
    • Route to Kol
  • Difficult mountain trails:
    • Slovenian route to Prisank
    • Route to Planja
    • Ridge route to Travnik
    • Over the Jalovška škrbina or past the shelter below Špiček to Veliki Ozebnik
    • Route to Zadnjo Mojstrovka via Šitna Glava
    • Route to Suhi Vrh
  • Caution! Extremely difficult hikes:
    • Trail over Kajzljeva škrbina or along Kopiščarjeva, Jubilejna and Grebenska pot to Prisank
    • Hanzova or Južna pot to Mala Mojstrovka
    • To Jalovec past the shelter below Špiček or via the Jalovška škrbina
    • To Razor

By bike to Vršič

Cycling to Vršič is a challenge that many cyclists take up every year, either at the Vršič Cycle Race or at the annual Goni Poni fun event – a competition with antique bicycles from the Poni (Rog) brand. The road is beautiful and paved on some of the serpentines, but we must warn you that the tour is long and steep, and is really more suited to cyclists with a lot of fitness. If you don’t have much fitness, take the time to make short stops in the lodges along the way and with a bit of effort you will surely make it up the 52 serpentines.

From the Reset Apartments, turn left along the cycling route to Kranjska Gora. Pass through the center on the right and turn right at the turnoff at the Best Western Hotel onto the Vršiška road, which will take you within a few minutes to the first obligatory stop – Lake Jasna. Continue to the bridge over the Pišnica river (the macadam road to Krnica branches off to the left), where the first more difficult climb begins, lasting until the first serpentine. There are 24 of them at the top.

The trail continues all the way to Mihov’s dom (Miha’s lodge), and later to Koča na Gozdu (Lodge in the Woods), with the next obligatory stop being a visit to the Russian Chapel, built in memory of the Russian soldiers who were building the road over the pass during World War I and were tragically buried in an avalanche of snow. Just above the Koča na Gozdu, there is a lookout point with maps of the mountains and a magnificent view of the most famous natural window in the Julian Alps – the Prisank Window. The window is one of the largest natural mountain openings in Slovenia, 80 meters high and 40 meters wide.

The final part of the trail is particularly interesting, as the forest border opens up to spectacular views of the magnificent two-thousand-meter mountains that surround the pass on all sides. There are three lodges at the top, where you will be catered for with home-cooked meals and spoon meals. We recommend that you visit Erjavečeva koča (Erjavec lodge) first, and then continue over the top of the pass, where you can leave your bicycles and walk to Tičarjev dom (Tičar lodge).

A must-walk from the top of the pass!

If you have already made the effort to get to Vršič, we strongly recommend that you take the time for a shorter walk past Tičarjev dom and on to the Poštarski dom (Postman’s lodge). Here the views are truly magnificent, and the path also leads past the Pagan Girl, one of the major landmarks of the Slovenian Julian Alps, carved by nature into the side of mountain Prisank. The image takes its name from a folk legend, a tale that partly describes the history of the Slovene nation.

The trail itself is not long or difficult and is beautifully maintained, so it is suitable for younger children.

View of the surrounding mountains

  • Visoka Ponca (2.228m)
  • Kotova špica (2.376)
  • Jalovec (2.645 m)
  • Travnik (2.379 m)
  • Visoka Peč (1.749 m)
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Russian Chapel

Russian Chapel

Explore local heritage

Russian chapel

Lake Jasna
Medium
Must see
!
Elevation: 818 - 1.132 m
7.3 km
Local heritage
*
Height difference: 325 m
1 h 44 min walk
Asphalt road
Kranjska Gora, Slovenia

The Russian Chapel was built in honor of the Russian soldiers who were building the road over the Vršič Pass in World War I and were tragically buried by an avalanche. Reportedly, 170 to 300 Russian and 10 to 80 Austro-Hungarian soldiers died during the road construction. Kranjska Gora was an important strategic point on the Isonzo Front at this time. The Orthodox wooden chapel of St Vladimir was built in 1916 and next to it is the grave of one of the buried soldiers with the Russian inscription ‘To the Sons of Russia’. The chapel is wooden and has a stone foundation. The two domes imitate the typical Russian Baroque style.

The Russian Chapel is dedicated to the memory of the Russian soldiers who were buried in an avalanche during the construction of the road over the Vršič mountain pass.

In 2006, the road to Vršič has renamed the Russian Road and connects Kranjska Gora with Bovec. All the turns are paved and numbered. Every first Sunday in September, the “Juriš na Vršič” or Goni Pony cycling event takes place on the road past the chapel.

Already at the time of Slovenia’s independence, the Kranj Institute for Nature Conservation and Cultural Heritage restored parts of the Russian Chapel, restored the graves of Russian prisoners at Erjavec lodge (Erjavčeva koča), cleaned and restored the grave of the unknown soldier next to the chapel and erected an information billboard. Since 1996, a Memorial Ceremony has been held at the Chapel every last Sunday in July, attended by many important Slovenian and Russian representatives. In the following years, the chapel’s deteriorated elements were continuously repaired, until in 2005, with the help of the Ministry of Culture and a donation from Russian sponsors, it was completely restored with its surroundings.

In 2015, the ceremony was attended by Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, and a year later by Russian President Vladimir Putin himself.

How to get to the Russian Chapel?

You will have to drive past the Jasna lakes, uphill towards the Vršič mountain pass, and past the Mihov dom mountain lodge. The Russian Chapel is located at the fifth kilometer of the Kranjska Gora – Vršič road at an altitude of 1,100 m. The area around the chapel is fenced and landscaped with paths and benches. On the opposite side of the road, there is a parking space for visitors to the chapel.

Sights in the immediate vicinity

If you go to the Russian Chapel, you can also see:

  • Jasna Lakes
  • Panoramic view on the way to Vršič (the Prisank window is particularly nice)
  • The Vršič mountain pass itself and the frozen face in the Prisank wall – the Pagan Girl
  • Have refreshments in one of the lodges on the way
  • Visit the Land of Kekec (Kekčeva dežela) with your children
  • Descend into the Tamar Valley and visit Bovec
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