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 Old fortress overlooking Visoko |
Friday, 16 April (continued). Then we checked out of the hotel and headed north and west to Visoko, Bosnia’s oldest city and once its capital. The ruins of an old fortress (originally 13th century?) looming over the town. It was after 12:00 when we got there. This was supposed to be a great town for buying leather goods. We looked in a few shops but we didn’t find anything we wanted. We ate lunch along the river a short distance out of town. The road was terrible, very rough, buckled by frost, narrow, and crowded with big trucks. There wasn’t room for us to stay on the paved portion of the road when we passed trucks going in the opposite direction, which was almost constant. On the other hand, the area was very picturesque because it was so primitive. There were many Bosnian peasants along the road in colorful or all white costumes. There were small horses loaded with hay, ancient-looking carts and wagons, and shepherds tending flocks of sheep. (Not wanting to stop to ask permission to take pictures, due to constraints of both time and language, we took them through the car windows, usually without stopping.) Not long after, we reached Jajce, our day’s destination, and checked into the Tourist Hotel where we'd made a reservation. No one spoke any language we knew, but we managed to check in. We appeared to be the only guests there and, in fact, the only tourists in town. The three double rooms with bath were $5.00 each.  Walled town of Jajce |
Jajce lies at the confluence of the Pliva and Vrbas Rivers. An old walled town with a citadel that dates back to the 13th century, it was once the capital of Bosnia. The last King of Bosnia was executed here by the Ottoman Turks in 1463. It's most recent claim to fame is as the site of Marshal Tito's proclamation of his new "democratic" government for Yugoslavia in November 1943 while the Germans still occupied most of the country.  Old Turkish watermills on Pliva River |
We took a quick drive into the mountains behind the town to see the old Turkish watermills on the falls. They were pretty much in ruins, but one was in operation, apparently just to show people how they worked. One end of a long wooden tube, about six inches in diameter, was swung into the falls, and the water it caught was directed onto a paddlewheel that turned the shaft that turned a millstone.  Pliva Falls below Jajce |
Next we walked to the beautiful Pliva Falls, 100-foot high and very wide. We had seen the falls briefly as we crossed the bridge into the city. We made our way to the bottom of the falls where the boys let off a little energy playing on the rocks. It was dusk by then, but the weather was still quite pleasant. We walked back to the hotel for dinner (another adventure with the language barrier), then went to bed.
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