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Experience the joy of slow travel and spend a day in nature. This is the closest mountain to the city and you need less than 20 minutes with the sable car ride to reach one of the peaks. Following the short break, you will pass through a forest path and head towards the mountain's west ridge. The ridge is known to be very sunny and a short break can be organized there if it's necessary. While you enjoy the sightseeing and the stunning view. The goal of the tour is to promote not only hiking but sustainable travel as well as lowering your carbon footprint. Free cancellation. Manual confirmation. Private Mountain Hiking in Trebevic. From EUR Book now. Next availability: Tue, 22 Oct. Sign up now. On foggy winter days, locals flock here to escape the hustle and bustle and breathe in the crisp forest air. Our journey kicks off at Meet Bosnia tours, where we'll hop on a cable car tickets sold separately that whisks us up to near the bob sleigh track. This track was a star of the Sarajevo Winter Olympics, so you'll get a glimpse of sporting history as we pass by. From there, we'll trek along mountain paths, winding our way up to the summit. The hike covers around 14 kilometers in total, with an elevation gain of about meters. But don't worry, we'll take it nice and easy, making sure everyone can enjoy the stunning scenery and mountain huts along the way. We highly recommend wearing sturdy boots for this adventure, as the terrain can be rugged at times. But if you need them, we've got hiking poles to lend you for extra support. This hike isn't just about the physical challenge—it's about immersing yourself in the beauty of nature and experiencing a slice of Sarajevo life. Hiking sticks. Personal expenses. Must Know. Mobile or paper ticket accepted. Good To Know. Service animals allowed. Public transportation options are available nearby. Suitable for all physical fitness levels. Why book with Pelago? Best price guaranteed See it cheaper elsewhere? Let us know and we'll refund the difference. Learn more. Earn KrisFlyer rewards Earn miles for every booking and use miles to redeem your purchases. Service that soars Verified reviews, secure payments, and high-quality standards. A Singapore Airlines company. Connect to culture Discover top-rated activities — from tours to hidden gems and everything in between.

Why we’re bowled over by Bosnia

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After the sun sets behind the bakery, and the sky turns a dark Prussian blue, the children feverishly play their sweetest games before being called in. From the hilltop they see how the downtown lights cast a golden glow on the glass dome of the City Hall, in the center of old Sarajevo. They hear the rattling of the streetcars below, and the barking of stray dogs in the Mt. Trebevic suburbs. Brothers and sisters can always go home and play or fight, but children without siblings cannot. Eva cannot go home now. Eva, feel how smooth it is. The elastic waistband stretches, so you can wear them next year too. You can wear them with your purple smock. And now, only one day after, Eva has a gaping hole in the back of her new shorts. Stella and Eva are different from everybody else. Eva has overheard the housewives gossiping on the other side of the crooked wooden fence, from behind the sheets on the clothesline. So much for her good looks. Ma on ti je zenskaros kakvog mu nema ravna! She was seven then and after cleaning the dirt between her toes in the warm kitchen, she would be sent to bed. Her babysitter would turn the lights off and shut the bedroom door. Stella sometimes rushed in to give her a quick kiss. Why do I have to sleep here? Quickly, take your doll. Just you and me, my treasure. I want you to smell like me and you. It had been a long time since she was allowed to spend the night at home. She knew better than to ask about her daddy. Just Mama, you and me, my treasure. Now that the shorts are ruined, her mother is going to be very upset. Her girlfriends are still playing monkey in the middle. Her best friend Lidia throws the ball to Eva, while Diana tries to snatch it and misses again. What do they know? The scent of freckled girls playing happily ever after. Eva can smell their dimples, their pixie noses, their sweetness. It makes her sick. Lidia does her homework at the kitchen table, her father takes a nap on the living room couch. They have everything, except nothing serves its original purpose. There is a record player on the night table, a large bed where they both sleep, two green armchairs, a mahogany coffee table, and an antique bronze table mirror that they call Psyche, meaning soul in ancient Greek. Eva has a small stool where she sits in the evenings, and reads to her baby doll from her favorite adventure book Winnetou. Eva is in love with the chief of the Apache. She carries the book everywhere with her. The boys chant after Eva,. Eva believes she can see her soul in the bronze table mirror, a girl riding on a wild mustang on the prairies and the mountains of the West of America. In the evening Eva watches I Love Lucy with her Grandma on a black-and-white television in the kitchen, while her mother is in their room, sitting upright in the bed needle-pointing. Stella wants to order the Island of Death kit next. She threads the embroidery floss through a needle. She measures the thread length from the tip of her middle finger to the bend of her elbow. She follows a chart and counts the stitches. The needle goes down and up on a cotton aida fabric, its edges protected from unraveling by machine zigzagging. Stella counts the rows of slanted stitches. She hung them on the walls in gold ornamented frames. Eva thinks of ways to cheer her mother up. She vacuums, mops, dusts, and polishes. She puts the embroidered runner on the table, makes the bed, picks flowers from the garden and then waits for praise. Eva spends hours daydreaming about the perfect house for Stella. It should have a sofa in the middle of the living room like the one on I Love Lucy. It will have yellow curtains and cupboards lined with parchment paper with decorative lace edges. As for herself, she will need only her medicine bag and a good horse. Stella, with her auburn hair and hand made dresses as seen in the fashion magazines, is glamorous, like a theater actress. The house is one story, white stucco, its paint peeling in large paper-thin sheets. Eva likes to step on the paper-thin sheets and watch them crumble into white dust, like spilled flour, like powder, like snow. They make a list of things to do,. They eat pate de fois-gras sandwiches from a bed-tray. There is a porcelain candy bowl on the table, full of cream chocolates. The white filling is better than pink or brown. My name is Lidia. Sead is my dream. Sead hangs out every evening in front of the corner store. Eva likes him because of his unkempt hair, his long bangs that always get into his eyes. She loves when he tosses his head back to pull the hair from his face, his hands in the pockets of his leather jacket. He never carries a school bag. Stella warned her to stay away from that jalijas. Eva imagines Sead lying on his bed and reading, surrounded by a pile of thick hardcover books. One day Eva does not get up. She remains in bed crying the entire day. Winnetou, the noble chief of the Apache has died on page , from a bullet in his chest. Under her pillow Eva keeps the medicine bag with dismembered pieces of Bettina, the fashion doll her father gave her for her ninth birthday, and the toy gun he gave her for her tenth. He sends one to fetch Eva. When Gvozden does not come to the front door himself, Stella adds some more blood-red lipstick, licks her lips, fluffs her red hair, and soothes her red chiffon sundress with wide shoulder straps. I think I will go to Slavica na kafu. But he never asks. His long white fingers grip firmly the red steering wheel. He takes her downtown shopping, to the Bascarsija, the old Turkish market quarter. He pays with a single bank note from a bundle in his leather wallet. They both blink at the spring sun outside. Gvozden carries two parcels wrapped in brown paper and tied with string. Eva stuffs her hands in the pockets of her dress, and follows him down a narrow cobblestone street with sweet shops with pistachios halvah and baklava on both sides. Street vendors sell bunches of violets and cyclamen picked on the Mt. Trebevic slopes. Gvozden stops by an improvised book booth in front of the National Museum. A traveling salesman sits on a wooden crate and cuts sausage with a pocket knife on greasy butcher paper in his lap. Gvozden picks up a hardcover book and asks for a pen. He writes something below the title The Call of the Wild on the first page. Eva washes her face with cold water, and combs her hair. Perhaps the book found them? She dashes to Stella and sprawls on the bed next to her and shows her what her father gave her for her birthday. Stella marks the spot on the gobelin chart and bites the floss off with her teeth. She tucks the needle into the pincushion. Night after night, for more than a year. They lie on the bed next to each other, gazing at the low ceiling. Their red, matching dresses appear stitched together, until Eva moves to embrace Stella, and rips its fanciful seam. Instagram Twitter. Fiction Short Story The West. You smell funny. New Baltimore. Split Tongue.

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