Experience the year-round pleasures of Boka Bay and beyond with adventures for the brave and ever-curious.
It wouldn’t be a trip to Montenegro without visiting the country’s most popular destination, Kotor. The UNESCO World Heritage Listed Kotor Old Town is among the most enchanting walled cities on the Adriatic, and a worthy rival to Dubrovnik or Split.
Europe’s deepest gorges run through the Durmitor National Park’s Tara River Canyon, a UNESCO World heritage site home to wolves, bears and the largest variety of butterflies on the continent. With arresting limestone peaks and glacial lakes, it is perennially popular for rafting and hiking.
The island of Sveti Stefan is the poster child of Montenegrin tourism, and it’s not difficult to see why. This is without a doubt one of the most beautiful places in Montenegro.
Often referred to as the most picturesque town in Europe, Venetian stone palaces line the shores of this pocket-sized gem in the Bay of Kotor. With just one main street, whimsical Perast still manages to squeeze in 16 churches and 17 formerly grand palazzi, with the air of both an upmarket waterfront town as well as quaint seafaring village.
Shades of the Norwegian fjords and Lake Como spring to mind as you wind through the serpentine bay lined with the ancient fortified towns of Kotor, Risan, Tivat, Perast, Prčanj, and Herceg Novi. Dotted with Romanesque churches and quaint fishing villages, this is a land where time appears to stand still. Allow our expert team to arrange a bespoke sailing trip of this spellbinding region.
Skadar Lake is the largest lake at the Balkan Peninsula, with fresh water and one of the largest national parks in Montenegro. It’s extremely famous for its diversity of flora and fauna. Lake itself is unusual for mutual vicinity of different living areas and their chain of feeding.
Part of Durmitor National Park, the Tara River Canyon is one of the most beautiful natural areas in Montenegro. In late spring and summer, visitors descend on the area to try whitewater rafting. The most beautiful spot along the gorge is Đurđevića Bridge. Constructed in 1940 when Montenegro was part of Yugoslavia, it was the largest concrete arched bridge in Europe at the time.