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JELSA (43° 10'N; 16°
42'E), town (pop. 1,792 in 1991) and small harbour
on the N coast of the island of Hvar.
Approach: The town is easily identified from some
distance by the prominent buildings of the hotel
complexes flanking the harbour entrance, the road
leading to the cemetery with a bell tower on the
E side of the entrance, the red round iron tower
exhibiting a red light on the breakwater fronting
the cemetery and the eight- sided masonry tower
with a cupola exhibiting a green light situated
on the head of the N breakwater.
Mooring: The inner harbour affords shelter from
all winds, only its S part does not provide sufficient
shelter during a strong bora. The outer part of
the harbour is completely exposed to northerlies
and to the bora and a dangerous surge develops
in it with such winds. Only small yachts can moor
using the four-point moor, at the quay (depth
1.63.4m alongside). The inner harbour is occupied
by local craft. Passenger liners land at the S
mole. An anchorage ground is situated 250m NE
of the breakwater (depth around 12 m), but it
is not recommended to use it in the winter months
during the bora.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, medical service, and chemist's. Pic Fishing
Club. Zecevo naturist hotel complex is situated
N of the town, behind Glavica point.
Provisions at local shops (self-service store).
Water from hydrants on the waterfront. Fuel at
the petrol station (about 300m from the waterfront).
A small slipway is situated in the S part of the
harbour.
Each year at the end of August the Jelsanska festa
vina (Jelsa Wine Festival).
Sights: Sv Fabijan i Sebastijan church (St Fabian
and Sebastian, 1331; renovated and fortified in
1535), Sv Ivan church (St John, in Baroque style);
the square with Renaissance and baroque houses.
Cemetery at the locality called Gradina with a
church of the Augustinians (16/17 C) and remains
of an old defence wall (11/12 C). On Tor hill
an ancient Greek watch-tower (4 C B.C.).
POKRIVENIK (43° 09'N; 16° 53'E), cove
in the middle of the N coast of the island of
Hvar.
Approach: It is entered between Tanki point and
Zarace point, which are foul and should be given
a berth of at least 300 m.
Mooring: The inlet is sheltered from all winds
except norther- liess and the bora. Shelter from
the bora, to some extent, can be found in its
SE part. Smaller yachts can berth alongside the
pier on the E coast of the cove. The best anchorage
is in its SE part.
SUCURAJ (43° 07.5'N; 17° 11.5'E), village
(pop. 422 in 1991) and small harbour in the inlet
of the same name at the easternmost end of the
island of Hvar.
Approach: Landmarks include the square stone tower
with a balcony beside a dwelling exhibiting a
white light on Sucuraj point; the red round iron
tower exhibiting a white light on the head of
the breakwater, the low white building with a
green factory chimney on the N coast of the inlet
in front of the village.
Care should be taken to avoid the underwater ballasting
of the breakwater with shallow water over it and
a submerged block off the SE side of the small
pier.
Mooring: E and SE winds raise a heavy sea inside
the harbour. Continuous northerly winds cause
the depth in the harbour to decrease, which should
be taken into account. Smaller yachts can berth
at the ferry-pier using the four-point moor, or
sidelong at the inner side of the breakwater.
They can also lie sidelong and using the four-point
moor at the quay in front of the harbour master's
branch office (depths 23.5 m).
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, medical service, fish-cannery. Pagar Fishing
Club.
Food provisions and water.
Car-ferry line: Sucuraj Drvenik (Makarska Riviera).
Sights: Parts of an Augustinian monastery (1573,
now housing per- sonage), Sv Ante church (St Anthony,
1664), and the pictoresque small square in front
of it. Fortifications dating from 1631.
MRTINOVIK (43° 07'N; 17° 06'E), cove in
the S coast of Hvar, about 4.4M W of Sucuraj point.
The cove is protected from all winds except those
blowing from the SE and SW quadrants, which are
apt to raise a moderate sea in it. The anchorage
ground is in the middle of the cove.
Facilities: In Sucuraj.
ZAVALA, also Pitavska plaza (43° 07.5'N; 16°
42'E), village (pop. 110 in 1991) and small harbour
on the S coast of Hvar, opposite the island of
Scedro.
Mooring: The small harbour is sheltered from all
winds except south-westerlies. Smaller yachts
can lie along the inner side of the breakwater
(depths 26 m). Anchorage with sandy bottom (depths
34 m).
Facilities: Provisions at a local shop; a restaurant;
water from cisterns.
MILNA (43° 09.5'N; 16° 29'E), inlet in
the S coast of Hvar.
Mooring: The cove provides good shelter from N
winds to smaller yachts. Depth up to 2 m.
Warning: Rocky shoal patches extend off the NW
point.
Sights: Sv Marija Magdalena chapel (St Mary Magdalene,
transitional Gothic-Renaissance style, 15 C);
partly fortified summer-residence of the Ivanic
and Boglic-Bozic families (17 C) with chapel.
HVAR (43° 10.5'N; 16° 27'E), town (pop.
3,643 in 1991), tourist resort and harbour on
the S coast of the island of the same name.
Approach: Landmarks: the stone tower mounted on
a pedestal exhi- biting a white light on Pelegrin
point, the square stone tower above a dwelling
exhibiting a white light situated on the islet
of Pokonji dol, the red iron tower with a column
exhibiting a red light on the NE edge of Jerolim
islet, the forts Spanjol and Sveti Nikola, the
television mast W of the city, Galisnik islet
with a square stone tower exhibiting a green light
on its S side.
Anchorage is prohibited in the passage between
Galisnik islet and Krizni Rat point.
Mooring: The Hvar harbour is exposed to north-westerlies.
South- erlies, especially the sirocco, raise waves
and an unpleasant swell inside the harbour. The
S part of the wharf is used by yachts on regular
services. Yachts drawing up to 2.5m can lie at
the waterfront W of the small harbour Mandrac
using four-point moor. Larger yachts anchor N
and NW of Galisnik islet (depths 2025 m). Smaller
yachts can anchor in the middle of the harbour
(depths 810 m) securing their sterns to bollards
on the W shore. Yachts can also sail into Palmizana
Marina on the islet of Sv Klement (Pakleni otoci).
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, medical service, chemist's. Pelegrin Fishing
Club. Zvir Yacht Club.
Naturist beach on the islet of Jerolim S of the
harbour.
Fresh food provisions at the shops and the self-service
store. Water laid on to the NE waterfront (hydrant).
Fuel obtainable from the pump on the pier in the
E harbour Krizna Luka. Minor repairs can be arranged;
slipway (width 5 m).
Sights: Town walls (built after 1278, additions
in the 15 C). The Palace Hotel (1903) occupies
the site of the demolished Rector's Palace; the
Clock Tower (Leroj, 1466, reconstructed); Spanjol
(elevation 109 m, built 1551) and Sv Nikola forts
(formerly: Fort Napoleon, built 1806, elevation
241 m); harbour (port development since 1455,
the Venetian fleet of the Eastern Adriatic used
to winter here); the Arsenal (15791611) into which
galleys could be hauled up and the adjoining Fontik
(housing historical archives, a Gallery of Modern
Painting, the wooden figurehead of a dragon from
the galley sent by Hvar to the Battle of Lepanto,
1571). Above the Arsenal a Theatre (built 1612,
one of the oldest in Europe still extant, renovated
in 1803 and 1900); Sv Stjepan cathedral (St Stephen,
built in the 1617 C on the site of an ear- lier
cathedral dating from 14 C, liturgical objects
dating from the 1517 C, Gothic-Renaissance choir-stalls
treasury) with the campanile from the 17 C. On
the main square: the town well (1529); the residential
homes of the families Paladini, Hek- torovic (unfinished,
15 C), Grguric, Lucic, Vukasinovic; the sum- mer
residence of the dramatist Hanibal Lucic; the
City Loggia (by Tripun Bokanic, early 17 C); Sv
Marko church (St Mark, preserved side walls and
belfry from 1550, lapidarium; the tower of St
Ven- erando on the extremity of the headland (now
an open-air the- tare); the Franciscan monastery
(146164) in the SE part of the town (Renaissance
cloister and refectory, collection of paint- ings,
illuminated manuscripts, naval charts, old embroidery,
archives, library), with Gospa od milosti church
(Our Lady of Mercy, 1465, reconstructed 1571,
three polyptychs, carved choir- stalls, paintings
by Italian masters).
VELA GARSKA (43° 11'N; 16° 25'E), cove
on the S coast of the westernmost part of Hvar,
in the channel Pakleni kanal, about 1.6M west
of the town of Hvar.
Approach: The mouth of the cave on the W entrance
point is con- spicuous.
Yachts entering the cove should keep closer to
the E coast.
Mooring: The small bay indented with several inlets
affords good shelter, especially from winds blowing
from the NE and SE qua- drants. The sirocco blows
violently but raises only a moderate sea. Yachts
can moor at the small pier (depth up to 2 m) in
the W part of the bay. Four-point moor with bows
facing seaward recom- mended.
Facilities: In the town of Hvar.
PAKLINSKI (PAKLENI) OTOCI
PALMIZANA (49° 09.5'N; 16° 24'E), cove
in the N coast of the islet Sv Klement, about
2M west of the town of Hvar.
Approach: When approaching the cove, care should
be taken to avoid Baba rock (rising about 1m above
sea level; white flashing light) in front of the
entrance to the cove.
Mooring: The cove affords good all-round shelter
from all winds and the sea. Good anchorage grounds
under the E shore and off the SW coast, where
lines should be secured to the rocks of the shore.
Depths 615 m. The pier in the SW part of the inlet
is reserved for tourist lines.
Facilities: In Palmizana Marina and Hvar.
PALMIZANA MARINA (ACY) is situated in Palmizana
cove on the N coast of the island of Sv Klement,
the largest in the island group of Paklinski (Pakleni)
otoci.
Capacity: about 190 berths at pontoons extending
parallel with the N shore and at the floating
fingers at the W shore. The depth along the W
shore are around 2 m, along the N shore 7 m, and
in the middle of the cove between 1220 m.
The marina operates through the summer season.
It has reception office, restaurant, shopping
area including duty-free shop, toilets and showers
with hot water, rental of sports equipment; sale
of butane gas; workshop for maintenance and repair
jobs; taxi yacht.
SOLINE (43° 09.5'N; 16° 22'E), spacious
cove in the S coast of Sv Klement island.
Mooring: S and SW winds raise a heavy sea inside
the cove. An anchorage ground for yachts of deeper
draught is situated NE of the Dobri islet (depth
32 m). Only temporary stays recommended.
Facilities: Limited supplies at Vlaka hamlet (about
400m inland).
ISLAND OF SCEDRO
LOVISCE (43° 06'N; 16° 42.5'E), village
(pop. 9 in 1991) and cove on the N side of the
island of Scedro.
Approach: The red iron tower exhibiting a red
light E of the cove entrance is conspicuous.
Mooring: The cove affords good shelter from all
winds except northerlies, which may blow with
violence and send in a swell. During such winds
smaller yachts seek shelter in one of the three
small coves (Rake, Srida or Lovisce) securing
their lines to the bollards or to rocks on the
shore. A good anchorage ground for larger yachts
is situated in the middle of the cove (depth about
26 m).
MANASTIR, also Mostir (43° 05.5'N; 16°
42.6'E), cove in the N coast of Scedro, E of Lovisce.
Like Lovisce it is open to northerlies but it
affords good shelter from S wind and the waves.
Only yachts of very light draught can berth at
the small pier at the head of the cove using the
four-point moor. The depth at the pier head is
only 1 m.
Sights: Ruins of Dominican monastery (16 C, deserted
in 18 C, later incorporated into a Renaissance
church).
ISLAND OF BISEVO
BISEVSKA LUKA (42° 59'N; 16° 00' E), cove
in the W coast of Bisevo. Suitable only as a temporary
refuge from the bora. When other winds start blowing,
especially westerlies or south- westerlies, yachts
should leave without delay. It provides no adequate
shelter from the sirocco either, since this wind
is apt to change its direction to the SW in these
parts. Yachts of light and medium draught can
anchor in the inner part of the cove (depths 510
m).
Polje hamlet (pop. 14 in 1991) inland.
BALUN (42° 58.5'N; 16° 01'E), cove in
the E coast of the island of Bisevo. The famous
Blue Cave (Modra spilja) is situated in this cove.
At noon, when the sea is calm, sunrays penetrating
into the cave through an underwater opening are
reflected from the white bottom, and illuminate
the cave with a blue light while lending a silvery
hue to objects under the water. The cave can be
entered by small yachts only.
ISLAND OF VIS
VIS (43° 04'N; 16° 11'E), town (pop. 1,932
in 1991) and harbour on the N coast of the island
of the same name.
Approach: Landmarks: the lighthouse Stoncica,
a masonry tower on a dwelling exhibiting a white
light, situated on the cape bearing the same name;
the concrete tower with a balcony exhibiting a
red light on Krava rock (E of the entrance); the
eight-sided masonry tower exhibiting a white light
on Host Islet; the white tower with a balcony
on Volici rock; the ruined Fort Wellington on
an elevation on the left side of the entrance
and Fort Torjan on its right side; the white tower
exhibiting a red light on the head of the car-ferry
landing place.
Care should be taken when making an approach to
avoid the rocks Krava and Volici and the islet
of Host.
Mooring: The harbour is open to the bora, which
blows here with violence and raises a considerable
sea. The sirocco also blows with heavy gusts.
Protracted southerlies are apt to raise the sea
level inside the harbour considerably. The E shore
of the bay is exposed to waves coming in from
the NW. Yachts can moor in the SW part of the
harbour (depths 34 m). Yachts drawing up to 2m
can berth along the shore in Kut Cove (to the
SE). Deeper drawing yachts can also anchor in
Kut Cove except during northerlies and north-westerlies.
During the bora and the sirocco it is recom- mended
to anchor W of the small Pirovo peninsula.
Anchorage is prohibited in the W part of the harbour
due to an underwater sewer pipeline. The pipe
extends for 300m from the shore, E of the Issa
hotel.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, medical service, chemist's.
Provisions at local shops and at self-service
shop. Water in lim- ited supply. Fuel at the pump
on the small pier in the NW part of the harbour.
Host Fishing Club.
Car-ferry line: Vis Split.
Sights: In the Gradina area remnants of the ancient
Greek town of Issa (walls, seawall, numerous finds);
remnants of Roman walls, thermal baths and mosaics
from the 1 C; on the small Pirovo pro- montory
remains of a Roman theatre and thermal baths (a
Francis- can monastery with a church was built
on the site in the 16 C). In the town of Vis the
Garibaldi Palace (1552); the summer- residence
of the poet Marin Gazarovic (early 17 C); the
house of the Dojmi-Delupis family (with a collection
of archeological finds from antiquity); four defence
towers on the outskirts of the town (17 C); Gospa
od Spilice church (Church of Our Lady, about 1500);
Sv Ciprijan church (St Cyprian, 1 C, renovated
1742, coffered ceiling); Sv Duh (Holy Spirit,
early 17 C); the British forts: George, Wellington,
Bentinck, Robertson (early 19 C). Old Austrian
barracks Baterija housing the Archaelogical Museum
(Arheoloski muzej). A number of monuments commemorating
events from the Anti-Fascist War (1941-45).
During the Anti-Fascist War, from 194344, Vis
was the main base of the naval forces of the National
Liberation Army, and from June 8 to mid-September
1944 seat of the Supreme Command and the Committee
of the Liberation of Yugoslavia headed by Marshal
Tito. Vis served as the base for the seaborne
assault operations that ultimately led to the
liberation of Dalmatia.
ZBODY 1.5 KRAJ = KOMIZA (43° 03'; 16°
05'E), town (pop. 2,032 in 1991), harbour and
spacious bay on the W coast of the island of Vis.
Approach: The harbour is easily recognised from
seaward by the white masonry tower exhibiting
a white light on the small islet of Barjak Mali;
Sv Nikola church (St Nicholas) SE of the town
(elevation 57 m); by the square masonry tower
exhibiting a white light on Stupisce point; the
red tower with a balcony exhibiting a red light
on the island of Bisevo (Kobila point); the green
metal fremework tower with a column and a balcony
exhibiting a green light on the head of the breakwater.
Mooring: The bay is exposed to westerlies and
south-westerlies, which raise a heavy sea. Behind
the breakwater (depths 35 m) yachts are protected
from these winds, as well as from the bora and
the sirocco. Yachts can moor at its inner side,
but it should be borne in mind that the area around
its head is reserved for regular passenger lines.
Smaller yachts can berth at the quay NE of the
breakwater using the four-point moor. A good anchorage
ground (depth around 30 m) is situated 500m W
and 850m S of the harbour light, but a bora renders
it untenable.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, medical service, chemist's, Neptun fish-cannery
with its own fleet.
PLOCE (43° 03'N; 17° 25.6'E) town (pop.
6,336 in 1991) and com- mercial port NW of the
delta of the Neretva river.
Approach: Landmarks: the red tower with a column
and a balcony (white light) on the S extremity
of Visnjica headland (Rt Visnjica); the red light-buoy
topped by a red cylinder on top exhibiting a red
light marking Gumanac shoal about 0.8 M south
of the light on Visnjica headland; the green light-buoy
(green light) about 0.3 M south of the light on
Visnjica headland; the green light-buoy (green
light) about 300 m east of the light on Visnjica
headland; the red tower with a column and a balcony
(red light) about 300 m north of the light on
Visnjica headland; the red square tower with a
pyramidal construction (red light) on Bad point;
Gubavac islet in the small cove between Bad point
and the red tower situated about 300 m north of
G. Visnjica headland (Rt G. Visnjica); the green
tower with a column and a balcony exhi- biting
a green light on the westernmost part of the wharf
(Gat Oslobo|enja).
The port is entered through a marked approach
channel, the tower on Visnjica headland (white
light) marking its beginning; two green light-buoys
(green light) on the NW end of the wharf mark
its right side; the red light-buoy on the Gumanac
shoal marks the beginning of Vlaska channel, which
leads to the tanker terminal.
In times of heavy rainfall, S winds and strong
currents, yachts should keep as close to the buoys
as possible.
Mooring: The harbour affords good protection from
all winds and waves, although the bora and the
sirocco are strongly felt, par- ticularly in the
winter. In summer the prevalent wind is a north-westerly,
which blows here with greater force than in the
Neretva channel and lasts till late in the evening.
Attention should be paid to the direction in and
at the rate at which the current is setting in
the harbour approaches, particularly in the vicinity
of Visnjica headland. Yachts moor according to
instruc- tions received from the harbour master's
office, i.e. either in the city port which encompasses
the Mala posta bay (the E arm) and the area S
of the connecting line defined by the following
points on the coast: 395 m off the green light
on Gat Oslobo|enja on a bearing of 335° and
870 m off the same light on a bearing of 22°.
Yachts are forbidden from entering the N part
of the bay, outside the limits of the commercial
port unless previous permission has been obtained
from harbour master's office.
The port is open to international traffic as a
permanent port of entry.
Facilities: It has a duty-free zone (marked by
white buoys in the form of double cones), harbour
master's office, customs house, post office, medical
service, chemist's, bus station and railway station.
Lica Fishing Club and Mornar Yacht Club.
Provisions at local shops, water from the hydrants
on the water- front. Fuel at the pump on the waterfront.
Naval charts and other relevant publications may
be obtained at the office Svetionicarska stanica,
Ploce, Neretvanskih gusara 1.
Repairs to yacht and yacht hulls as well as repairs
and mainte- nance of marine engines are possible.
Car-ferry line: Ploce Trpanj.
NERETVA, river flowing into the Neretva channel;
navigable for yachts drawing up to 4.5 m (mastheads
up to 14 m) from the river mouth to the bridge
in the town of Metkovic.
In the Neretva valley the bora blows with violence,
particularly in the area around Kula Norinska
village. In summer in the morn- ing hours there
is usually a breeze blowing seaward, down the
valley and in the afternoon a wind blowing in
from the sea. Under settled weather conditions
the current is not strongly felt (about 2.5 knots)
but it can attain a rate of 6 knots when the river
is carrying a great amount of water.
Approach: Landmarks: the hexagonal red cement
hut with a column exhibiting a red light on the
head of the N mole at the river mouth, the green
square hut with a column exhibiting a green light
on the head of the S mole, the guardian's house
on the S embankment and the cross on Galicnik
Hill.
In the river mouth: the red light-buoy Gumanac
topped by a cylinder (about 0.8 M south of the
light on Visnjica cape head- land); the green
cylindrical light-buoy topped by a cone (785 m
from the red light on the head of the N protective
mole on a bearing of 294° from the red light
on the head of the N protec- tive mole); about
100 m from the red light on the head of the N
mole, at a bearing of 240°, there is a green
cylindrical buoy with a conical topmark, which
should be left to starboard by incoming yachts
(see Ploce).
The river mouth is entered S of the red Gumanac
buoy. After clearing the light-buoy yachts should
shape course north of the green light-buoy (small
yachts as close to it as possible). When abreast
the buoy, course should be altered so as to lead
between the N molehead (red column on hut, red
light) and the green cylindrical buoy topped with
a cone. After passing the N molehead (red light)
yachts should take a sharp turn towards the middle
of the river mouth, between the N and S protective
moles (green hut with column, green light).
Warning: Due to banks formed by deposits in the
river mouth, it is advisable to keep in dredged
channel. It is necesarry to start changing course
between the two moleheads (with lights on them)
on time as the current at the river entrance is
stronger. Yachts are recommended to reduce speed
before changing course (when abreast the green
buoy topped by a pyramid). About 4 km upstream
the Gospa shoal extends off the right bank. Another
shoal is situated at the E end of the quay in
Opuzen (near the spot at which Mala Neretva branches
off). The NW edge of this shoal is marked by a
black buoy, which should be left to starboard
by yachts proceeding upstream. A road bridge of
the Adriatic highway crosses the river at Rogotin
village (pop. 727 in 1991), about 4 km upstream
from the mouth (at highest water level the bridge
has a vertical clearence of 14 m in the middle,
reducing to 11 m at the piers). A high-tension
cable with a vertical clearance of 15 m at highest
water level spans the river 9.2 km upstream from
the mouth, near the small town of Komin (pop.
1,546 in 1991).
Care should be taken to avoid collision with the
numerous local craft (trupice), passing up and
down the river or entering it from the side arms.
Special Regulations for Navigation in the Neretva
River. Yachts may navigate in the Neretva any
time of the day or night. Yachts must keep to
the starboard side. Navigation in fog is prohibited.
Yachts proceeding downstream must have an anchor
ready for instant use astern. At night, anchoring
yachts are required to display an additional white
position light astern, as well as the white position
light on the bow prescribed by the International
Regulations for Prevention of Collision at Sea.
Yachts passing other navigating or floating objects,
installations on the river banks, places at which
hydrotechnical operations are in progress, or
inhabited places are required to reduce speed
at least within 200 m of such objects, installations
and places so as not to endanger their safety
or cause demage. Yachts proceeding upstream (with
the exception of towing tugs) must give way to
yachts navigating downstream. Yachts must give
way to ships. A yacht which loses its manoeuvering
capacity is required to drop anchor at a place
where it will not obstruct other yachts. Moored
yachts and yachts at anchor are forbidden to keep
dinghies, rafts, etc. or any other protruding
objects secured alongside.
OPUZEN (43° 01'N; 17° 34'E), town (pop.
2,778 in 1991) and har- bour on the left bank
of Neretva, about 6.5 km upstream from its mouth.
Approach: The green tower on a pedestal on the
W bank (down- stream) is conspicuous.
Mooring: Yachts can berth at the town quay (depths
2.42.9 m). A shoal patch with depth up to 4.5
m over it is situated at the NW end of the harbour.
It is marked by a black conical buoy.
All yachts are prohibited from navigating, anchoring
and landing at the section between the point at
which Mala Neretva bifurcates and the iron bridge
crossing it higher upstream when the water level
rises 1 m above normal.
Facilities: Post office and medical service; the
Neretva agricul- tural enterprise has citrus fruit
and vegetable farms in the vicinity.
Food and water in adequate supply. Fuel at the
pump about 20 m from the river bank.
Sights: Fort Kos (late 15 C), renamed by the Venetians
in 1685 to Fort Opus in ruins on a hill above
the town; a collection of archaeological finds
from Vid village, which occupies the site of Roman
Narona; monument to the national hero Stjepan
Filipovic. On a hill above the nearby village
of Podgradina the ruins of Brstanik castle built
in 1373, during the reign of the Bosnian King
Tvrtko (restored in 15 C and in 1878). Up to Neretva
(on its left bank) Kula Norinska with a cylindrical
defence tower (1550).
METKOVIC (43° 03'N; 17° 39'E), town (pop.
12,026 in 1991) and principal harbour on the Neretva,
situated about 11 M upstream from its mouth.
Approach: Landmarks: two red towers exhibiting
red light are situated downstream from the bridge:
one 1.1 M (Jerkovac), the other 0.4 M.
Mooring: Yachts can berth at the lower part of
the S bank, at the quay fronting the harbour office
(downstream from the harbour light). Attention
should be paid to the underwater reinforcements
of the quay, which extend at places up to 0.7
m offshore. The N quay is reserved for commercial
operations.
Warning: Yachts are forbidden to land at certain
portions of the quay.
Metkovic is a permanent port of entry.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, hospi- tal, chemist's and railway station
(regular line to Sarajevo).
Food supplies at local shops. Water from the water
main (taps on the quay), fuel (diesel oil) on
the N bank, 25 m downstream from the bridge.
Mehanika undertake repairs to and maintenance
of marine engines.
Sights: Vid (village on the site of ancient Roman
Narona) with numerous archaeological finds (remnants
of town walls, stone fragments bearing inscriptions,
mosaics, graves, Roman fragments built into the
walls of village houses; Museum collection) 4
km by road to the NW; Mogorjelo (restored Roman
villa rustica from the early 4 C with remnants
of two early Christian basilicas and ancient farm
buildings) 14 km by road to the NE; Pocitelj (16
C), medieval castle, reconstructed into a Turkish
residence around which a settlement developed:
defence walls with towers, a mosque, a clock-tower,
Muslim religious school, the residence of the
Pocitelj captains, Turkish inn and bath.
Artists' colony, every first Sunday in June Tresnjeva
nedjelja (Cherry-picking Festival) 19 km to the
north.
Ornithological collection one of the most comprehensive
in Europe (more than 300 stuffed specimens of
birds and game) represents the endemic and migratory
wild life of the Neretva delta.
DUBA PELJESKA (43° 01'N; 17° 10'E), village
(pop. 67 in 1991) and small harbour on the N coast
of Peljesac Peninsula, about 4.5 M west of the
harbour of Trpanj.
Mooring: The small harbour affords protection
for small yachts from the bora and the sirocco.
It is open to waves raised by north-westerlies.
Yachts are recommended to moor at the inner end
of the breakwater (depth 23.5 m).
Facilities: Provisions and water are limited.
Sights: Remains of a Roman building with mosaics.
The summer residence of the poet Dinko Ranjina
(15361607) from Dubrovnik was in nearby Divna
cove (1 mile E).
TRPANJ (43° 00.5'N; 17° 16'E), village
(pop. 660 in 1991) and small harbour on the N
coast of Peljesac Peninsula in the Neretva channel.
Approach: Landmarks: two chapels on two cone-shaped
hillocks; a red tower exhibits a red light on
the head of the E breakwater; a white column exhibits
a red light on the head of the pier.
Care should be taken while approaching the harbour
to avoid a shoal patch with depth of about 3.5
m over it, about 0.4 miles WNW from the head of
the N breakwater. Shallow water extends off the
outer end of the S breakwater, which should be
given a berth.
Mooring: The harbour is protected from winds from
the NE and SE quadrant. Northerlies and winds
from the NW quadrant raise a heavy sea in the
E part of the harbour. Yachts can moor along the
quay or W of the pier (depths 13 m) using the
four-point moor. The four-point moor with bows
facing the second arm of the north, L-shaped breakwater
is also recommended. This position affords protection
from westerlies and from waves.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post-office,
medical service and a chemist's. Gruj Fishing
Club.
Provisions at local shops. Water from the hydrant
on the pier. Fuel at the pump on the waterfront.
Car-ferry line: Trpanj Ploce.
Trpanjske glazbene veceri (Trpanj Music Evenings)
are held here in July.
Sights: Remnants of a Roman summer residence (villa
rustica) at the cemetery; near the ruins of a
medieval castle a Roman pis- cina; the Baroque
church Gospa od Karmela (Our Lady of Carmel);
a private art collection in the house of the Salacan
family.
DRACE (42° 56'N; 17° 27.4'E), village
(pop. 48 in 1991) and small harbour in Bratkovica
cove on the N coast of Peljesac Peninsula. It
serves as the harbour of the village of Janjina
(pop. 371 in 1991) situated about 3 km inland.
Approach: The stone mark on Bililo shoal with
a topmark (two cones turned base to base) and
the white tower with a column (sector light) on
the head of the N breakwater are discernible from
a distance. Care should be taken when making an
approach to avoid the numerous rocks and shoals
E of Rat point and around the islet of Galicak.
The red sector of the light on the N breakwater
covers the clear passage to the harbour.
Mooring: Behind the breakwater yachts are protected
from all winds. Smaller yachts can moor inside
the harbour (depths 1.33). The anchorage ground
ENE of the harbour becomes untenable in a bora.
Facilities: Post office and medical service. Batas
Fishing Club.
Provisions and water in limited supply.
BRIJESTA (42° 54.2'N; 17° 32'E), village
(pop. 130 in 1991) in the cove of the same name
on the N side of the Peljesac Penin- sula.
Approach: Brijesta may be identified by the white
tower with a balcony exhibiting a white light
on Blaca point and by the old tower and the belfry
at the head of the cove.
Mooring: The cove is protected (partly by a string
of islets) from all winds and affords good shelter
to yachts of all sizes. A good anchorage ground
for larger yachts is situated about 700 m SSE
from Blaca point (depths 1723 m). Smaller yachts
can anchor in the inner part of the cove. During
the bora yachts at anchor are well advised to
secure their lines on the NE shore.
Provisions and water in limited supply.
Sights: Defence tower built 1617 for protection
against pirates; Baroque chapel of Sv Liberan
(St Liberanus) at the cemetery.
KUTA (42° 50'N; 17° 45'E), cove at the
head of Mali Ston bay, between the Adriatic highway
and the Peljesac road.
Approach: Yachts aproaching from the NW ahould
take care to avoid the shoal (with a depth of
3 m over it) situated in the straits between Govanj
islet (recognizable by a few buildings scattered
in a sparse forest), also known as the island
of Life (Otok Zivota) in tourist literature, and
the village of Hodilje. The cove is fronted by
a string of islets (Crkvica, Veliki Skolj and
Bisaci). Between them the sea is shallow. A dark
rock is visible SW of Crkvice islet, and W of
Veliki Skolj there is a low-lying rock seen only
when closely approached.
Mooring: The anchorage ground (depth 68 m) off
the NE shore affords shelter from all winds.
ZALJEV MALOG STONA, bay situated between the mainland
coast and the Peljesac Peninsula, is a continuation
of the Mali Ston chan- nel. In some places it
is narrow and shallow. Between the small harbour
of Hodilje and Mali Ston there are a number of
submerged rocks. Only yachts drawing up to 3 m
can navigate from the islet of Govanj to Kuta
cove. A bridge spans the entrance to Bistrina
Cove.
From Celjen point (white tower with a column and
a balcony exhi- biting a white light) course should
be shaped towards the middle of the entrance into
the narrow part of the bay. At night course should
be shaped towards the middle of the line connecting
the green light (white tower) on the molehead
at Hodilje and the red light (red tower) marking
Vranjak shoal. North of the harbour light at Hodilje,
yachts should gradually change course so as to
leave Vranjak to port and proceed closer to the
islet of Ostrog in such a way that the green light
(green tower on a cement base in the sea) marking
the Skoljic shoal (1.4 m) is left to star- board
and the red light (red tower) on Mali Voz point
to port. Oyster beds are marked with marker buoys.
An underwater cable is laid between the islet
of Govanj (sparsely wooded) and Peljesac Peninsula.
The bora blows violently, especially in the winter
season. In the summer months the area is subject
to frequent storms. Sudden changes in the water
level, the so-called ses (1 to 2 m) which may
occur when S winds suddenly start blowing but
occasionally also in calm weather and during storms,
are accompanied with strong and changing currents
(whirlpools and fierce eddies). This phenomenon
is rather rare, but when it occurs it is dangerous.
Shelters: Mali Ston, Kuta cove (depths 68 m at
the anchorage ground), but care should be taken
to avoid the islets, rocks, shoals and rocky patches.
Misevac cove (S of the islet of Skrpun) has a
good anchorage ground for small yachts.
An underwater pipeline is laid on the sea-bed
between the main- land and the shore of the Peljesac
Peninsula (100 m NW of Celjen point).
MALI STON (42° 51'N; 17° 42'E), village
(pop. 152 in 1991) and small harbour on the NE
side of the Ston isthmus, in an indented inlet
in the Mali Ston Channel.
Approach: Landmarks: old fortifications (5 towers)
above the vil- lage and on the slopes of Mt Bartolomija.
A white tower with a column and a balcony exhibiting
a white light on Celjen point.
Mooring: The harbour is sometimes subject to sudden
change in the water-level (ses); the sea level
falls suddenly and immediately starts to rise
again, at times even to 2 m above normal. Only
smaller yachts can enter harbour through the passage
between Govanj islet and the village of Hodilje
(depth of about 3 m), as the depth inside the
harbour ranges from 0.7 to 2.4 m. The har- bour
provides shelter from all winds.
Facilities: Provisions at local shops, water from
the main; fuel at Zamaslina on the Adriatic highway
(4 km by road).
Oyster beds in Bistrina cove in the Mali Ston
Channel; hotel com- plex on nearby Govanj islet
(Otok zivota).
Sights: Town walls (133658) with Sea Gate; Fort
Koruna (with 5 towers) above the village; the
cylindrical Toljevac tower (1478) on the quay.
The medieval defence system of Mali Ston is linked
with that of the town of Ston (long walls transversing
the isthmus and linking both towns with the fortress
on Pozvizd sum- mit (elevation 224 m).
STON or VELIKI STON (41° 49.5'N; 17° 42'E),
village (pop. 581 in 1991) and small harbour in
the NW part of Ston Channel (Stonski kanal).
Approach: Landmarks: the ruined medieval defence
walls above the town; a round red tower with a
column exhibiting a red light is situated on the
quay at Ston.
ZBODY 0 KRAJ = Due to a submerged stone block
at the beginning of the fairway, about 80 m NNW
of the light on the molehead at Broce, yachts
should keep closer to this light. The fairway
lead- ing to Ston is marked on the right side
by two towers (green light) mounted on concrete
bases in the sea. The left side of the fair-way
is marked by 4 towers (red light) on concrete
bases in the sea and by a red tower (red light)
in the small harbour of Broce. From the light
on the molehead (Broce), yachts should proceed
between the first pair of the lights on concrete
bases, then closer to the red tower on a concrete
base in the sea (about 1030 m on a bearing of
299° from the light on the molehead at Broce);
then S of the line connecting the red light with
the red light of the second pair of lights On
account of the shallow sea (up to 1.5 m) yachts
should keep close to the middle of the chan- nel
and then pass between the second pair of lights
After pass- ing it, they should shape course for
the molehead at Ston, on which there is a red
tower (red light). An incoming yacht must wait
in front of Broce for any yacht navigating through
the fairway. A yacht wishing to leave Ston must
wait for any yacht coming through the fairway
to reach Ston harbour.
Mooring: The harbour is protected from all winds
and waves. Tides may cause a strong current which
can make manoeuvering difficult. Yachts lie sidelong
the mole or at the quay. The four-point moor may
also be used. An anchorage ground is situated
in the outer part of the inlet, SE of Broce (depths
1050 m). Good holding ground.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office and medi- cal service. Provisions in local
shops; water from the main; fuel at the petrol
station in the village. Liganj Fishing Club.
Sights: City walls (890 m in length) in the form
of a pentagon encompass the old town, the streets
of which intersect at right angles. From the town
walls the 5 km long Veliki Zid wall extends (13331508),
which runs up to the Pozvizd summit (224 m), whence
it links with the defence walls of Mali Ston.
Remnants of the castle (Veliki Kastel), the Rector's
seat in the time of the Dubrovnik Republic; the
Sorkocevic- 8r|evic residence (Gothic); the former
bishop's residence (1573, with Gothic windows);
a Francis- can monastery and Sv Nikola church
(St Nicholas, 1347, old liturgical objects), town
well (1571), Sv Vlaho church (St Blaise, 1878,
with items from an older church). On Gorica hill
above Ston Sv Mihajlo chapel (St Michael, 9/11
C, mural paintings from that period). Solila (salt
pans), were in use even before the Dubrovnik Republic
gained possession of Peljesac Peninsula (1333).
They occupy an area of over 429860 m2 and have
an annual output of 2800 tons of salt.
STONSKI KANAL, deep and narrow channel leading
from the Kolocep channel (Kolocepski kanal) to
Ston. Its sides up to the village of Broce are
steep and covered by dense brush or wooded (sparse
pine-woods). The depth in the outer (wider) part
of the channel range from 10 to 57 m. The inner
part is narrow and shallow. The fairway leading
from the harbour of Broce to the harbour of Ston
is 25 to 60 m wide with depth ranging from 2 to
3 m. Its left side is marked by five red lights
and the right one with two green lights (see Ston).
Approach: The village of Kobas on the S shore
of the inlet with a quay and the big masonry column
of the transformer station in a pine-forest are
conspicuous. A round white tower with a column
and balcony, on a pedestal, exhibiting a white
light stands on a concrete base at the right entrance
point (Pologrin); a round red tower with a column
exhibiting a red light is situated at the molehead
of Broce.
The bora and the sirocco are strongly felt but
do not interfere with navigation. The direction
and the rate at which the current sets in depend
on the tides. Sudden S winds may cause the sea
level to drop suddenly only to immediately rise
again (sometimes up to 1.25 m). This phenomenon
sometimes occurs in calm weather. The strong currents
and waves pose a danger for navigation in the
channel.
PRAPRATNA (42° 49'N; 17° 41'E), cove in
the SW coast of the Peljesac Peninsula.
Mooring: The cove affords good shelter to smaller
yachts from E winds. Indifferent holding ground
(depth about 20 m). During a bora it is recommended
to secure lines ashore as well.
Warning: The stone mark E of the entrance indicates
the place where an underwater cable comes ashore.
Limited supplies at the camp-site.
A pipeline extends from Prapratna point at a bearing
of 200°.
ZZULJANA (42° 53,5'N; 17° 27'E), village
(pop. 206 in 1991) and small harbour in the E
part of Zuljana bay.
Approach: Landmarks: a white tower exhibiting
a white light on the islet of Lirica; a green
tower with a column and a balcony exhibiting a
green light on the head of the breakwater.
When entering harbour care should be taken to
avoid the low-lying islet of Kosmac, the shallow
rocky bank Miriste and the above- water rock lying
W of it. At night all these dangers are covered
by the dark sector of the green light on the breakwater.
Mooring: Inside the harbour yachts are protected
from all winds but not from waves sent in by strong
SW and NW winds. Smaller yachts can moor at the
end of the breakwater, behind the head of which
the depth is 4 m shelving rapidly towards its
root. The E part of the harbour gradually shelves
towards a pebbly beach. During the bora, smaller
yachts can also anchor in the first two coves
W of the harbour, but with lines secured ashore.
Facilities: Post office and medical service. Some
provisions and limited quantities of water
Sights: Remains of Roman graves; Sv Martin church
(St Martin, Baroque style, built on the site of
a 12 C chapel), and Sv Juli- jana chapel (St Juliana,
transitional style from Renaissance to Baroque).
TRSTENIK (42° 55'N; 17° 24'E), village
(pop. 106 in 1991) and small harbour in the NW
part of Zuljana bay.
Approach: Trstenik may be identified by the red
metal tower with a column and balcony exhibiting
a red light on the head of break- water and Sv
Mihovil chapel (St Michael) on the right side.
Mooring: The harbour affords shelter from W winds,
but strong S and SW winds raise a heavy sea in
it. The bora blows violently here, but does not
raise waves. Yachts can moor at the inner end
of the breakwater (depths 24.6 m) or anchor SE
from its head (depth of about 30 m) with lines
secured ashore, bows facing NE. The head of the
breakwater is reserved for car-ferry.
Facilities: Post office and harbour master's branch
office. Some provisions and limited quantities
of water.
Minor repairs are possible at the workshop on
the N shore of the small harbour.
Car-ferry line: Trstenik Polace (Island of Mljet).
PODOBUCE (42 ° 57'N; 17 ° 17'E), village
(pop. 35 in 1991) and cove on the S coast of Peljesac
Peninsula.
Mooring: The cove affords shelter from all winds
except souther- lies. The landing-place can only
accomodate smaller yachts as the depth alongside
range from 24 m.
Facilities: Limited provisions and water.
OREBIC (42° 58.5'N; 17° 11'E), small town
(pop. 1,489 in 1991) in the Peljeski kanal. Popular
tourist resort.
Approach: Landmarks: the green square tower with
a column exhi- biting a green light on the head
of the long breakwater and the buildings of the
hotel complex.
Mooring: In the SE part of the harbour the local
Peliska Jedra Sailing Club maintains a yacht harbour
with 240 berths. About 30 of them are available
to passing yachts. Most of them are situated alongside
the breakwater in the E part of the harbour. The
depth ranges from 2.53.5 m. The entrance is marked
by marker-buoys.
Facilities: Post office, hotels, a hotel complex,
restaurants, medical service, chemist's. Sandy
beaches. The harbour master's branch office for
the area is located at Korcula.
Provisions at local shops, water from the main,
fuel at the petrol station in the town.
Car-ferry line: Orebic Dominca (Island of Korcula).
Sights: Pomorski muzej (Maritime Museum) and two
private collec- tions at the homes of the families
(sea captains) Zupa and Fiskovic. In the surroundings:
hill-forts and tombs dating from prehistoric times;
remnants of a Roman villa rustica; the Fran- ciscan
monastery (1470, in Gothic-Renaissance transitional
style); Gospa od An|ela church (Our Lady of the
Angels, with Renaissance marble reliefs, with
adjoining cemetery and interest- ing gravestones
of Orebic seamen). Above the town in the hamlet
Karmen (elevation 178 m), Gospa od Karmena church
(Our Lady of Karmen, Gothic, renovated in Baroque
style), surrounded by Roman sarcophagi and old
cypress-trees; further on the ruins of the Rector's
residence and a Loggia.
VIGANJ (42° 59'N; 17° 06'E), village (pop.
330 in 1991) and small harbour in Peljeski kanal,
on the S coast of Peljesac Peninsula, about 3.5
miles W of Orebic.
Approach: Landmarks: the buildings of holiday
centre on the low- lying Sv Liberan promontory,
the monastery and the belfry in the village.
Mooring: Yachts of light and medium draught can
moor on both sides of the small pier or along
the village jetty using the four-point moor (depths
1.94.2 m). The best anchorage ground for deeper
drawing yachts is situated SW of the monastery
(depths 20 28 m). It is sheltered from the sirocco
but exposed to W winds and the bora.
Facilities: Provisions and water.
Sights: In the surroundings: Illyrian tumuli;
Roman finds, Fran- ciscan monastery (cloister)
with the Gospa od Ruzarija church (Our Lady of
the Rosary, 1671); Sv Mihovil church (St Michael,
Gothic, enlarged in 1760).
LOVISTE (43° 02'N; 17° 02'E), village
(pop. 242 in 1991) and sheltered anchorage ground
in Luka cove, on the westernmost part of Peljesac
Peninsula, between the small promontories Lovisce
(N) and Osicac (S). In the N part of the cove
is the hamlet of Mirci.
Approach: The village may be identified by the
white tower exhi- biting a white light situated
on Osicac; the white square masonry tower with
a balcony on Lovisce point, the spar buoy on the
S entrance point and round red tower with a column
(red light) on Kljuc point.
Mooring: The cove affords good all-round shelter.
Only its S part is exposed to waves sent in by
W and SW winds. Small yachts can moor on both
sides of the pier in front of the village of Loviste
(depth from 1 to 3.2 m). A good anchorage ground
is situated in the N part of the cove, E of Kljuc
point (depth 17 m). Another anchorage is in Mirci
cove (a few houses) in its NE part.
Facilities: Post office. Food (restaurant) and
water (from the main).
Sights: Remnants of a Roman villa rustica. In
Roman times Loviste was a stopping-off point for
seaborne traffic between Korcula (Corcyra nigra)
and Vid (Narona) on the Neretva River.
DOLI (42° 48'N; 17° 48'E), cove and village
(pop. 253 in 1991) in Budima bay (Kolocep Channel),
about 3.5 miles NW of Slano.
Approach: Landmark: a red iron tower with a column
(a red light) on the head of the breakwater.
Mooring: The cove affords protection from all
winds except the sirocco. Only small yachts can
moor at the breakwater in the small harbour (depths
1.23.8 m). Larger yachts can anchor in inlet,
Budima cove, between the coves of Janska and Budima,
about 500 m offshore (depths 4060 m). As this
anchorage is exposed to the bora and to southerlies,
it is suitable for temporary stays only.
Sights: Remnants of the Roman castrum Pardua at
Zamaslina (5 km NW). In the village the church
Gospino Uznesenje (Assumption of the Holy Virgin),
with several medieval tombstones around it, defence
tower (late 16 C) built for protection against
pirates.
SLANO (42° 47'N; 17° 52'E), village (pop.
512 in 1991) and small harbour at the head of
a spacious cove in Kolocep Channel.
Approach: It may be easily identified by the light
coloured buildings of the hotel complex at the
head of the cove, the grey pointed spire with
a clock, the masonry tower with a balcony exhibiting
a red light on Donji cape, W of which is Osmine
hotel. A green column exhibits a green light on
the S corner of the quay.
Mooring: The inlet affords shelter from the sirocco
and, partly, from the bora, which blows here with
violence. Yachts drawing up to 2.5 m can berth
at the landing-place with lines secured to bollards
(depths 46 m). The four-point moor is also recommended.
Good anchorage grounds abound within the inlet.
During the bora and the sirocco it is best to
anchor on the lee of the E shore in the small
Banja cove. Osmine cove (to the SW) is occupied
by naturists from the naturist Osmine hotel. Yachts
of deep draught can anchor in front of the entrance
to the inlet, SW of Gornji point (depth 50 m).
Facilities: Post office, medical service, harbour
master's branch office. Provisions and water.
A traditional fair is held at Slano every year
on August 2. It is attended by villagers in folk-costumes.
The famous folk-dance lin|o is danced on that
occasion.
Sights: Remnants of Illyrian settlement and tumuli
in the immedi- ate surroundings; traces of Roman
castrum in the village. Along the road to Zavala
stecak medieval tombs. The Rector's residence
(reconstructed in the 19 C); the summer residence
of the Ohmucevic family, Franciscan church (1420,
with Roman sarcophagi around it); Sv Vlaho church
(St Blaise, 1758).
ZATON (42° 41'N; 18° 03'E), deep bay 3
miles NW of Dubrovnik. Three villages (pop. 707
in 1991) are situated in it: Veliki Zaton on the
west side, Stikovica on the east side and Mali
Zaton on the north coast.
Approach: Landmark: a white iron tower with a
column and a bal- cony (red light) is situated
on the SW entrance point (Bat) of the bay.
Mooring: In the winter season the bay is exposed
to strong S, SW and N winds (especially to the
bora) and it is not recommended for longer stays.
Yachts drawing up to 2.5 m can moor at the pier
fronting Veliki Zaton. Anchorage grounds in the
middle of the bay and in its N part (depths 1923
m). Owing to the bora, it is advisable that anchoring
yachts secure their lines to the bol- lards on
the E shore.
Facilities: Post office and medical service in
Mali Zaton. Provi- sions at the self-service shop;
water. Fuel at the pump on the Adriatic highway.
Minor repairs can be undertaken.
Sights: A number of Renaissance and Baroque summer
residences of the Dubrovnik patrician families,
Sv Stjepan church (St Stephen, 1050, reconstructed
several times); old water-mill at Mali Zaton.
Orasac (Arapovo, fortified summer residence allegedly
built for the Florentine gonfalonier Pietro Soderini,
now housing a restau- rant) 5 km NW. Trsteno (two
giant plane trees Platanus orien- talis on the
village square; summer residence of the Gucetic
family with beautifully laid-out park and arboretum
dating from 1502; great number of exotic trees,
nature reserve) 8 km NW.
DUBROVNIK MARINA MIHO PRACAT is situated at Komolac
(Rijeka Dubrovacka), about 2 M from the entrance
into Gruz harbour. A long breakwater protects
the marina from the river current.
Up to the prominent monastery in Prijevor village
the inlet (river) has a width of 170 to 400 m
and is navigable for craft of all sizes. From
Prijevor onwards the river narrows and its depth
gradually decreases. Anchoring is allowed only
to small yachts (yachts) NE of the village of
Trajkovici (depth 511 m).
The bora is strongly felt, at times blowing down
the river valley with gale force. NW and SW winds
sometimes raise a heavy sea at the river mouth.
Yachts berth at the breakwater, at the embankment,
and at the floating fingers. There are about 450
sea-berths with water, electricity and telephone
hook-ups. Dry-berths (6000 square m) for about
350 yachts. The depth inside the marina is 5 m;
max. speed allowed is 5 knots.
The marina is open all year round as the port
of entry; customs.
It has reception office, harbour master's branch
office, hotel, restaurant, super-market, duty-free
shop (DFS), shop selling nautical items and spares,
nautical charts and other relevant publications,
camping and sports equipment; tennis court. Nearest
post office in the village of Komolac. Fuel pump
and sale of bot- tled gas (500 m).
Crane (5 t) and launching and hauling-up facility
(25 t and 60 t travel-lift), slipway, wintering
(outdoors), safe keeping, clean- ing and rubbing
down of laid-up yachts. Repairs to wooden and
plastic hulls, repair and maintenance of all types
of engines (VOLVO authorized service), installation
of engines and electric installations, painting
and varnishing. Nearest shipyard at Mokosica (downstream
on Rijeka Dubrovacka).
DUBROVNIK, city (pop. 49,728 in 1991), town, port
and major tour- ist centre of the eastern Adriatic.
The Port of Dubrovnik con- sists of the Old City
harbour in the E part of the Old Town, the commercial
harbour Gruz NW of the Old Town, and Rijeka Dubrovacka,
the inlet which houses the Dubrovnik Marina (Komo-
lac).
Old City harbour (42° 38,5'N; 18° 07'E)
protected by the Por- porela breakwater (red square
iron tower with a column exhibiting a red light)
and by the masonry sea-wall Kase.
The City harbour can accomodate yachts drawing
up to 3 m. The small pier is reserved for local
passenger ships. Smaller yachts can anchor in
Gornja Bocina cove (S of Kriz point); moderate
waves and winds.
Gruz harbour (42° 40'N; 18° 05'E), commercial
port 2.5 km northwest of the Old City.
Approach: When approach is effected from Kolocep
Channel, land- marks include the Babin Kuk hotel
complex on the Lapad peninsula, the round white
tower exhibiting a white light on the N extremity
of the islet of Daksa, the round red tower with
a column and a balcony (red light) on Kantafig
point. When approach is effected from the open
sea, landmarks include Mt Sr| (elevation 403 m)
with a conspicuous grey radio mast and cable car
installations on its slopes, the two conical wooded
hills (Velika Petka, 197 m and Mala Petka, 146
m) on the Lapad peninsula below which are the
white buildings of housing developments, the lighthouse
on the islet of Sv Andrija (square masonry tower
on a dwelling, flashing white, visibility about
22 miles), the square masonry tower on a dwelling
exhibiting a white light on the westernmost rock
of the Grebeni rocks, the conical masonry tower
with a balcony exhibit- ing a white light on the
island of Kolocep (Bezdanj point), the tower (white
light) on the islet of Daksa. The shoal patch
Vranac which extends off the N coast of Lapad
is marked by a square stone mark with a conical
topmark (peak turned upwards). Between this mark
and the coast the depth is about 0.8 m.
Special Regulations. Yachts of all descriptions
are required to reduce speed to 4 knots inside
the line joining the light on Daksa islet and
Leandar point (Lozica). Anchorage is prohibited
SE of the line joining Vranac shoal (off the N
coast of Lapad) and Leandar point. Navigation
is prohibited between the islet of Daksa and the
Lapad peninsula from April 1 to October 1.
Mooring: The harbour is protected from all winds
except wester- lies, which raise waves and cause
a swell to creep in. The bora blows violently.
Its full impact is felt at the harbour entrance
and in the area around Kantafig point (at the
mouth of Rijeka Dubrovacka). The Petka pier (Gat
Petka) is reserved for liners and the car-ferry
service (DubrovnikBari). Moorages for yachts are
laid out S of Petka pier (in depth of about 4
m) to the Radeljevic factory (berths are indicated
by the Luka company). Smaller yachts may moor
at the breakwater or in the small harbour of the
Orsan Sailing Club, if prior permission has been
obtained and dues paid at the club. The depth
range from 4 to 5 m.
Dubrovnik Marina Miho Pracat (ACY) is situated
at Komolac (Rijeka Dubrovacka). Yachts can anchor
(with lines secured ashore) in Lozica cove, NW
of Leandar point.
The port is open to international traffic as a
permanent port of entry.
The Gruz area houses the harbour master's office
(with a branch office in the Old City harbour),
post office, customs house, the Maritime Faculty
and Maritime School, the headquarters of Atlantska
plovidba shipping line, central post office, hospital
and the Atlas Travel Agency, which owns a fleet
of tourist ships. The Orsan Sailing Club.
The coastal radio station RADIODUBROVNIK is a
station of the mobile maritime radio service (see
Part I of the Guide).
Facilities: Food privisions and other supplies
at big shops and at the open market. Water from
the hydrant on the waterfront and in the small
harbour of the Orsan Sailing Club; fuel at the
pump on the small wooden jetty (yachts drawing
up to 3 m) in the yacht harbour of the Orsan (E
coast of the Lapad peninsula), and at the pump
at Sustjepan (Rijeka Dubrovacka, yachts drawing
up to 8 m). Navigation charts and other relevant
publications may be obtained at the office of
PLOVPUT Plovno podrucje Dubrovnika (Gruska obala
25).
Hauling-out of yachts up to 200 GRT at the slipway;
mobile crane for yachts up to 12 and 13 m. The
Orsan Sailing Club provides moorage and lying-up
of yachts and yachts during the whole year; also
care and maintenance of engines.
Car-ferry lines: Dubrovnik (Mljet Vela Luka) Hvar
Split (Primosten) Zadar Rab (M. Losinj) Rijeka;
Dubrovnik Bari.
Local passenger line: Dubrovnik Kolocep Lopud
Su|ura| Luka Sipanska Okuklje Sobra Polace.
Sights (Old City). City walls (10 C, reconstructed
and reinforced between 12 C and 17 C) with the
forts: Sv Ivan (St John, housing the Maritime
and the Ethnographic Museums, the Aquarium, the
Bio- logical Institute), Minceta, Revelin (with
a stage for perfor- mances) and Bokar. The town
gates Pile and Ploce. Fort Lovri- jenac, the Sponza
Palace (1312, reconstructions 151622, housing
the State Archives), the Rector's Palace (Knezev
dvor, 1435, reconstructions in 1465 and after
1667, housing the Municipal Museum Dubrovacki
muzej), the Clock Tower (first recorded in 1444,
renovated in 1929), Rupe (granary of the Dubrovnik
Repub- lic, 154290, housing part of the Municipal
Museum and ethno- graphic collection); Orlando's
Column (1418, renovated), the Onofrio Fountain
(1428), the Lazarettos (quarantine hospitals near
the Ploce Gate, 1590 and additions 162324). Churches:
Velika Gospa cathedral (Our Lady, 16721713, rich
treasury; the remains of an earlier, Romanesque
cathedral, which stood on the same site, were
discovered after the earthquake of 1979); Sv Vlaho
(St Blaise, 170614), Sv Ignacije (St Ignatius,
1725, mural paintings; adjoining the church there
is the building of the former Jesuit college,
Collegium Ragusinum), Sv Spas (the Holy Saviour,
152028). Monasteries: Franciscan (Minorite) monastery
(1317, cloister with 14 C hexaphores, pharmacy
from 1317, Sv Frano church /St Francis/, 1343),
Dominican monastery (14 C, cloister from 15 C,
art collections, Sv Dominik church, 1315, with
later reconstructions); the nunnery at Dance (1457,
important paintings in the church). Skocibuha
Palace (154953). Summer residence of the Pucic
family at the Pile Gate (now housing the Atlas
Travel Agency).
Gruz summer residences of the Dubrovnik nobles:
The Bunic-Pucic- Gradic residence (Gothic Renaissance
transitional style); the Gundulic residence (16
C, with yacht house); the Natali residence (Renaissance);
the Getaldic-Gundulic residence (Gothic and Renaissance);
the residence of Petar Sorkocevic (1521), now
hous- ing the Historical Institute of the Croatian
Academy of Arts and Sciences (Zagreb) and a collection
of objects of cultural and historical interest.
In the surroundings. Fort Impirial on Mt Sr| (elevation
412 m), cable car (from the Konal area N of the
Old Town). Lokrum islet (0.5 M from the City harbour):
Benedictine monastery (14 C, later reconstructions)
housing the Museum of Natural Sciences and the
Ru|er Boskovic Memorial Museum. On the S side
of the islet there is an interesting natural phenomenon
called the Dead Sea. The whole islet is under
protection as a national park. Smoking for- bidden.
CAVTAT (42° 35'N; 18° 13'E), town (pop.
1,930 in 1991) and small harbour with a quayed
shore situated in a well-protected cove about
18 miles SE of Dubrovnik.
Approach: Landmarks: the white mausoleum surmounted
by a cupola on the summit of the Sv Rok hillock
(elevation 42 m). Naviga- tional marks include
the round tower on a concrete base painted in
red and black stripes, topped by two black spheres
exhibiting a white light on the shoal Seka vela
and the white round tower with a column (sector
light) on the NE entrance point.
When entering harbour care should be taken to
avoid two shoal patches fronting the entrance
Seka vela (3.7 m) and Seka mala (3 m); Seka vela
is marked by the black-red-black striped tower
topped by two black spheres. SE of the Sustjepan
point there is a rock and a shoal (9.3 m) of the
same name. The white sector of the lights on the
NE and SW entrance points covers the safe pas-
sage, while the red and the green sectors cover
the off-lying dangers.
Mooring: The harbour affords shelter from the
sirocco and the bora. With NW and W winds an uncomfortable
surge develops inside the harbour and yachts are
recommended to leave under such condi- tions;
the occurrence of this surge (ses) is a characteristic
feature of this harbour. Yachts can moor at the
quay in the E part of the harbour (depths 1.5
4.7 m). A good anchorage ground affording shelter
from E and SE winds is situated in the S part
of the harbour (depths 1020 m). An alternate anchorage
is situated under the NE shore of the Sustjepan
peninsula. During NW winds it is advisable to
berth in front of the church using the four-point
moor. Yachts can also anchor in the middle of
Tiha bay (depths 68 m), NE of Cavtat (Bay of Zupa),
as well as in its W part (with lines secured ashore).
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, medical service, chemist's, hotels of
all categories, and various touris- tic objects.
Provisions at local shops, water from the hydrant
on the waterfront. Fuel at the pump E of town.
Sights: Remains of defence wall (1461), remains
of Roman thermal baths, aqueduct, inscriptions;
the Rector's residence (155558, housing a library,
archives, a museum collection, a graphic arts
collection assembled by the scientist Baldo Bogisic,
and a lapi- darium). The churches: Sv Nikola (St
Nicholas 1484; reconstructed 1732), Sv Vlaho (St
Blaise, with adjacent Franciscan monastery from
1483). The residence of the Kaboga family. The
gallery (former studio) of the painter Vlaho Bukovac.
On the hillock Sv Rok above the town a cemetery
with the mausoleum of the Racic family by the
sculptor Ivan Mestrovic (192022). Mlini (remnants
of Roman buildings, summer residence of the Stay
family) 7 km to the N. Konavle (a 22 km long fertile
valley), known for its folklore and national costumes,
which may be admired at the vil- lage of Cilipi
after Sunday mass.
DONJI MOLUNAT (42° 27'N; 18° 26'E), village
(pop. 199 in 1991, together with the village of
Gornji Molunat), and cove on the N side of Rat
peninsula. Affords good shelter to yachts of all
sizes (in depth up to 16 m). It is open to NW
winds, which raise heavy sea. In order to protect
the underwater telephone cable, yachts should
anchor as close to the peninsula as possible.
GORNJI MOLUNAT (42° 27'N; 18° 26'E), village
and cove on the SE side of Rat peninsula, about
13 M southeast from Cavtat.
Approach: Navigational marks include the round
tower with a bal- cony (white light) on the SW
side of Veli skolj islet.
Approaching yachts should give a berth to the
rocky patch extend- ing off the NNE coast of Veli
skolj islet and keep closer to the mainland coast
(tower with a column and a balcony white light).
Mooring: The cove is well protected from all winds.
The bora is strong but does not develop a sea.
Waves make entrance to the cove very difficult
in a sirocco. Yachts drawing 2.5 m can moor alongside
the quay in front of the village. There is anchorage
in the middle of the harbour (depth 9 m), N of
islets Veli skolj and Supetric.
ISLAND OF KORCULA
PRIHONJA (42° 59.5'N; 16° 42'E), cove
in the N coast of Korcula, sheltered from S winds.
The E part of the cove provides some shelter from
the bora, too. Smaller yachts can berth at the
small pier in the E part of the cove using the
four-point moor. A wreck dangerous to navigation
(with a depth of 6 m over it) lies N of the pier.
PRAPRATNA (42° 59'N; 16° 43'E), cove in
the N coast of Korcula, adjoining the Prihonja
inlet.
Mooring: The cove affords shelter from southerlies
but is open to northerlies. Only smaller yachts
can moor at the small breakwater (depths 1.52
m). Care should be taken when anchoring on account
of an underwater power cable.
PRIGRADICA (42° 58'N; 16° 49'E), village
(pop. 25 in 1991) and small harbour in the N coast
of Korcula, at the foot of the Veli vrh hill (190
m).
Approach: Landmarks: the marks of a measured mile
and a chapel; a red iron tower with a column and
a balcony (red light) is situated on the head
of the breakwater (E shore). If approaching from
E, care should be taken to avoid the Naplovci
rocks.
Mooring: The cove is completely open to the bora
and to E winds, NW cause a reflected swell. Good
anchorage grounds for smaller yachts (depths 1218
m); yachts can moor alongside the quay (depths
2.53 m) and at the inner side of the breakwater
(depth 5 m).
Facilities: Hotel and restaurant. Water from the
main.
RACISCE (42° 58'N; 17° 0,16E), village
(pop. 456 in 1991) and small harbour on the N
coast of Korcula, W of Kneza vela islet.
Approach: Landmarks: the village houses at the
head of the cove; the white monument on its E
coast; a green tower with a column and a balcony
(green light) on the head of the breakwater.
Mooring: The harbour affords shelter from all
winds with the exception of northerlies. Smaller
yachts can moor at the inner end of the breakwater
(depth 23.5 m), which is from time to time used
by local liners supplying the island population.
A good anchorage ground is situated in the middle
of the cove, N of the breakwater (depth 14 m).
It is open to northerlies and yachts should weigh
and leave when such winds start blowing.
Facilities: Post office, medical service. Provisions
in local shops, water from the main.
KNEZA (42° 57'N; 17° 04'E), cove in the
N coast of Korcula in Peljesac channel.
Approach: Landmarks: the islet of Kneza vela and
the masonry tower (white light) on its NE extremity
are conspicuous.
Shoal water extends betwen the islet Kneza mala
and the coast of Korcula.
Mooring: The islet is protected from winds blowing
from the W and NW quadrants. Good anchorage SW
of the island of Kneza mala but during the bora
it is better to anchor W of the islet.
KORCULA (42° 58'N; 17° 08'E), town (pop.
3,232 in 1991) and har- bour on the NE coast of
the island of the same name. The harbour consists
of W and E parts.
Approach: The city walls and the belfry of the
cathedral are con- spicuous. Landmarks: the red
square tower with a column exhibit- ing (red light)
on the breakwater head in the W harbour and the
green round tower with a column and balcony (green
light) on the quay in the E harbour.
Mooring: The W harbour affords shelter from winds
blowing from the SE and SW quadrants. North-westerlies
raise a sea in this harbour and it is advisable
to shift to the E harbour or to Luka cove, when
such winds start blowing; mooring for yachts are
laid out alongside the S waterfront below the
fortress walls (depths 34 m). The E harbour is
protected from winds blowing from the SW and NW
quadrants; mooring for yachts are also available
alongside the quay (depths 46.7 m), S of the harbour
light.
Warning: Underwater power cables cross the channel
between the coves E and W of the town and Peljesac
Peninsula and anchorage is prohibited in these
areas.
The harbour is open to international traffic as
a permanent port of entry.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, medical
service, chemist's, post office; head-office of
Mediteranska plovidba shipping line; Inkobrod
shipyard; Kanjac Fishing Club and Korcula Sailing
Club.
Provisions at shops, water from the main. Fuel
at the pump in the E harbour. Navigation charts
and relevant publications at the office PLOVPUT
Plovno podrucje Dubrovnik ispostava Korcula (Zapadna
obala bb.)
Repairs to hulls and engines at the Inkobrod and
the Brodogradi- telj shipyards, as well as at
a number of privately owned workshops.
Car-ferry line: Korcula (Dominca)Orebic.
A traditional sword dance, the Moreska, is performed
at Korcula every July 27 in commemoration of a
victory over Turkish invaders.
Sights: City walls (13 C onwards, partly demolished
1875) with the forts: Zorzi (1449), Balbi (1483),
tower next to the Balbi fort (1449), Zakerjan
(148183), Bokar (148588), Barbarigo (148588),
Capello (1493), and the Land Gate (Kopnena vrata)
Reve- lin (14 C, renovated, with sculptural decorations).
Loggia on the waterfront (1548), Sv Marko Cathedral
(St Mark, apse from the 14 C, naves from the 15
C; Sv Rok chapel from 1525; ciborium, altar-pieces
by Tintoretto, L. Bassano, C. Ridolfi, old tombs),
Abbey Treasury (Opatska riznica, collection of
liturgical items and church furnishing, art and
other objects of cultural and his- torical interest),
Gabrielis Residence (16 C, housing Municipal Museum,
with exhibits and collections illustrating Korcula's
development through history), abandoned Arneri
Palace (florid Gothic, with Renaissance patio),
Town Hall (1515, additions from 1866): Sv Mihovil
church (St Michael, 1408, art objects, the hall
of the Confraternity), the All Saints' Hall of
the Confraternity (with church from the 15 C,
renovated, coffered ceiling, collec- tion of icons),
the so-called Marco Polo House with a turret,
the Dominican monastery with the Sv Nikola church
(St Nicholas, about 1505, renovations in 1573
and 1655, baroque inventory). Outside the town,
on a hill, the round Sv Vlaho (St Blaise) fort
(also called Fort Wellington) built by the British
in 1813.
KORCULA MARINA (ACY Grassetto) is situated in
the small bay E of the town.
From the SE the marina is protected by a breakwater
(green tower with a column and a balcony exhibiting
a green light on its head).
Capacity: 200 sea-berths (four-point moor) are
laid out alongside the waterfront, the pier and
the breakwater. About 50 dry-berths are available.
The depth is about 3 m along the waterfront and
up to 10 m alongside the breakwater.
The marina operates all year round.
The marina has reception office, restaurant, coffee-bar,
apart- ments, shopping area including duty-free
shop, rent-a-car and rent-a-yacht, toilets and
showers with hot water, laundry, car park, fuel
station nearby. Slip (35 t) and crane (10 t);
techni- cal services.
LUKA (42° 57'N; 17° 07'E), deep inlet
about 0.5 miles SE of the Korcula harbour. Affords
shelter from all winds with exception of the bora.
Small yachts can moor of the landing place in
the NW part of the inlet. Food and water at the
restaurants on the S shore.
LUMBARDA (42° 55'N; 17° 11'E), village
(pop. 1,102 in 1991) and small harbour situated
on the easternmost part of the island of Korcula.
Approach: The white masonry tower (white light)
on Raznjic point, on the E extremity of the island,
is conspicuous. Care should be taken to avoid
the low-lying Knezic rock E of Tatinja cove and
the Bili zal shoal (depth 5 m over it) extending
E of Knezic rock.
Mooring: In the marina. There are more anchorages.
Bufalo cove (depth about 14 m) affords protection
from all winds but is open to waves from the sirocco.
Tatinja cove is open to winds blowing from the
NE quadrant.
Facilities: Post office, medical service, chemist's,
self-service store. Provisions and water.
Berba naranaca (Orange-picking festival) is held
in February.
Sights: Archaeological finds from a colony founded
by Greeks from Issa (Vis) in the 4 C B.C. The
most important of the finds, an inscription in
stone (Ploca iz Lumbarde) is now in the Archaeo-
logical Museum in Zagreb. The medieval church
of Sv Petar (St Peter) and the church of Sv Rok
(1561); partly fortified summer residences of
patrician families (Krsinic, Nobilo and Milina).
Art collections: sculptors Frane Krsinic, Ivan
Lozica and Ivan Jurjevic-Knez.
LUMBARDA MARINA is situated in Lumbarda cove (depths
57 m at the entrance; fixed mark, 1.6 m).
There are about 170 sea-berths (yachts 535 m,
depths 6-2 m) and 40 dry-berths (514 m).
It has reception office, restaurant, hotel, supermarket,
duty- free shop; slipway, mechanical work; charter
fleet. The marina is not in full operation.
PUPNATSKA LUKA (42° 56'N; 17° 00'E), cove
in the S coast of the island of Korcula. The village
of Pupnat (pop. 488 in 1991).
Mooring: The cove provides shelter only from northerlies.
Yachts may anchor (depth 1015 m) only in settled
weather.
Facilities: Provisions and water in limited supply.
ZAVALATICA (42° 55'N; 16° 56'E), cove
in the S coast of the island of Korcula.
Mooring: Yachts (drawing up to 3 m) can berth
behind the small breakwater using four-point moor.
As the inlet affords shelter from northerlies
only, yachts should leave when southerlies start
blowing.
Facilities: Water from the main, provisions in
local shops.
BRNA (42° 54'N; 16° 52'E), village (pop.
20 in 1991) in the spa- cious bay of the same
name; harbour for the village of Smokvica (pop.
1,125 in 1991) situated further inland (4 km).
Approach: Landmarks: the round white tower with
a column and a balcony (white light) on the wooded
Veli zaglav cape and the hotel building. When
approaching the harbour from the W, care should
be taken to avoid a number of shoals, rocks and
islets.
Mooring: The bay is sheltered from all winds except
westerlies and south-westerlies, which cause unpleasant
sea, especially in the winter months, and it is
recommended to seek shelter in the small cove
of Kosirina. With the bora blowing, yachts should
secure their lines on shore. Yachts can moor along
the mole (depths 45 m) or anchor in the middle
of the cove.
Facilities: Provisions in local shops. Fuel not
available.
PRIZBA (42° 54'N; 16° 48'E), fishing village
(pop. 10 in 1991) and anchorage on the S coast
of the island of Korcula; S of it lies Blato town
and harbour (pop. 4,093 in 1991).
Approach: The anchorage ground is surrounded by
a string of islets (Stupa, Crklica, Sridnjak,
Vrhovnjak) and by a number of above-water rocks
(Cerin) and submerged rocks.
Mooring: The anchorage is exposed only to SE and
SW winds. Smaller yachts can find shelter from
S winds in the small cove of Prizba mala or under
the N coast of the islet of Sridnjak. The depth
at the molehead in Prizba mala is only about 1
m.
Facilities: Hotel, restaurant. Provisions and
water.
GRSCICA (42° 54'N; 16° 47'E), small fishing
village and cove on the S coast of Korcula, about
1 M west of Prizba. Care should be taken when
entering to avoid the shoal (about 1.2 m) situated
in the middle of the cove by keeping to the N
coast.
Mooring: The cove affords good shelter to yachts
drawing up to 4 m in all winds with the exception
of south-westerlies.
KARBUNI (42° 55'N; 16° 44'E), village
and anchorage on the SW coast of Korcula, about
2 M west of Grscica; fronted and pro- tected by
the islet of Zvirinovik.
Mooring: Good anchorage along the N coast of the
islet of Zviri- novik (depths 14 25 m). Smaller
yachts are recommended to use four-point moor
in the small cove of Zvirinovik.
TRI LUKE (42° 55'N; 16° 40.5'E), spacious
cove on the SW part of Korcula.
Mooring: The cove is open to winds and waves from
the SE quadrant but provides shelter from all
other winds. During the sirocco small yachts can
shelter between the islets of Prznjak veli and
Prznjak mali.
VELA LUKA (42° 58'N; 16° 43'E), town (pop.
4,464 in 1991) and harbour in the bay of the same
name on the W coast of Korcula.
Approach: Landmarks: the white hexagonal masonry
tower (white light) on the western extremity of
the island of Proizd; the octagonal masonry tower
(white light) on Velo dance point and the square
masonry tower (red light) on the islet of Kamenjak;
the pyramidal stone tower with a red balcony (red
light) on Vranac point; the belfries and the chimney
of the fish cannery; the white tower with a column
and a balcony (green light) on the head of the
car-ferry landing place; the white tower (green
light) on the W end of the quay in Vela Luka.
The passage between the islands of Proizd and
Korcula is shallow (3 m). The rocks Izvanjska
and Prva are situated N of this pas- sage. In
the proximity of the low-lying point of Velo dance,
which should be given a berth of at least 400
m, there is the barely visible Cancir rock.
Mooring: The harbour is sheltered from all winds
but stronger westerlies send in waves. Yachts
can moor alongside the quay, a part of which is
reserved for local passenger ships (depths 2.14.8
m). Smaller yachts can use the four-point moor
alongside the small jetty E of the quay (depths
1.32.1 m).
The bay affords good protection to yachts: the
anchorage ground E and ESE of the Osjak islet
(depths 3050 m); Plitvine cove (where smaller
yachts can use the four-point moor); Gradina cove
(good anchorage for yachts drawing up to 4 m)
and alongside the shore in Bobovisce cove.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, post
office, hotels, rest-homes, numerous espresso-bars
and restaurants, medical ser- vice, chemist's,
fish-cannery; Zubatac Fishing Club, head office
of Pomorska plovidba shipping line. In Kale cove,
situated at the head of the harbour, there is
the Kalos sanatorium (treatment of joint inflammations,
sciatica and female disorders with radio- active
water and mud).
Water from the hydrant. Fuel at the pump on the
waterfront. Repairs can be undertaken at the Greben
shipyard.
Car-ferry lines: Lastovo (Ubli) Vela Luka Hvar
Split; Lastovo (Ubli) Vela Luka Split.
Every four years Vela Luka is the venue of an
international club (workshop) of architects, sculptors,
painters and mosaic artists. The works of art
produced are donated to Vela Luka.
ISLAND OF LASTOVO
MALI LAGO (42° 46,5'N; 16° 50'E), small
bay between the W coast of Lastovo and Prezba
island.
Approach: Zrvanj point on the small cone-shaped
peninsula on the E side of the entrance and the
islet of Maslovnjak veli N of it are easily identified
from seaward. Approach should be made between
the islet of Maslovnjak veli and Zrvanj point
because of the Karlovica tovari and Hljeb rocks
situated between the islets of Maslovnjak veli
and Maslovnjak mali.
Mooring: The cove is sheltered from all winds.
Good anchorage for larger yachts S of Zrvanj point
(depths 3840 m). Smaller yachts can anchor at
the head of the cove (depths 1416 m).
Facilities: Limited provisions in the passage
Most (Pasadur) or in the harbour of Ubli.
VELJI LAGO (42° 45'N; 16° 49'E), spacious
bay and harbour on the W coast of Lastovo. The
village of Ubli (pop. 303 in 1991) is situated
in the SE part of the bay.
Approach: Landmarks: approaching from the W: the
islet of Kopiste, the hills Hun (417 m) and Plesevo
(415 m), the islets of Bratin and Vlasnik. On
the S side of the entrance is Cuf point and on
the N side Kremene point a white concrete tower
with a column and a balcony (sector light); a
red tower with a column and a balcony (red light)
is situated on the wharf at Ubli (SE part of the
bay).
Warning: In order to avoid the rocky shoals N
of Cuf point yachts should approach on the aligment:
Kremena point (white tower) and the SE extremity
of Makarac islet. By night the fairway lies within
the white sectors of the light on Kremena point.
Navigation is prohibited in the small cove of
Jurjeva luka (the islet of Prezba).
Mooring: Kremena cove on the SE coast of Prezba
island is shel- tered from all winds. Smaller
yachts can moor along the wharf in the harbour
of Ubli (depths 4.56 m) in the SE part of the
cove or in front of the Solitudo hotel (depths
1.52 m). They can also anchor in Kremena cove.
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office in
Ubli. Provisions, water and fuel (on the agricultural
estate).
Sights: Remains of Roman and early medieval buildings,
founda- tions of an early Christian basilica (5/6
C), sarcophagi and foundations of farm buildings.
Lastovo (the largest village on the island, pop.
734 in 1991): ruins of the Romanesque Sv Ivan
church (St John), of Sv Kuzma i Damjan church
(St Cosmas and Damian, built in 1473, reconstructed
in the 16 C, with collection of liturgical items);
Loggia; defence wall (early 17 C), Sv Vlaho church
(St Blaise, reconstructed in the 14 C). Folklore
and car- nival celebrations 10 km by road.
ZAKLOPATICA (42° 46'N; 16° 52.5'E), islet,
village (pop. 69 in 1991) and cove on the N coast
of Lastovo.
Warning: The W passage between the coast of Lastovo
and the islet of Zaklopatica is only 1.4 m deep;
E passage is 20 m wide and about 5 m deep.
Mooring: The cove is protected from all winds
except those from the NE quadrant. Best anchorage
during the bora on the lee of Zaklopatica islet.
SKRIVENA LUKA (PORTORUS local name) (42° 44'N;
16° 53'E), vil- lage (pop. 20 in 1991) and
cove on the S coast of Lastovo.
Approach: Landmarks: the round masonry tower above
a dwelling on Struga cape and the red iron tower
with a column and a balcony (red light) on Strazica
point (at the entrance to the cove). Approaching
from the W, care should be taken to avoid the
rocky shoal W of Velje more point.
Mooring: The cove is sheltered from all winds
and suitable for longer stays. The best anchorage
in a sirocco is in front of the cove entrance.
In a bora yachts are recommended to anchor between
the entrance and Uska rock (0.5 M of the entrance
to Skrivena luka cove). A good anchorage for smaller
yachts is in the inner part of the cove (depth
up to 15 m).
Facilities: Limited provisions and water.
ISLAND OF MLJET
POMENA (42° 47.5'N; 17° 20'E), village
(pop. 50 in 1991) and cove on the W extremity
of the island of Mljet. It is protected from the
N by the islet of Pomestak. Between that island
and the Gali- cija rock there is a shoal patch.
Approach: When approaching from SW, care should
be taken to avoid Sij rock N of Goli rat point
and the rocky patch near the rock; Crna seka rock
fronts the cove entrance (should be given a berth
of at least 200 m; shoals). Approaching from the
NE, course should be shaped NW of the islet of
Glavat in order to avoid Crna seka and Borovac
rock, two rocky patches and a shoal (depth 3 m).
Mooring: The cove is sheltered from all winds
and suitable for prolonged stays. Good anchorage
for larger yachts S of Galicija rock and Pomestak
islet (depth about 40 m). Smaller yachts can anchor
in the S of the bay (depths 2030 m). Moorings
along the waterfront in front of the hotel (depths
24.5 m). In the middle of the bay there is a mooring
buoy.
Facilities: Limited provisions and water.
POLACE (42° 47'N; 17° 23E), village (pop.
123 in 1991) and cove on the N coast of Mljet.
Approach: The string of small, almost bare islands,
among which the islet of Ovrat stands out, is
easily discernible from sea- ward. A round white
tower mounted on a pedestal exhibiting a white
light is situated on Kula cliff. In the W part
of the pas- sage between the coast of Mljet and
the islet of Moracnik, shoals extend around Stupa
point and both sides of its S part.
Mooring: The inner part of the cove, particularly
Mala tatinica cove, affords protection from all
winds and sea. Yachts can moor along the pier
in Polace harbour (depths 4.75.2 m) or use the
four-point moor along the NW part of the landing-place
(depth ca. 2.5 m). Good anchorage for larger yachts
NE of the ruins of the old palace near the village
(depth 22 m), W of Tajnik islet (depth ca. 35
m) or W and SW of Kobrava islet (depth 43 m).
The best anchorage for smaller yachts is in the
W part of Rogac cove (depth 14 m).
Car-ferry line. Polace Trstenik (mainland).
Local passenger line: see Dubrovnik.
Facilities: Limited provisions. Shops in the village
of Gove|ari (pop. 182 in 1981) 1.5 km inland by
road.
Sights: Walls of a palace, according to tradition
of Agesilaius of Anzarbo, dating from the late
Roman period (3/4 C), remnants of an early Christian
basilica (5/6 C). Starting point for visit to
the Mljet lakes (2 km by road).
SOBRA (42° 45'N; 17° 37'E), village (pop.
68 in 1991) and cove on the N coast of Mljet.
Main harbour of the village of Babino Polje (pop.
398 in 1991), 7 km inland.
Approach: Landmarks: the white octagonal concrete
tower (white light) on Pusti point (should be
given a berth of at least 500 m; shoals), the
low-lying Seperka rock in its vicinity and part
of the road leading to Babino Polje can be seen
from seaward.
Mooring: In the harbour yachts are exposed to
the bora and the sirocco and it can not be recommended
for longer stays. Yachts can moor along the landing-place
in front of the village (depths 3.24.1 m). The
best anchorage, even in a sirocco, is situated
S of the islet of Badanj, in the small cove of
Zaglav (E part). In NW winds Klacna luka cove
affords a good anchorage (W part), but care should
be taken to avoid submerged rock (depth about
0.8 m).
Facilities: Harbour master's branch office, shop,
car-ferry land- ing ground in Zaglav cove (the
E part of the cove). Limited pro- visions. Post
office and medical service in the nearby village
of Babino Polje.
Car-ferry line: see Dubrovnik.
PROZURA (42° 44'N; 17° 39'E), village
(pop. 78 in 1991) and cove on the N coast of Mljet.
Approach: Landmarks: the islet of Borovac fronting
the cove entrance and the islet of Planjak situated
S of it, are easily identifiable. When approaching
trom E, care should be taken to avoid a submerged
rock (depth 4.5 m) in front of Maharac point,
as well as the Senjevci rocks.
Mooring: The cove is exposed to the bora and to
north-westerlies. Smaller yachts can use the four-point
moor at the smaller mole in the S part of the
harbour (depths 45 m). Good anchorage off the
SW coast of Planjak islet (where yachts should
anchor with lines secured to the shore, bows facing
NE).
Facilities: Limited provisions.
Sights: Ruins of a Benedictine monastery, Sv Trojica
church (Holy Trinity, 15 C).
OKUKLJE (42° 44'N; 17° 41'E), village
(pop. 16 in 1991) and small harbour on the N coast
of Mljet.
Approach: Landmarks: navigational marks include
the round white tower with a column and a balcony
(white light) on the E entrance point (Stoba),
the green tower standing on a cement block in
the sea in front of Okuklje point and the green
tower (green light) on the molehead.
Mooring: The cove is protected from all winds
and it can be recommended for longer stays. Yachts
drawing up to 3.5 m can moor alongside the mole
on the NE coast (green light) or use the four-point
moor in its vicinity. Anchorage for smaller yachts
in the harbour entrance (depths 46 m). Poor holding
ground. The SW part of the harbour is shallow.
Facilities: Restaurant on the N coast of the small
harbour.
SAPLUNARA (42° 42'N; 17° 44'E), village
(pop. 32 in 1991) and cove on the E extremity
of the island of Mljet.
Mooring: The cove is sheltered from the sirocco
and the bora but open to south-westerlies. It
should be taken into account that the sirocco
(SE) is likely to turn into a south-westerly (lebic),
which makes the cove untenable. An anchorage ground
for smaller yachts is situated at the head of
the cove.
MLJETSKA JEZERA (42° 46'N; 17° 23'E),
sea lakes situated in the W part of the island
of Mljet. There are two lakes, Veliko jezero and
Malo jezero (Big Lake and Small Lake), linked
by a narrow channel. The lakes are part of the
Mljet National Park. They are connected with the
open sea by the 0.6 M long Soline channel (depth
up to 2 m), width at narrowest part 10 m. The
tide pro- duces strong currents.
Warning: Speed limit in the channel and in the
lakes is 4 knots. Yachts are forbidden to enter
the channel and the lakes except in cases of force
majeure.
Facilities: Shopping for provisions in the village
of Gove|ari (pop. 179 in 1991) 5 km by road.
Sights: On the islet in the S part of Veliko jezero
there is a Benedictine monastery (12/13 C), enlarged
in the 15/16 C, with a cloister (16 C) and Uznesenje
Marijino church (Assumption of the Virgin, 12/13
C, later additions). The monastery is now a hotel.
ISLAND OF SIPAN
SIPANSKA LUKA (42° 44'N; 17° 52'E), village
(pop. 279 in 1991) and cove in the NW part of
the island of Sipan.
Approach: The cove can be entered either through
the Mali Vratnik passage, between the SE extremity
(Vratnik point) of the Peljesac Peninsula and
the island of Olipa, or through Veliki Vratnik
(between Olipa and Jakljan). It can also be entered
through the Harpoti passage (between Jakljan and
Sipan). Yachts approaching through Veliki Vratnik
should navigate past the SE extremity of the islet
of Olip (square masonry tower, white light) and
the three islets off the NE coast of Jakljan:
Tajan (round red tower with a column and a balcony,
red light), Crkvina and Kosmec (between them is
Golec rock). The harbour light: a white iron column
(red light) on the molehead.
Mooring: The harbour is sheltered from all winds
with the excep- tion of lebic (south-westerlies).
The anchorage it affords is one of the best sheltered
in Kolocep Channel. Smaller yachts can use the
four-point moor along the waterfront in the inner
part of the cove. Depth along the mole 13 m. Larger
yachts will find good anchorage between Misnjak
point and the small peninsula of Brag (depths
3060 m).
Facilities: Post office, hotel and medical service.
Food supplies at local shops; limited quantities
of water.
Local passenger line: see Dubrovnik.
Sights: Summer residence of the Sorkocevic family
(15 C), remains of the Rector's Palace (Gothic,
1450), Sv Stjepan church (St Stephen, 10 C, later
reconstructions).
ISLAND OF LOPUD
LOPUD (42° 41'N; 17° 57'E), village (pop.
348 in 1991) and cove on the NW coast of Lopud.
Approach: The cove can be entered through Lopudska
vrata (from the S) or through the Kolocep Channel.
When approaching from the N, care should be taken
to avoid the shoal patch and Sutmiho rock in front
of N Sv Mihajlo point; in its vicinity there is
a monastery with a belfry. A red iron tower (red
light) is situated on the breakwater.
Mooring: The cove is well protected from all winds
except north- westerlies, during which waves break
strongly against the coast. Smaller yachts can
moor alongside the L-shaped breakwater front-
ing the village, when it is not used by local
liners (depth 1.34.3 m). Good anchorage, especially
for bigger yachts, off the E coast (depth 2040
m).
Facilities: Post office and medical service. Provisions
and water.
Local passenger line: see Dubrovnik.
Sights: Remains of ramparts (1516 C), the Franciscan
monastery (1483, fortified in 1516, tower dating
from 1592), Sv Marija od Spilice church (Our Lady
of Spilice, 12 C, later additions), the ruins
of Miho Pracat's and Bishop Brautic's summer residences
(16 C), Sv Trojstvo church (Holy Trinity, 1617
C, collection of sacral art objects), the 8 r|evic-Mayneri
summer house with a park.
SUNJ (42° 41'N; 17° 57'E), cove in the
SE coast of Lopud.
Approach: When approaching from the N, care should
be taken to avoid the Cavalika shoal (depth about
3.5 m), W of the point cape of the same name.
When approaching from the S, care should be taken
to avoid Skupio islet (shoal extends E, depth
about 5.8 m), and the Skupjeli rock near the S
entrance point.
Mooring: As the cove is exposed to southerlies
and to waves, it is not recommended for longer
stays. Provisions in the village of Lopud (2 km).
Sights: Gospa od Sunja church (Our Lady of Sunj,
15 C, recon- structed in the 17 C).
THE ISLAND OF KOLOCEP
DONJE CELO (42° 41'N; 18° 0.1'E), village
(pop. 148 in 1991) and cove on the NW coast of
the island of Kolocep.
Approach: Yachts approaching from the open sea
pass beside the Sv Andrija lighthouse (white flashes);
between the islands of Sipan and Lopud care should
be taken to avoid shoals extending from the shores
of Skupio islet and the shoal patch (2 m) in the
vicinity of the W extremity of Kolocep.
Mooring: The bay is sheltered from S winds and
waves; it is pro- tected from the bora by a limestone
ridge. Smaller yachts can moor alongside the pier
(depths 0.93.2 m). The anchorage under the NE
coast affords protection from the bora; yachts
are advised to secure lines ashore as well.
Facilities: Some provisions and limited quantities
of water. Better shopping for provisions at Zaton
Mali and Gruz (Dubrov- nik).
Local passenger line: see Dubrovnik.
Sights: Uznesenje Marijino church (Assumption
of the Virgin, 1315 C), defence towers at several
localities on the island.
ove on the N side of Rat peninsula. Affords good
a.--
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