Vrelo (river)
Vrelo (Serbian Cyrillic: Врело) is a right tributary of the river Drina in the settlement of Perućac, Bajina Bašta Municipality in Serbia. The river is only 365 meters long and is probably one of the shortest rivers in the world.[1][2]
Vrelo Godina | |
---|---|
The Vrelo in Perućac | |
Location | |
Country | Serbia |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | karst spring |
• elevation | 234 m (768 ft) |
Mouth | |
• location | Drina, at the Serbian-Bosnian border |
• coordinates | 43.9583°N 19.4272°E |
Length | 365 m (1,198 ft) |
Basin features | |
Progression | Drina→ Sava→ Danube→ Black Sea |
Course
The stream springs out of a large rock. It forms a small waterfall and then flows mostly slow, with crystal clear water. After it passes under the concrete bridge, it rapids over the natural obstacles made of rocks and tree roots. It fastens, starts to resound and foam, before it reached the waterfall and falls into the Drina.[2]
Characteristics
Due to its length (same number of meters as days per year), many call it the Godina (Serbian Cyrillic: Година, lit. 'Year') and say it's one year long. The river has a large spring and after its short course it flows into the Drina via a waterfall. Although short, the river has all the characteristics of major rivers – the great, powerful source from which water gushes whitish, a pond on the right bank, water mill on the left, a left tributary in the form of clear creek, a village on the left bank, two bridges.[2][3]
There is a restaurant on the small plateau above the final waterfall.[2]
See also
References
- Vrelo waterfall
- Miroslav Stefanović (14 October 2018). "Занимљива Србија: Перућац" [Interesting Serbia: Perućac]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1098 (in Serbian). pp. 19–21.
- Perućac