The Kvarnerić: from the Rab Gold Sand-Tones to the White-Gray Lime-Tones of the Rest of the Area, Where it Tend Overall, Adding the Sky'n'Sea Light Blue Reflections, to a Silvery Athmosphere...
26-September-2019: in the notes what you could see.
The northern Adriatic section in this photo is called, precisely, Kvarnerić (little Kvarner/Quarnerolo in Italian) and is part of the Mountain-Coastal Region (Primorsko-Goranska Županija) of Rijeka, that is the main Center of the Croatian North/West.
As many as 4 inhabited islands, among which the largest in the Adriatic (Cres) bathe part of their coasts in this sea-lake, while numerous uninhabited islands, of various dimensions, are visited by a (left) couple of specimens of monk Seal, the only ones of North Adriatic, among the 3-400 that still inhabit the Mediterranean, especially between southern Croatia, Montenegro and the Aegean Sea.
About twenty-five years ago 4 specimens of Eurasian brown Bear, swimming across the narrow northern part of the Novi Vinodolski and Velebit channel (Vinodolski-Velebitski Kanal), reached the island of Krk, probably attracted by the smell of many sheep bred on the island, some become wild, and driven by the overpopulation of brown Bears of the neighboring Gorski Kotar, the mountainous part of the Kvarner Region (Quarnero in Italian).
The Kvarnerić: from the Rab Gold Sand-Tones to the White-Gray Lime-Tones of the Rest of the Area, Where it Tend Overall, Adding the Sky'n'Sea Light Blue Reflections, to a Silvery Athmosphere...
26-September-2019: in the notes what you could see.
The northern Adriatic section in this photo is called, precisely, Kvarnerić (little Kvarner/Quarnerolo in Italian) and is part of the Mountain-Coastal Region (Primorsko-Goranska Županija) of Rijeka, that is the main Center of the Croatian North/West.
As many as 4 inhabited islands, among which the largest in the Adriatic (Cres) bathe part of their coasts in this sea-lake, while numerous uninhabited islands, of various dimensions, are visited by a (left) couple of specimens of monk Seal, the only ones of North Adriatic, among the 3-400 that still inhabit the Mediterranean, especially between southern Croatia, Montenegro and the Aegean Sea.
About twenty-five years ago 4 specimens of Eurasian brown Bear, swimming across the narrow northern part of the Novi Vinodolski and Velebit channel (Vinodolski-Velebitski Kanal), reached the island of Krk, probably attracted by the smell of many sheep bred on the island, some become wild, and driven by the overpopulation of brown Bears of the neighboring Gorski Kotar, the mountainous part of the Kvarner Region (Quarnero in Italian).