Slovenia
Idrija

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    • Day 73

      Idrija

      August 20, 2023 in Slovenia ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

      Day 72:
      Distance: 35.50 km (2,212.40 km)
      Steps: 50,241 (3,163,020)
      Move time: 8h02 (499h49)
      Spend: £20.31 (£1,360.54)

      🇸🇮 Most na Soči to Idrija. 🇸🇮

      A really therapeutic day actually. Just me, the hills and the heat (33°C!). I enjoy just how quiet it is around these parts, I barely saw anyone all day really. And Idrija is hardly a big place either, yet it seems to be the biggest town around for some distance; I guess it just goes to show how few and far between large settlements become as you head into the Balkans. To entertain my mind while walking, I've listened to a hell of a lot of music over the past ten weeks, and frankly, I've got a bit bored of my own tastes lately. Instead, I've been enjoying some podcasts as well over the last day or two. So, I'd love to ask: if anyone has any recommendations (for either music or a podcast), I'd love to hear them! It only keeps me sane.Read more

    • Day 194

      Roots

      November 1, 2023 in Slovenia

      Wir waren in jelinci. Letztlich waren es nur 2 Häuser irgendwo in den Bergen von Slowenien, aber mein Urgroßvater ist hier geboren. Die Gegend ist wirklich schön. Auch wenn es gefühlt 24.stunden am Tag geregnet hatRead more

    • Day 1

      Nekaj o najdbi živega srebra v Idriji

      September 2, 2023 in Slovenia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      Na tem mestu so 1490 našli naključno živo srebro. Škafar ga je... In zato tu danes stoji cerkev sv. Trojice

      1500 so začeli kopat v zemljo, ker so na površju pobrali, kar se je pobrat dalo. 22.6.1508 goduje sv. Ahac in na ta dan so našli rudo 42 globoko... In od takrat pa kakih 500 let so bili rudniki

      Največ so ga izvozili v Ameriko za pridobivanje zlata
      Velik razpon uporabe...
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    • Day 5

      Idrija die Schönste, Größte und Beste

      August 28, 2019 in Slovenia ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

      „Die *schönste* Stadt, das *größte* Wasserrad, die zweit*größte* Mine das reinste Quecksilber der Welt.“

      Genau so wurde uns die Stadt immer und immerwieder beschrieben und genau so soll man das auch weitererzählen.

      Die Leute auf Idrija. Sind sehr stolz auf ihr Städtchen, das mittlerweile zum UNESCO-Weltkulturerbe gehört.

      Gestern Nachmittag kamen wir auf dem kleinen Hof von Veri an. Dort wurden wir sehr herzlich von seiner Frau und seinem Sohn begrüßt. Er kam später dazu und ging sofort seinem Job als Tourist Guide nach. Wir wurden über die Geschichte der Stadt aufgeklärt und bekamen eine Einweisung mit Voucher-Preisnachlass für alles was es hier zu sehen gibt.

      Heute Morgen ging es also los zur Mine. Ausgestattet mit Helm und Jacke ging es dann in die Tiefen des Berges.
      Danach spatierten wir ans andere Ende der Stadt, zu dem Ort, an dem das angebaute Erdreich verarbeitet wurde.

      Gevespert wurde mitten in der Stadt um sich für den Aufstieg zum Hof zu stärken.
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    • Day 1

      Glavni mestni trg

      September 2, 2023 in Slovenia ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      ...simbolike...

      Manjkajoča peta cerkev, ki je bila porušena v 2. sv. vojni

      Rdeča črta ponazarja rudo cunabarit

      Dolžina plošče ena klaftra

      Lučke ne svetijo ampak žarijo, ponazarja rudarjevo svetilko

      Krog stebrov predstavlja skupnost...

      Spomenik rudarjevi ženi...
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    • Day 11

      Zurück nach Deutschland

      July 30, 2022 in Slovenia ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

      Nachdem wir die BMW von Umer noch am Vorabend in seinen Transorter verladen haben, können wir, jeder für sich in der Früh zusammenpacken und die Fahrzeuge beladen.

      Gegen 08:30 Uhr fanden wir uns im Camp ein. Ein etwas trauriger Anblick empfing uns. Die kleine Zeltstadt, die unser Zuhause in den letzten 5 Tagen war, hat sich großflächig aufgelöst. Viele waren schon aufgebrochen und die Verbliebenen waren damit beschäftigt ihre Sachen zusammenzupacken.

      Der Abschied war auch schnell gemacht. Ein herzliches Drücken und Schulterklopfen, schon waren die Fahrzeuge entschwunden.

      Um dem aufziehenden Regen, der angekündigt war, vorzubeugen, habe ich mir vorsorglich meinen Regenanzug übergestülpt. Das war auch gut so, da es die ersten 200 km ordentlich die Schleusen aufgemacht hat.

      Die Fahrt selbst war nicht mehr von der Lust begleitet, die am Hinweg nach Bosnien vorherrschte. Die letzten Tage steckten einem doch ganz schön in den Knochen und so habe ich auch beschlossen, nicht in drei Tagen, sondern in zwei Tagen die Strecke zu bewältigen, um eher zuhause zu sein.
      Ein schönes Hotel in Idrija auf dem Rückweg in Slowenien hat mich für die Wackelpartie mit den Rally-Reifen auf den nassen Straßen entschädigt...
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    • Day 20

      Avondwandeling in de stad

      June 6, 2023 in Slovenia ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Heerlijk weer, dus nog even de beentjes strekken. Idrija blijkt een Unesco erfgoed. Tot WWll hoorde het bij Italie, na WWll bij de oprichting van de federatie Joegoslavie werd het geannexeerd door de partizanen en nu hoort het bij Slovenie.
      Bij het pijltje staan we, achter de boom. Bij de afdaling zagen we het bijenhotel en een hazelworm. Hij hield zich dood, tot Berend hem oppakte 😬
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    • Day 244

      Mercury rising

      June 28, 2019 in Slovenia ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

      WIth temperatures reaching 35 on the concrete I thought I'd check from where all this extra Mercury was coming.
      On satellite imagery a line from Italy to Croatia can be seen marking the fault where the Adriatic plate has been insinuating itself under the Eurasian one for millennia. Following this trail I entered the Kanomlja valley to Idrija where the oldest rocks in Slavinia - Carboniferous shales that are at least 320 million years old - can be found. Thanks to this rift, when a tax avoider named Schauffer escaped to this valley in 1480 and took up coopering, whilst testing the waterproofness of his tubs one day, discovered one tub markedly heavier than the rest bearing flashes of silvery stuff. Rather shortsightedly he took the mineral to the nearest assay office & lost control over the property as soon as the authorities discovered that it was in fact Mercury, a substance in much demand but in little supply.
      By the end of the 16th C when Gewerkenegg Castle was constructed, the Idrija mine was well on its way to being the 2nd largest in the world, (after Almaden in Spain.) In fact "Gewerkenegg" means mine, for it was built for security rather than defence as it housed the mercury, the administration hq of the mine / town, and of course the manager & his family.
      The Baroque painting in the courtyard was added later & recently touched up.
      I was dying to see the cinnabar, by product of the smelting process, but nothing much was said about it. Briefly, I saw red.
      Showing how commerce trumps even nationalism, the managers made a syndicate with the Spanish and ended up shipping most of it to Spain. Hg has a special affinity for gold you see, and by then Hispanic gold mines in South America were in full swing.
      The EU banned mercury mining in 2011 so the works have closed down leaving about 40 years supply still down there, having produced 107,000 tons over 500 years (13% of the entire world production, enough to make a 20m cube,) and cut an estimated 700 km of tunnel.
      Big business wants to reopen it but for once the locals and the law agree in opposing them. After all, contaminated silt is still finding its way down the Soci river into the Trieste bay.
      The mine also owned 9500 hectares of forest surrounding the town, the town alone needed 30000 cubic metres per annum, and what with pit props and smelters they would have deforested the place long ago where it not for some advanced sustainable harvesting.
      The bubble sculpture is supposed to invoke the feeling of mercury in the ground.
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    • Day 244

      Minors' quarters

      June 28, 2019 in Slovenia ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

      This house belonged to a miner and is being restored as part of the museum. In it, 3 families lived together with some single blokes allowed to sleep in the attic. Only the owner was allowed to keep animals: goats, pigs, chickens but only 1 cow. There were 2 gardens habitually, vegetable and herbs.
      Part of their wages were paid in grain - shades of the company store.
      Images of the early miners show them in elf hats and smocks. They were obliged to wear them as they had no pockets so that no ore would be mislaid. Given the difficulty of smelting enough ore to make a tiny amount of mercury, and the tightly controlled market, it seems a bit superfluous.but in the end did inspire Disney.
      The matrimonial bed is next to the mass heater. Not exactly king sized but no doubt cosy in the winter.
      From boredom and to get pin money, the ladies used to gather on someone's veranda to make the lace for which Idrija is famous. There is one of the oldest lace schools in town and I saw some work by students, as young as 9, that was pretty impressive. Especially the more artistic multicoloured patterns and even a 3 dimensional lace sculpture (by a boy!)
      A couple of hundred years ago, as indeed today, the State didn't want the proletariat educated above their status in life: they wanted them trained to work. So the mine started the first independent high school in Slovenia, recognising that this would eventually provide them with the skilled engineers they needed. They also funded a theatre, now the oldest in SLO.
      This place is much more interesting than the places most tourist buses go and if I returned I would spend more time in the smelting museum / exhibition and in "Anthony's Main Road", the original entrance. I would expect large things from "Francis' Shaft" of course.
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