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Serbia Rock Climbing Guidebook
£46.95
Temp Out Of Stock
| Cordee Code: | CCE840 |
|---|---|
| Page Size: | 150 x 210 mm |
| No of Pages: | 704 |
| Publisher: | Ticket To The Moon (europe) |
| ISBN13: | 9789997672322 |
| Published Date: | May 2025 |
| Edition: | 1st: May 2025 |
| Illustrations: | Full Colour Photos + Photo-Topos |
| Product Type: | Guide Books |
This is a comprehensive guidebook describing the sport climbing in Serbia. Serbia is a country with a diverse mountainous karst landscape of deep gorges, remote valleys, with crags tucked into quiet corners of the Balkan, Carpathian and Dinaric mountains. These limestone crags will offer solitude, adventure, or just a fresh perspective and fresh rocks to explore.
This guidebook covers 38 separate crags across Serbia, describing 2,200 routes. This includes single pitch sport routes, multi-pitch routes and bouldering. Some of the major crags detailed in the guidebook are Jela?ni?ka Klisura, Grdoba, and Soko Grad. The climbing is spread across a good range of grades, and all the routes are shown on colour photo topos.
For each crag there is a location map, approach information, plus GPS co-ordinates for the parking areas and the crag itself. There is a description of the character and style of climbing to be found, along with a chart showing an overview of the routes grade spread and total number of routes. Symbols are used to show orientation of the climbing area, altitude of the crag, approach time, maximum route length, quality of the protection, the steepness of the rock, and best time of the year to climb. There is also a table showing the grade spread for the crag.
Published in May 2025 this guidebook is in English and Serbian text throughout. At the start of the guidebook there is plenty of information regarding travel, transport, accommodation, food and drink, plus money matters, as well as health and safety tips.
This guidebook covers 38 separate crags across Serbia, describing 2,200 routes. This includes single pitch sport routes, multi-pitch routes and bouldering. Some of the major crags detailed in the guidebook are Jela?ni?ka Klisura, Grdoba, and Soko Grad. The climbing is spread across a good range of grades, and all the routes are shown on colour photo topos.
For each crag there is a location map, approach information, plus GPS co-ordinates for the parking areas and the crag itself. There is a description of the character and style of climbing to be found, along with a chart showing an overview of the routes grade spread and total number of routes. Symbols are used to show orientation of the climbing area, altitude of the crag, approach time, maximum route length, quality of the protection, the steepness of the rock, and best time of the year to climb. There is also a table showing the grade spread for the crag.
Published in May 2025 this guidebook is in English and Serbian text throughout. At the start of the guidebook there is plenty of information regarding travel, transport, accommodation, food and drink, plus money matters, as well as health and safety tips.




