17 red deer and 96 fallow deer have been reintroduced to the Eastern Rhodopes this winter, according to the Wilder Rhodopes Foundation. The deer are under constant surveillance and will not be hunted for the next 5 years.
This brings the total number of new deer of both species released in the mountains in the last ten years to over 650, which is the largest reintroduction of deer in Bulgaria. "Our aim is to reintroduce two of the three deer species found in Bulgaria to the whole of the Eastern Rhodopes," explains Stefan Avramov, an expert at Wilder Rhodopes.By the end of February, 35 more red deer will be translocated to the area, whose biodiversity is one of the best preserved in Europe.
In the past, the red deer and the fallow deer were widespread in Bulgarian lands. Depictions of fallow deer appear on various pieces of jewellery from the Thracian era, and fallow deer bones have been found in almost all Bulgarian prehistoric settlements. It is assumed that it was wiped out by man in the early Middle Ages, and the restoration of the species in Bulgaria began at the beginning of the 20th century.
Deer are interesting to observe and photograph by hikers and photographers and according to conservationists, increasing their population will help to establish the area as a year-round preferred tourist destination.
The ultimate goal of the Wilder Rhodopes Foundation team is to have at least 50 free-living red deer and 300 fallow deer in the Eastern Rhodopes in five years.
Aleksandar Vučić offers the opposition an advisory referendum on his presidency Serbs do not believe that the solution to the political crisis in the country could be an "advisory referendum" on confidence in the president, as requested by the..
Methodological assistance, teacher training, meetings and educational programs in Bulgarian language and culture for students – these are just some of the ways in which the academic community of Veliko Tarnovo University "St. Cyril and Methodius" reaches..
The Botanical Garden's Tropical Greenhouse will be open to visitors from 16 to 26 January, every day from 10 am to 4 pm. More than 30 varieties of azaleas, some of which once adorned the Royal Palace, will be in bloom. Blueberries, rhododendrons, ericas..
"I started working as a teacher in France, but I was bored. I started looking around – where could I go as a history and geography teacher? A vacancy..
The Eastern Rhodopes are one of the few places in Europe where the balance of nature has been restored almost to the state it was in two centuries ago...
+359 2 9336 661