
Kranjska Gora Ski Resort and Vitranc
In Kranjska Gora, Slovenia .
More places to visit in Kranjska Gora
Discover more attractions and things to do in Kranjska Gora.

Lake Jasna
Pebble shallows and a promenade announce Lake Jasna before the peaks, and the water's color answers shifts of cloud. Built as twin leisure ponds where the Pisnica streams meet, the site sits near 830 meters above sea level and stays brisk in summer, often around 12-14 degrees . Locals point out the ibex on its rock and the footbridges joining the lake's two linked basins, good perches for sunrise photos. The banks drop quickly to green depth, so families linger by the piers while swimmers choose laddered platforms. Cafes open early for hikers bound for Vrsic. Landscaping from the 20th century shaped the shore, but the drama belongs to ridge lines mirrored on calm days. Walk the perimeter in about 30 minutes , and the soundtrack shifts from tires on asphalt to water on stone. At dusk the mountain shade arrives suddenly, turning the lake into a cool room whose windows are cut by paths and the occasional paddleboarder.

Planica Nordic Centre
Planica Nordic Centre reads like a campus built for air: in-run towers, landing slopes, and a valley that catches speed. The flagship hill, Letalnica bratov Gorisek , is a ski flying venue rebuilt in 2015 and rated around HS240 , a scale clear only when a jumper arcs over the outrun. Inside, a compact museum threads film reels, suits, and wax tables into a history of calculation. A zipline down the big hill runs about 566 meters , letting non-jumpers trace the line with controlled gravity and a quick whoop at the end. On training days the smaller hills step in sequence for juniors, and coaches talk in numbers: takeoff angle, wind gate, style points. Snowmaking steadies the calendar; in summer the tracks go green and the valley switches to runners and rollerski teams. Stand by the judges' tower and even silence reads as pressure; stand at the landing fence and sound lands a beat after flight. Planica teaches that altitude here is not summit but trajectory.

Vrsic Pass and Russian Chapel
The climb to Vrsic begins gently from town and soon twists into hairpins, a mountain road drawn with a steady hand. At the top the pass sits at 1,611 meters , completed under wartime pressure in 1915-1917 when supply mattered more than views. On a forested bend below, the Russian Chapel remembers the prisoners who labored here; its small Orthodox silhouette and shingled roof carry a modest authority. Walking the verge reveals stone setts on old corners and timber snow fences that still shoulder drifts. Drivers count 50 switchbacks across both sides, each with a slightly different horizon, and cyclists read wind by tree tips. Built in 1916 , the chapel's gate lists names and a note of thanks, and candles keep a faint resin scent in the shade. From a nearby clearing the Prisank face and window appear, geology posing as folklore before cloud closes. Descend slowly: brakes cool, views lengthen, and the road drops to the valley like a map rolling back into its tube.

Zelenci Nature Reserve
A short, level path west of town reaches Zelenci Nature Reserve, where emerald water seems lit from below and reeds hold the breeze. This is the symbolic source of Sava Dolinka , a karst spring that keeps a steady temperature near 6 degrees Celsius year-round, in a basin around 840 meters . Boardwalks and a small tower guide visitors over peat and pools, protecting a mosaic of sedge, alder, and dragonflies. The protected area covers about 47 hectares , designated in 1992 to shield habitats made fragile by easy access. Look down and the spring vents pop like quiet boils; look up and peaks arrange themselves into an amphitheater. In winter the fringes freeze while the center steams; in summer the color shifts with cloud and sun angle. Signs ask for soft shoes and patience; movements matter here. Leave with a photograph if you must, but also with a mental map of the valley - streams, rails, meadows - so the bright pool reads as a beginning, not an ending.