Hajla

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Hajla (Maja e Hajles, Hajlë)
Winter in the Montenegrin part of the mountain range

Winter in the Montenegrin part of the mountain range

Highest peak Hajla ( 2403  m )
location Peja , Kosovo / Rožaje Montenegro
Hajla (Maja e Hajles, Hajlë) (Dinarides)
Hajla (Maja e Hajles, Hajlë)
Coordinates 42 ° 45 '28 "  N , 20 ° 8' 18"  O Coordinates: 42 ° 45 '28 "  N , 20 ° 8' 18"  E
rock lime
particularities Kosovar-Montenegrin border
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The Hajla ( Serbian - Cyrillic Хајла ; Albanian  also  Hajlë ) is a mountain in the Dinaric Mountains with the highest peak at the eastern end of Vrh Hajle / Maja e Hajlës ( 2403  m. I. J. ). The main ridge of the massif forms the border between Kosovo and Montenegro .

Location and landscape

The Bergstock belongs to the main ridge of the Dinarides and extends in a north-west-south-east direction. It is still partly counted among the Mokra Gora , and these in turn, in a broader sense, belong to the Prokletije southwest, the southernmost main group of the Dinarides (Albanian Alps). In this broader sense, the Vrh Hajla would be the main peak of the Mokra Gora.

To the south lies the valley of the Pećka Bistrica ( Lumbardh i Pejës , also Bistrica e Pejës ) and behind it the Lumbardh Mountains ( Ljumbardske planine , Bjeshka e Lumbardhit ; 2522  m ). To the east, the Kosovar Alagina Reka ( Rekë e Allagës , Reka e Alags ), a tributary of the Pećka Bistrica, and the Montenegrin Bukeljka border the stock to the Ahmica-Štedim massif ( Ahmica , 2272  m ), the pass in between is the Cafa Hajla ( Qafa Hajlës , 1884  m ). To the north, the Bjeluha and the uppermost Ibar , into which the Bjeluha flows, separates the Stock from the foothills that stretch down to Rožaje . There the Bukeljka also flows into the Ibar. To the west, the long ridge descends over Vranovačka Hajla ( Hajla Vranovcit , 2218  m ) and Košutanska Hajla ( Hajla Koshutanit ) to the secondary peaks Maja Dramandol  ( 2120  m ), Škreljska Hajla  ( 2011  m ), Bregi i Mujit  ( 1941 m ) and Krstac  ( 1941  m ) 1872  m ). At the Ćafa Murgoš ( Krstac ) pass , the significantly lower mountains Murgoš ( Murgaš , Mečkin Krš  1854  m ) connect to the west .

The main ridge is sharply cut, only a few steps wide towards the main summit. The mountain is limestone rock, partly with alpine mats and pines .

Paths, development and nature

The natural massif is easy to cross. Climbing is possible from the north from the village of Bandžov , from the south from places on Pećka Bistrica such as Hokaj , Drelaj and Boga (on the Lumi i Pejës stream). The Vranovac refuge is located directly south of the main peak . The mountain is also suitable as a climbing area.

The Kosovar southern capping of the Hajla belongs to the National Park Bjeshkët e Namuna [ të Kosovës ] with the Rugova gorge of Pećka Bistrica and the mountains south .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Official Montenegrin map