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Tales from the Village
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Rural Tourism - Has this summer heralded a new touristic era in the life of Prebilovci and other villages on the periphery of Hutovo Blato? The answer is yes. However, what the final result will be for Prebilovci depends on many things, most of all on the actions of the local residents - returnees. It also depends, at least as much, on the work of the canton's tourist organizations, particularly the Hutovo Blato Nature Park. Some of the projects which have been launched and developed indicate that Hutovo Blato has finally got a company which protects and values its resources. There is undreamed-of potential in the nature park and bird reserve at Hutovo Blato. Following the completion of a modern road to Hutovo Blato passing through the local community area of Prebilovci, and the installation of improved road signage to this pearl of nature, interest in it has increased. It is also worth noting that the increased number of visits to Hutovo Blato is due as well to the fact that modern tourists seek out just such places. Although Hutovo Blato has been devastated for years, it remains the case that there are still several intact places within this huge area. Two Frenchmen milking one cow Two two-member French families arrived at the village in the early evening when the villagers were preparing to put their cattle into stables for the night. The families were staying in Do below the village where they came across a flock of sheep and some cows. They pointed at a goat and its udder – imitating milking – and Stana, happily smiling, understood their wish. The unexpected guests were each offered a cup of warm unboiled goat milk for supper. In the morning, after breakfast served by Stana's neighbors and having refilled their water tank, they left for Sarajevo. Spaniards looking for the best view The Swedes who spent their summer vacation in Dubrovnik, some hundred kilometers from Hutovo Blato, from where they went on picnics to Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina, were surprised at the number of houses which, more than a decade after the war, were still in ruins. They wondered how it was possible that human beings can do something like that to one another. Determined to see as much as possible, they visited nearby Hutovo Blato, and were delighted at the sight of the old bridge in Mostar as well as at the ancient medieval town of Počitelj whose beauty and whiteness surprise motorized tourists on their way from the seaside. They had lunch at the Buna spring and wondered at how so many contrasts were to be found in such a small space – natural beauty along with buildings of cultural and historical importance. Live encounter with animals instead of picture books Return to village Rural tourism, both domestic and foreign, might be an additional source of profit. In an effort to preserve the authenticity of Hutovo Blato, it is believed that it is possible to find a common interest and reach an agreement with local residents to make numerous waterways through Hutovo Blato passable. Intact nature would then be even more accessible. Even those who know little about Hutovo Blato are familiar with the fact that there are dozens of homonyms given after the names of families. They refer to ravines and ditches where some families used to fish and subsist from that labor. It is possible to return to that tradition founded in the Middle Ages, which reached its peak during the period of Austro-Hungarian rule and broke off during the Socialist Yugoslavia, and to permit those interested from Svitava, Gnjilište, Drijen and Prebilovci a limited fishing of carp and eels (nowadays the largest number of poachers is recorded from these villages). Fishermen who possess permits would realize a triple profit: for themselves, for Hutovo Blato Nature Park and for Mother Nature, which would be made accessible to tourists by building waterways for fishing. In this case, it would be possible to revive the former tradition of fish drying, particularly carp and eels which were once even served on the dining tables of Paris. If it was possible once, why shouldn't it be possible today? All the more so because the local residents once participated in the preservation of nature at Hutovo Blato and took care of it far better and more responsibly. Published at the beginning of September 2008. Originally published (in Serbian) at http://www.prebilovci.net/cirilica/aktuelno/turizam.htm |