Gorce Mountains
View of Mount Kiczora from Jaworzyna Kamienicka
Highest point
PeakTurbacz
Elevation1,310 m (4,300 ft)
ListingMountains of Poland
Coordinates49°32′36″N 20°6′47″E / 49.54333°N 20.11306°E / 49.54333; 20.11306
Naming
Native nameGorce (Polish)
Geography
Location of the Gorce Mountains
CountryPoland
RegionLesser Poland Voivodeship, Podhale, Zagórze,Ochotnica region
SettlementOchotnica Dolna Poręba Wielka Mszana Dolna
Parent rangeWestern Beskids
Borders onWestern Carpathian range

The Gorce Mountains (Polish: Gorce, Polish pronunciation: [ˈɡɔrt͡sɛ] ) are part of the Western Beskids mountain range spreading across southernmost Poland.[1] They are situated in Małopolska Province, at the western tip of the long Carpathian range extending east beyond the Dunajec River for some 1,500 kilometres (930 mi). The Gorce are characterized by numerous ridges reaching in all directions for up to 40 kilometres (25 mi) east–west with a series of higher elevations cut by deep river valleys.[1]

The range is dominated by about a dozen gentle peaks including Turbacz (the highest, at 1,310 metres (4,300 ft) above sea level) in the centre, and – facing east: Jaworzyna Kamienicka (1,288 metres (4,226 ft)), Kiczora (1,282 metres (4,206 ft)), Kudłoń (1,276 metres (4,186 ft)), Przysłop, Czoło and Gorc Kamienicki. The south-eastern ridge of the Gorce reaches the Pieniny range (cut off by the Ochotnica pass), with Lubań (1,225 metres (4,019 ft)) as its tallest peak followed by Pasterski Wierch, Runek and Marszałek.[1] The north-west ridges include Obidowiec, and the peak of Suhora (1,000 m (3,300 ft)) featuring an astronomical observatory owned and operated by the Pedagogical University of Kraków.[2]

There are a number of smaller caves in the Gorce, carved out in sedimentary rock and its conglomerates which form the Carpathian Flysch Belt. High annual rainfall is caused by the air forced up by the mountains and accumulating into clouds. Rain water flows fast in all directions due to dense ground and ground-cover; feeding the Raba river on the north-west side of the Gorce, and the Dunajec on the south-east side. Other rivers, formed by the mountains include the Kamienica (35 kilometres (22 mi) in length), the Ochotnica (24 kilometres (15 mi)) and the Porębianka (13 kilometres (8.1 mi)), as well as large streams such as the Turbacz, the Gorcowy and the Łopuszna among others. The main city is Nowy Targ on the Dunajec below in the valley of Podhale,[3] with large recreational villages including Krościenko nad Dunajcem, Szczawa and Ochotnica.[1][4]

Geography

Part of the Gorce Mountains are protected within Gorce National Park (Polish: Gorczański Park Narodowy), a bird sanctuary and a biodiversity conservation area designated in 1981 by the Małopolska Province,[5] with strictly protected zone covering 3,611 hectares,[6] out of the total park area of 7,030 hectares (27.1 sq mi), in the highest part of the Gorce.[7][8]

Wildlife include almost 50 mammal species,[9] with wolf and lynx at the top; less frequent brown bear,[10] and lutra (rare European otter), as well as marten and badger often found digging under pasture fields. The Hazel and the Forest dormouse along with the Edible dormouse are all strictly protected. There are over 200 Red deer counted in the park area, as well as Roe deer and Wild boar,[1] fox, wildcat, hare, skunk, and stoat (the ermine). Reptiles and amphibians include the fire salamander (Latin: Salamandra salamandra, the only amphibian (one of two Salamandridae) that give birth to fully formed offspring at high elevations;[11][12][13] the symbol of the Park),[8] as well as over ninety species of breeding birds including owl, eagle, hawk, grouse, black stork and others.[8]

In the Gorce, there are hundreds of species of plants, including Alpine and Subalpine plants, which grow in meadows and open areas. Forests cover about 65% of the mountains, in four distinct levels according to elevation. The most common species of trees are beech, spruce and fir,[1] with the average age of up to 100 years.[8]

The Gorce landscape has been altered by human activity. Early settlers appeared in the Gorce area in the 12th century. The first monastery was erected in Ludźmierz by Cistercian monks in 1234. During the reign of Casimir III the Great (Kazimierz Wielki) the first castles were built, including in Czorsztyn, and more new settlements, such as the town of Krościenko (1348) and villages: Kluszkowce (1307), Grywałd (1330), and Tylmanowa (1336), were established along the border with the Kingdom of Hungary, followed by increased commercial logging and transport. However, the Gorce forests suffered most in the 19th century during the imperial rule of Austria-Hungary. Trees were cut on a large scale, especially in easily accessible areas.[1]

The Gorce Mountains are a popular tourist area, with forty well-marked trails for hiking trips two-to-four hours long, split into different levels of difficulty with the maximum distance of 17 kilometres (11 mi) (Raba Niżna-Turbacz Trail, which is twice the average length).[14] Notably, the colors of trail blazes (signs, installed by PTTK for hikers and skiers alike) do not imply levels of difficulty, but rather primary and secondary trails with different length and orientation, for example: the red and blue colors signify trails in east-west and north-south directions, while shortest loops generally use yellow blazes.[15]

  1. Red, the longest trail, traversing the entire range: from easternmost Krościenko nad Dunajcem, to Rabka-Zdrój at its western end.
  2. Blue trails, from Snozka Pass (Przełęcz Snozka) in the south, to Kamienica (north).
  3. Green trails, from Tylmanowa, Niedźwiedź, Nowy Targ (district capital) across the highest peaks (Turbacz, Lubań).
  4. Yellow trails, from Ochotnica Górna, Poręba Wielka, Raba Niżna to PTTK mountain chalets usually.
  5. Black trails; from Szczawa, Lubomierz, Łopuszna, Mszana Dolna, Rabka-Zdrój across various meadows and passes.
Panorama of the Gorce Mountains

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Marek Cieszkowski (2004). "W sercu Beskidów. Geografia i przyroda Gorców (In the Heart of Beskids. Geography and Botany of Gorce)". Gorce: przewodnik dla prawdziwego turysty (Gorce: Guide for a Qualified Tourist). Oficyna Wydawnicza "Rewasz". pp. 17–32. ISBN 8389188198. Retrieved January 9, 2013.
  2. "Obserwatorium astronomiczne na szczycie Suhora (Mount Suhora Observatory)". Pod Jaworzyną (in Polish). Poręba Wielka - Koninki. Archived from the original on December 2, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
  3. Timothy J. Cooley (2005). "Podhale". Making Music In The Polish Tatras: Tourists, Ethnographers, And Mountain Musicians (Google books preview). Indiana University Press. pp. 19–. ISBN 0253344891. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  4. Parks Board (2012). "Geologia, Wody, Klimat (Geology, Waters, Climate)". Przyroda Gorców (Geography of the Gorce Mountains) (in Polish, English, and German). Gorczański Park Narodowy (Gorce National Park). Retrieved January 9, 2013.
  5. "General information with weather and broad selection of photographs". Gorce National Park (in Polish). Gorczański Park Narodowy (Portal turystyczny iGorce.eu). Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  6. Study group (2013). "Gorce National Park (GNP). Introduction". Science and research. Kašperské Hory: Národní park Šumava. Retrieved January 9, 2013.
  7. Janusz Tomasiewicz (2012). "GPN w liczbach (Park in numbers)". O Gorczańskim Parku Narodowym (About) (in Polish, English, and German). Gorczański Park Narodowy (Gorce National Park). Retrieved January 9, 2013.
  8. 1 2 3 4 "Gorczanski National Park". Polish National Parks. University of Adam Mickiewicz, Poland (Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu). 2008. Archived from the original on January 9, 2013. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  9. Marek Cieszkowski (2004). "Geografia i przyroda Gorców (Geography and botany of Gorce)". Gorce: przewodnik dla prawdziwego turysty (Gorce: guide for the qualified tourist). Oficyna Wydawnicza "Rewasz". pp. 29–. ISBN 8389188198. Retrieved January 27, 2013. Google Translate: Of the nearly fifty species of mammals living in the mountains and their foothills, in the first place, are the large predatory mammals: wolf and lynx. (Spośród blisko pięćdziesięciu gatunków ssaków zamieszkujących góry i ich podnóża na pierwszym miejscu należy wymienić duże ssaki drapieżne: wilka i rysia.)
  10. Christopher Servheen (1999). "Bears: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan". Brown bear range in Poland: Gorce Mountains (Google books preview). IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature). pp. 90–. ISBN 2831704626. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  11. William V. Holt; Amanda R. Pickard; John C. Rodger; David E. Wildt (2002). "Reproductive Science and Integrated Conservation". Amphibian reproduction: Fire salamander (Google books preview). Cambridge University Press. p. 361. ISBN 9780521011105. Retrieved January 25, 2013. S. salamandra [Fire salamander] and Mertinsiella caucasica [Caucasian salamander] ... in montane regions ... retain their eggs, later giving birth to well-developed young (D&T, 1986).
  12. Frank Indiviglio (2010). "Fire Salamander: Breeding". Newts and Salamanders: Everything about Selection, Care, Nutrition, Diseases, Breeding, and Behavior. Barron's Educational Series. p. 79. ISBN 978-0764142437. Retrieved January 25, 2013. Individuals living at high elevations give birth to fully formed small salamanders, skipping the larval stage completely.
  13. Zoological Society of San Diego (2013). "Amphibians: Salamander & Newt". Animal Bytes. San Diego Zoo. Retrieved January 17, 2013. "Fun facts • The fire salamander is the only amphibian that does not hatch from an egg. Instead, the babies develop inside the mother's body" (webpage: left-hand side).
  14. Janusz Wojtarowicz (2012). "Gorce szlaki turystyczne (trails)". Informator. Gorce (in Polish). Baza turystyczna Czorsztyn.com. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  15. "Colors of tourist trails (Kolory szlaków turystycznych)". Official website. Grupa Beskidzka GOPR. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
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