Lisca | |
Map: | Slovenia |
Relief: | yes |
Location: | Sava Hills |
Range: | Slovene Prealps |
Lisca (in Slovenian pronounced as /ˈliːstsa/) is a 948m (3,110feet) hill in the eastern part of the Sava Hills[1] in southeastern Slovenia,[2] northwest of Sevnica, north of the Sava, and south of Gračnica Creek.[3] It is the most frequently visited hiking destination in the Sava Hills.[4]
The name Lisca comes from .[5]
The hill has two summits: Lisca and Little Lisca (Slovenian: Mala Lisca; 934m (3,064feet)). At Lisca there is a meteorological station, the only one in Slovenia with a meteorological radar, and a ski slope.[6] At Mala Lisca, there are three paragliding take-off sites.[7]
At,[8] the Jurko Lodge (Slovenian: Jurkova koča) stands below the peak, built in 1972 at the site of the previous structures. It is named after Blaž Jurko (1859–1944), an early teacher and hiking pioneer that built the first hut on Lisca in 1902.[9] Next to it stands the Tonček Lodge (Slovenian: Tončkov dom), built in 1952 after the old one was burned during World War II by the Partisans. It was named after Tonček Čebular, the president of the Lisca Sevnica Mountaineering Club, who led the rebuilding.[10] Below the Tonček Lodge there is a chapel dedicated to the Mother of God,[11] built in 1939 at the initiative of Blaž Jurko. Six names are written on plaques around its door: the nieces and nephews of the priest that consecrated it.[12]
The Slovenian Environment Agency combines data from Meteosat and the meteorological radar at Lisca for accurate precipitation forecasts. The radar has a measuring distance of 200km (100miles).[13]
The main path leading to the top is the Jurko Trail, named after Blaž Jurko. It leads from the village of Breg (220m (720feet)) through the village of Razbor to the top of Lisca.[14] An asphalt road leads to the Tonček Lodge from a pass (676m (2,218feet)) between the Sava and Gračnica valleys.
The Jurko Trail also leads past a church dedicated to St. Judoc (Slovenian: sveti Jošt; 788m (2,585feet))[15] on the western slope of Lisca. There, three paths leading to the top join. An auction of pork hocks and cured sausage has taken place at St. Judoc's Church every Shrove Sunday since 1997, reviving a tradition that had disappeared for a period.[16]
The company Lisca, a major lingerie manufacturer, is named after the hill.