10-Hour Scarisoara Ice Cave Tour From Oradea
Highlights
Oradea
nature, cultural, sightseeing
Private Tour
10 Hours
Medium
English, German, Romanian
Description
Embark on a 10-hour tour that is situated in the Apuseni Mountains, almost 40 km from Campeni and in the northwestern part of the Alba district in Garda de Sus, Scarisoara Cave is one of Romania's largest ice caves, containing the world’s second-largest underground glacier. First mentioned in 1863 by Austrian geographer Arnold Schmidl, Romanian scientist Emil Racoviță later explored it between 1921 and 1923. At 105 m deep and 720 m long, its entrance shaft leads to a large chamber known as The Big Hall. Tourists can visit The Big Hall and The Church, while other parts are reserved for scientific study.
Itinerary
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Scarisoara Ice cave from Oradea
- We pick you up from your hotel early in the morning and drive to the Scarisoara Ice Cave, which is located 130 km from Oradea. The route is Oradea ; Beiuş ; Ştei ; Lunca Village ; Arieseni (DN75); Gârda.
- Once you arrive in the village, take the path to the top of the mountain at 1,165m altitude.
- Descend on the metal stairs along the abrupt vertical walls of the 50-meter-deep shaft. At its bottom lies the entrance to the glacier. We explore one of the natural wonders of the Apuseni Mountains, a karst region, by visiting Scarisoara cave. The cave is formed by Jurassic calcareous rocks (150 million years old).
- A river once flowed on the surface, gradually melting the lime. As it did so, the water went underground, creating a cavity. This cavity was, in turn, filled with ice during an ice age 4,000 years ago. The climate became warmer, but the glacier did not disappear, as it was supplied with a new layer of ice every winter.
- Beautiful stalactites and stalagmites await to be discovered.
- First mentioned in 1863 by the Austrian geographer Arnold Schmidl, who made some observations and the first map of the cave, but it was later explored by the Romanian scientist and speleologist Emil Racoviță between 1921 and 1923, who mentioned it and its origin in his 1927 work Speleology.
- It is 105 m deep and 720 m long, and the entrance shaft (60 m in diameter and 48 m in depth) gives access through metal stairs to a large chamber (108 m long, 78 m wide) – The Big Hall. . Thehas metal stairs leading, the
- From this point three openings lead to The Church (in front, with over 100 stalagmites) Great Reservation, Coman Gallery and Little Reservation.
- The parts that tourists can visit include the entrance shaft, The Big Hall and The Church, and the other chambers, which can be visited only with the agreement of the Speleological Institute of Cluj-Napoca, being reserved for scientists.
- Late in the evening, we are returning to Oradea.
What's Included
What's Excluded
Know Before You Go
What To Bring
Meeting Point
Cancellation Policy
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No refund in case of any cancellation.
Price
The Group Size and Price | |
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1 to 3 | /group |
4 to 6 | /group |
This is a private tour |