Montenegro's alpine far north
Of all the trips from the beach at Bečići, Durmitor and the Tara Canyon are the most ambitious — a true mountain wilderness in Montenegro's north, a UNESCO-listed national park of some 48 peaks over 2,000 m, deep glacial lakes and pine forest, with the town of Žabljak — one of the highest settlements in the Balkans — as its gateway. In summer it is cool and green; in winter, a ski resort. The park's signature is the Tara River Canyon, carved over millennia into limestone: at its deepest it drops around 1,300 m, making it the deepest canyon in continental Europe and one of the deepest anywhere, its green river running through a gorge over 80 km long.
The bridge, the lake and the adventures
The most photographed spot is the Đurđević Tara Bridge, an elegant concrete arch completed just before WWII, vaulting the canyon roughly 150 m above the river (one arch was deliberately demolished in 1942 to slow an enemy advance, and rebuilt after the war). Today it is a viewpoint and adventure hub — cafés, souvenir stalls, ziplines strung across the gorge (the longest well over a kilometre), and rafting launches nearby. From Žabljak, the easy, unmissable walk is to the Black Lake (Crno Jezero), a glacial lake ringed by forest about 3 km from town, with a loop trail for those with more time.
The honest problem: it's a huge day
From Bečići, the drive to Žabljak or the Tara Bridge is roughly 180 km, and realistically three hours or more each way on winding mountain roads — often longer with summer traffic. That is six-plus hours in the car for a same-day return, leaving only a few hours in the park. An organised tour at least spares you the driving, but if you can spare a night, an overnight in Žabljak transforms the trip: you arrive with the afternoon ahead of you and wake in the mountains. Go late spring to early autumn, and pack layers — the altitude is far cooler than the Adriatic. For a shorter inland day, Ostrog Monastery or Cetinje are far less punishing.

