Wind speed reached 122 kmh in some parts of Dalmatia on Friday
In recent months, Croatia's been through a lot on the weather front. We've seen horrifying wildfires, insane storms and floods of Biblical proportions – come to think of it, it's only appropriate to resort to a themed analogy and say the situation resembled a proper 10-plagues list. The most unnerving thing is that you can never know what comes next... And yet, when it comes to Croatia, there's a certain ill-tempered constant on whose destructive potential we can always count on: bura.
The infamous bura wind makes its return to the Pearl of the Adriatic in its usual, brutal style.
A little bura didn't stop anyone this morning...
In the Split area, there has been the termination of the catamaran lines 9604 Ubli-Vela Luka-Split-Hvar, 9608 Korcula-Hvar-Split, 9603 Jelsa-Bol-Split and 631 Split-Supetar.
The statistical analysis of the climatological data for the first 10 days of January 2017 in Split.
Sub-zero termperatures on Croatia's Adriatic coast have been accompanied by the fierce northern bura wind, which reached 216 km/h on Pag Bridge on January 7, 2016. A video appreciation of the bura from Lovre Peraic.
After the fierce bura wind brought ice to Dalmatia's Adriatic waterfront on January 8, 2017, the icy calm after the storm in Makarska.
As Croatia's cold spell continues, our correspondents have been out and about, with TCN's Vice Rudan capturing an icy waterfront of the Makarska Riveria on January 7, 2017. Great videos!
Bura, everyone’s favorite gusty, icy cold wind, is currently ripping its way across the coast. While the sun in Split is inviting us in with open arms, it’s cold, and if there is no reason to go outside, no one is. As we look back on the last few days of frigid cold (with today being the real kicker) how has the bura affected the coast thus far?