November 26, 2019 - The first Museum of Hangovers in the world opens on December 1 in Zagreb (Preradoviceva 8), just in time for the Advent festivities in the capital.
This unforgettable space for some of our more forgettable events is the project of a group of students designed as ‘a drunken return home’ - from the city streets to a casual stroll through the forest and eventually getting home where, if you are lucky, you manage to wake up in the morning. The idea of this unique museum was borne on an evening out, when students Rino Dubokovic and Roberta Mikelic, together with their friends, began to retell their best booze-fuelled stories.
It didn’t take long for their tales of tipsiness to bring them to a quite brilliant idea - why not create a museum featuring the best drunken and hangover stories with one item that would best represent it?
The idea came to fruition thanks to the students who chose the space, the lighting, painted the walls, and also sent in their best drunken escapades. To create the feeling of a drunken trip home, the museum will take you on a tour of four different rooms. The experience begins when you enter the museum, where the first stop of the adventure - exiting a stuffy club or packed bar, is visually captivated.
The Museum of Hangovers is a must-see during this year’s Advent for anyone looking to have a good laugh. The stories are presented in both Croatian and English at the same time, and the museum will be open daily from 9 am to 11 pm. The adult ticket price is 25,00 kuna, while students will have a slight discount (20,00 kuna).
If you also have a hangover story you would like to share to be a part of this unique museum concept, you can email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or send a message to their Facebook page.
You can find more info about the new Zagreb museum here.
Source: Journal.hr
To read more about lifestyle in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.
Major airlines are pulling out of the Franjo Tuđman Airport in Zagreb, Croatia. While the coastal airports are experiencing a boom in air traffic; passenger growth has been stagnating this year in Croatia’s capital. The decline is expected to continue into 2020; as Jakov Fabinger/SimpleFlying points out on November 24, 2019.
According to the airport’s own statistics, Franjo Tuđman Airport has handled 2.96 million passengers so far in 2019. It had handled 2.89 million passengers by the same time last year, which is only a slight increase. There are two reasons why this is a significant problem for Croatia and for the airport itself. First, the negligible growth comes during a period when Croatia is booming. Iberia keeps expanding year after year, direct flights to the USA have resumed after 28 years, and passenger growth is averaging 10% this year. Zagreb Airport is lagging far behind the growth rates of Croatia as a whole, but it is also behind its European counterparts.
Zagreb Airport appears to be in an advantageous position. It is the only airport serving the Croatian capital and the only airport in the vicinity of the wider catchment area. But its passenger numbers are still comparably low. At just 45 flights per day, the airport is less busy than many of Europe’s secondary airports like Palermo, Hanover or Aberdeen. In Lithuania’s capital Vilnius, which is half the population size of Zagreb, air traffic is almost 50% higher.
In 2020, Zagreb Airport passenger numbers are expected to shrink. No new routes have been announced. And Croatia Airlines, the national carrier of Croatia, will be receiving government grants to cover its operating losses. Furthermore, there is a risk that Ljubljana Airport will soon become the low-cost alternative to Zagreb. Ljubljana, the Slovenian capital, is just two hours’ drive away from and has been left with a serious lack of air connectivity since the demise of Adria Airways.
Korean Air has converted its service between Zagreb and Seoul from year-round to seasonal. CSA Czech Airlines has discontinued flights completely and Eurowings has discontinued ticket sales for flights from Zagreb to Berlin and Dusseldorf from March onwards. FlyDubai has significantly reduced the number of wintertime weekly flights. Furthermore, Eurowings will be operating flights to Hamburg for a shorter time period in the summer only, and Swiss Air has completely cancelled its flights to Zurich.
Eurowings has cited high fees at Zagreb as a deterrent for introducing new routes. And now that it will cut the two routes mentioned above. It will only be serving Cologne and Stuttgart from Zagreb. EasyJet, Ryanair and Wizz Air do not serve Zagreb at all. EasyJet left the airport in 2014, also citing high fees.
The pattern of route cancellations is interesting too. Zagreb Airport offers incentives to airlines for new routes, and airlines make use of them. But as soon as the incentives stop, they tend to pull out. CSA Czech Airlines introduced year-round flights between Prague Václav Havel Airport and Zagreb in the summer of 2016. As it was a new route, the airline was given significant discounts on various charges. Discounts for winter operations were particularly high. But, CSA Czech Airlines made use of the incentives for one winter and then discontinued winter services for 2017/18. Finally, in 2019 it also discontinued summer flights and has left the airport completely.
Emirates operated daily flights to Zagreb for a one winter before pulling out of Zagreb completely, as did Korean Air. There is a clear pattern here: an airline will leave as soon as the incentives package expires.
From January until June 2020, Croatia will take its turn at EU presidency. And yet the country’s capital has only 14 airlines maintaining year-round routes, even during this time period.
Follow our Travel page for more information on airlines and travel options to Croatia.
Sea Shepherd, a world environmental organization, is establishing an office in Zagreb, Croatia. It was founded in 1977 by Captain Paul Watson to fight for the protection of the sea and its inhabitants. Since then, Sea Shepherd has become the most active and successful organization dealing with the protection of the ocean and marine fauna.
The Sea Shepherd fleet consists of 13 ships with crews of volunteers from all over the world, and has the largest private fleet in the world, which is on call day and night. Sea Shepherd doesn’t engage in protest rather they focus on responding and use tactics and direct actions to investigate, document and prevent illegal activities which cause damage to the world’s oceans.
Over the past 40 years, due to their actions, massive underwater life hunts have been on the decline worldwide. Sea Shepherd has worked against the seal massacre in Canada, the whale massacre on the Faroe Islands, illegal fishing in the Mediterranean, dolphin killing in Japan, and for the protection of the Vaquita porpoise in the Gulf of Mexico, among many other actions. For ten years, they have been actively combating commercial whaling of the Japanese fleet in the Pacific Ocean, despite attempts by that fleet to disguise the hunt for research purposes. This is the action they are most well-known for.
Each year, the Japanese fleet seek to slaughter a minimum of 1,000 whales to make their catch commercially viable. Thanks to Sea Shepherd’s on-site responses, they have been prevented from hunting and have been virtually forced to give up. About 5,000 whales have been rescued and set free. Sea Shepherd continues to operate due to the success of their campaigns and the support of volunteers and donors. For more information on Sea Shepherd’s global work, visit their website here.
Sea Shepherd organizers will be holding their first public event in Croatia on November 28, 2019. They will be discussing their organization at the Oris kuća arhitekture (Oris House of Architecture) in Zagreb. They will also reveal how they are fighting to preserve the ocean, the current state of the Adriatic Sea and how to take action to promote the survival of underwater life.
This is an opportunity to obtain information, ask questions, and find out how we can save the sea and support the world's most active marine conservation organization.
DATE: 11/28/2019
TIME: 19:00
PLACE: Oris kuća arhitekture (Kralja Držislava Street 3, 10 000 Zagreb)
GUESTS: Captain Alex Cornelissen CEO of Sea Shepherd Global and others
Other guest speakers include Andrea Morello CEO Sea Shepherd Italy, Robert Mach CEO Sea Shepherd Austria, Scientists at the Ruđer Bošković Institute and numerous guests from the world of science, sports and entertainment.
More information about the event can be found here.
A video of Sea Shepherd removing an illegal driftnet in the Mediterranean:
For more information on environmental issues in Croatia, follow our Lifestyle page.
November 26, 2019 - The Croatian National Tourist Board has launched a promotional Croatia Advent campaign as one of the key motives for traveling here in the winter.
HRTurizam reports that the campaign is being implemented in the markets of Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Austria, France, Switzerland, Spain, Hungary and Slovenia until the end of December this year. The communication channels through which the campaign is advertised are YouTube and social networks Facebook and Instagram.
The Advent campaign is implemented through the new promotional video "Croatia, full of magic" and encourages the Advent offer of Croatian destinations.
According to the Croatia National Tourist Board, the campaign leads the user to the page "Croatia.hr", where in addition to Advent in Zagreb, which won the title of the best Christmas fair in Europe for three years in a row, the Advent events of SalajLand, Slavonia, Dalmatia, Kvarner, Istria and continental Croatia are also promoted.
Over 50 foreign established journalists, bloggers and influencers from 11 European countries will visit Croatia in the organization of the Croatian National Tourist Board in December and will have the opportunity to get to know and experience the Croatia Advent offer firsthand. For example, Croatia will be visited by Russian MUZ TV, which creates the show "Independent Traveler", which is viewed by more than 25 million viewers across Russia.
Also, a team from Swedish RES TV and RES Magazine will record three special episodes dedicated to Zagreb's Advent, which are estimated to be watched by a total of 1.5 million viewers in Sweden. Croatian traditional holiday customs will be transmitted to its viewers by TVN Discovery, the oldest and largest private TV station in Poland, which is watched by over 8.38 percent of the entire Polish market.
"In the last few years, our country has become an increasingly sought after and attractive tourist destination in the winter, when diverse Advent programs come to the fore. I believe that the vibrant Advent facilities in many Croatian destinations such as Zagreb, Split, Osijek, Zadar, Rijeka, Porec, Dubrovnik, but also on the islands will attract numerous Croatian and foreign guests and contribute to the conclusion of a very successful tourist year,” said the director of the Croatian National Tourist Board Kristjan Staničić.
According to eVisitor, more than 410,000 tourists visited Croatia during last year's Advent, generating over one million overnight stays.
To read more about travel in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.
ZAGREB, November 25, 2019 - The head of the Croatian National Theatre (HNK) in Zagreb, Dubravka Vrgoč, has received the Order of the Star of Italy whereby Italy acknowledges her outstanding contribution to the promotion of friendship and cooperation and persistent work on the development and expansion of cooperation between the two countries in the field of theatre art.
Vrgoč was presented with the decoration by Italian Ambassador Adriano Chiodi Cianfarani at a ceremony held at the HNK last Wednesday.
Cianfarani said the decoration was a high civic award whereby the Italian state honoured outstanding contributions, by Italians abroad or foreign nationals, to the promotion of friendship and cooperation.
He said that Vrgoč had been awarded for her outstanding contribution to the development of relations between Italy and Croatia in the field of culture and that the decoration bore witness to the importance of culture, cultural cooperation and cultural diplomacy in international relations.
More news about the Croatian National Theatre can be found in the Lifestyle section.
November 25, 2019 - The 16th round of the Croatian First League was held from Friday, November 22 to Sunday, November 24. This round featured the never disappointing ‘Eternal Derby’ between Dinamo and Hajduk.
Dinamo v. Hajduk (1:1)
Dinamo and Hajduk opened the 16th round at Maksimir stadium on Friday, November 22, 2019, in front of 15,757 fans.
Dinamo was quick to score thanks to an own goal by Hajduk defender Ismajli in the 12th minute for 1:0. However, a penalty awarded to Hajduk just before the half saw Mijo Caktas score for 1:1.
Neither team was able to score in the second half, and Hajduk resisted Dinamo’s intense pressure throughout the game, even though they were without several of their key players on Friday.
Dinamo is currently in first place with 35 points, while Hajduk is in 2nd with 31.
Gorica v. Varazdin (1:0)
Gorica and Varazdin met in Velika Gorica on Saturday, November 23, 2019, in front of 1,272 fans.
The first half went without goals, and Gorica’s Ndiaye scored only in the 57th minute for 1:0, which was the final score of the game.
Gorica is currently in 6th place with 25 points, while Varazdin is in 10th place with 11.
Slaven Belupo v. Lokomotiva (1:0)
Belupo and Lokomotiv met on Saturday, November 23, 2019, in Koprivnica in front of 754 fans.
It was another low scoring game of the 16th round, which saw Belupo’s Krstanovic score in the 17th minute for 1:0, which was the final score of the game.
Belupo is currently in 7th place with 15 points, while Lokomotiva is in 5th place with 25.
Osijek v. Istra 1961 (1:0)
Osijek and Istra met on Sunday, November 24, 2019, at City Garden Stadium in front of 2,455 fans.
While the game saw Istra’s Pavic receive a double yellow in the 52nd minute, forcing Istra to play with a man down from the 52nd minute, the first and only goal of the game came in the 5th minute of added time (95') thanks to Osijek’s Maric for 1:0.
Osijek is currently in 3rd place with 26 points, while Istra is in 8th with 12.
Inter Zapresic v. Rijeka (1:4)
Inter and Rijeka met in Zagreb to close out the 16th round on Sunday, November 25, 2019, in front of 820 fans.
Rijeka scored all four goals in the first half, thanks to Andrijasevic (6’), Colak (23’, 28’), and Gorgon (32’). Inter’s Soldo was able to get one for the home team in the first minute of added time for 1:4.
Inter is currently in 9th place with 11 points, while Rijeka is in 4th with 25.
You can see the full HNL table here.
To read more about sport in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.
November 24, 2019 - To the delight of all chocolate lovers, on the 25th of November in Varšavska 5 in Zagreb, the first Croatian museum dedicated to chocolate is opening its doors to the public.
Muzej čokolade Zagreb (Museum of Chocolate Zagreb) is a theme park dedicated to chocolate, its historical, geographical and cultural significance. The idea of opening the Museum of chocolate came to the spouses Ružica and Domagoj Cerovac, otherwise passionate chocolate lovers. The concept of space was designed by themselves, and their fairy-tale vision was completed by Željka Zrnić, a collaborator of the Museum, which, to the smallest detail, decorated every corner of the premises.
Through an interactive approach, the museum's exhibition and scenery will take visitors on a journey through time and space, arousing their senses of sight, smell, touch, hearing and of course-taste. Visitors will follow the path of the creation of chocolate from cocoa beans in Mesoamerica, through chocolate drinks at European courts to the exclusive praline of today.
All chocolate lovers at the Museum store are also offered the opportunity to buy products from the assortment of small Croatian artisan chocolatiers. The idea is to connect the true lovers of chocolate with experienced producers of this exceptional food.
Visit the Museum of Chocolate Zagreb and awaken the child in you!
Official Museum Instagram profile
Official Museum web page (work in progress)
All photos by Leon Božić, Dnevna doza biljaka
To read more about lifestyle in Croatia, follow TCN's dedicated page.
ZAGREB, November 21, 2019 - Opposition councillors in the City Assembly and NGOs condemned on Thursday the Construction Ministry's decision to okay the changes of Zagreb's city plan (GUP), accusing "the Croatian People's Party (HNS) ministry" of violating the law.
The Opposition also accuses the ministry of being included in "a shameful deal" between Mayor Milan Bandić and the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ).
"This is a shameless state," said the leader of the "Zagreb Is Ours" left bloc in the assembly, Tomislav Tomašević, commenting on the Ministry of Construction and Physical Planning decision on the proposed amendments to the GUP.
"Minister Predrag Štromar has played a 'double pass' with Milan Bandić regarding the GUP and has made fools of citizens. Last Friday, Štromar pompously refused to allow the changes to the GUP and said that adjusting the amendments to the ministry's demands could take years yet four days later, he approved those changes," Tomašević said.
The chairwoman of the GLAS and Croatian Pensioners' Party (HSU) group, Anka Mrak-Taritaš claimed that this was a "coalition of political bartering," involving the HDZ and Bandić with his "cronies" and HNS, and the ministry's approval was the result.
However, Mrak-Taritaš underscored, the problem of citizens and experts still existed, who considered that the new GUP was not developmental for Zagreb but "wishes and greetings by certain people close to Mayor Bandić."
The chairman of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) branch in the city, Gordan Maras said that the scenario of the deal between HDZ, Bandić and HNS was obvious and that the opposition would do all what it could for the amendments to the city plan not to be adopted in the Assembly.
Councillor Matej Mišić (SDP) announced a referendum regarding the contentious amendments to the GUP which paved the way for the development project dubbed Zagreb Manhattan to be built.
The Green Action, Right to the City and Association of Siget Residents said that based on the Physical Planning Law the entire process of adopting Zagreb's GUP should be abandoned.
More Zagreb news can be found in the Lifestyle section.
November 19, 2019 - Total Croatia News is delighted to announce an internship programme with the Faculty of Political Science & Journalism of the University of Zagreb. Meet the TCN interns!
The TCN inbox is never dull, and with our policy of flexibility and going with the flow, the inbox often leads us into some unplanned and very unchartered waters.
A few weeks ago, I received an invitation from Professor Gaj Tomas from the University of Zagreb to give a lecture to his second-year journalism students about the realities of running a news portal in Croatia today. It was not something I had ever planned to do, but I appreciated the invitation and interest, and the more I thought about it, the more it made sense. Some kind of partnership with the university would make sense, and perhaps we could even organise a programme for some TCN interns.
Many thanks to Luka Solta for filming the lecture (for any interested students who could not make the very early 9 am start) can see the lecture in full in the two YouTube videos below. At the end, I discussed the internship concept and invited any interested students to contact me if they were interested. It had been an interesting experience for me, and I headed off to Hvar to help pick the family olives without really expecting to hear from any of the students again.
But then I did, the next day. One of the students who attended wrote a very sweet email of thanks and registering interest in the programme. And then another. And then another. Three TCN interns! Now I would have to come up with a concrete programme for them...
I met with Janja, Paula and Ana recently in a Zagreb cafe to get to know their interests and what they wanted to get out of the internship. For my part, one of the benefits of the internship for TCN is that it brings us closer to the Gen Z generation and allows us to explore different forms of media. I am grateful to PR guru Kresimir Macan who has agreed to lend his expertise to the internship programme for our political student, as well as very favourable feedback from a number of Croatian businesses where I think our internship initiative can bring mutual benefit.
Our TCN interns will be doing a variety of tasks with TCN mentoring, including writing their own standalone articles, making short videos around Zagreb, and doing various research projects. We will publish the first of their articles tomorrow. If your business is interested in supporting our intern initiative, please contact me on This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and we can see how the relationship can develop.
In the meantime, meet the new TCN interns, in their own words. A little about them, why they are studying journalism, and what they hope to get from the programme.
Hello there, my name is Janja Šestak and I am from a small village named Seketin (near a former capital city of Croatia, can you guess? But no pressure).
My hobbies include archery (I hold several state records), reenactments (more or less), singing (not saying I'm good, I just love to sing) and soon playing the guitar (God, help my roommates). I love to hike, being in nature, going around castles and fortresses (ex wanna-be-knight, who would say). I love sport and I love to think I'm good at it. Also, I was part of the movie and the professional theatre play (HNK Varaždin) and in both held the main role, nothing special. I love to write and I think I am creative, sometimes. Oh yes, I love eating. Seriously, I love food.
Why I have chosen journalism? Well, at first, I was interested in criminalistics because I naively think I can rid Croatia of the bribery and corruption disease which is spreading. Not only that, but there is also more of this, of course. After that, I was thinking about being a military pilot because I don't plan to have a boring life. Here I am now, a student of journalism who is going to bed around 10 p.m. on Saturday.
However, I still think I can fix a part of Croatia. Even a small one, it doesn't matter. I would love to be the reason that someone is smiling again. I would love to be someone who encourages others to do great things. I am a huge fan of what the team Provjereno is doing, but I don't want to be next Ivana Paradžiković, I want to be the first Janja Šestak.
My biggest flaw: hastiness. My biggest advantage: adaptability. Now something that is a flaw and an advantage in one, I try to see good in every situation and person. I like to think every person has something good in her. In general, my problem is I'm interested in a lot of things which is hard sometimes because I really don't know how to compress all of them in one and called it a job one day.
Lastly, I don't take things for granted. I give my best for things or people that matter to me. All in. Yeah, that kind of would be my motto. If you're doing things superficially or by force, seriously, don't do it.
Link of a trailer of the theatre play.
My name is Paula Anić and I'm a 2nd-year student of journalism at the Faculty of Political Science in Zagreb. I am 20 years old and live with my parents and sister in Zagreb, the capital city of Croatia.
Ever since I can remember I have been interested in writing. At first, those were short stories that I would read only to my younger sister because I was afraid to show them to anyone else. With years, my passion for writing grew, and with it came the passion for history. That in particular, I can thank my high school professor, an amazing woman who made me fall in love with history by talking about it with an immense passion. Once I entered the magical world of kings, queens, battles, and wars I also started reading a lot. During my high school days, I become known as a girl that always has a book in her arms and that hasn't changed till today. No matter how many people are there in a tram or a bus, I can always be seen reading some of my favorite novels.
A little while later, I started being interested in politics and that is my biggest passion at the moment. Next year's goals include enrolling in Faculty for political science and studying it together with journalism. Some of the long term goals include perhaps one day working in diplomacy/foreign relations or being a member of the European Parliament.
That is where I come to explain why I want to work with TCN. For once, it is an unbiased news portal that gives its journalists great freedom in writing about topics of their own choice and it is based on promoting positive news rather than filling its readers with negative ones all the time. It sounds like a dream come true for anyone who wants to do this job. The other thing is the fact that my college focuses mainly on building our theoretical knowledge and very little on practical training which I think is crucial for every aspiring journalist. I see great potential for growth as a writer, especially in English by working with Paul and TCN.
Some of my other, still developing skills and hobbies include learning about film theory and learning French, both of which I have started doing during this academic year and have fallen in love with. In my free time, that is while I'm not reading some new and exciting book, I am volunteering in two organizations; AIESEC which focuses on building relations with foreign countries (my job includes explaining people from Croatia what kind of benefit they can get from volunteering all across the globe) and eStudent where I am part of PR and Event Management team. I only just started the later, but I am were excited and eager to learn all about it and work on promising new projects regarding students. I see myself as a capable and positively stubborn person who, once it starts something, doesn't stop until the job is done.
My name is Ana Samodol, I come from Šibenik and I am a second-year student of journalisam at the Faculty of Political Science. What I see as passion in my future job is investigating interesting and less common stories about people, what kind of life they have and if they unfortunately had any obstacles in their lives. Also I like reading about travelling, mainly where to travel, what to see, what monuments can be visited, and what can you do in that town. Furthermore I like reading about other cultures, their foods, drinks and their customs. I am very fascinated by Turkish food and their culture, mostly by their beautiful towns, monuments and natural sights.
I also like reading lifestyle articles, sometimes even sports and the most important news from politics and business. Sometimes that type of news might seem a bit boring, but I have to keep up with things that are happening in Croatia and all over the world. I like to share reading interests with students my age. These are the reasons why I would write about things to do in Zagreb or Croatia, where to hang out with your friends, how to study and enjoy in student life. As I said over the coffee, I love watching TV shows and films. My favourite TV shows are sitcoms, I love watching them because they make me feel better and I forget about my problems. I also love listening to older hits from previous century; 80s, 70s, 90s and 2000 music. In my opinion, music from that era was far better than this one today. Unfortunately I can't listen to this type of music on Radio Student where I volunteer, where I write and read the news.
I want to be a journalist because I am interested in radio and television journalisam. Apart from those things I would also like to write about interesting stories of people, travelling and culture of other countries. I applied for an internship at Total Croatia News because I want to expand my knowledge in journalism and collect knowledge and ideas from other journalists. Also I would like to learn more about Croatian culture in which I am not familiar with. Apart from expanding my knowledge in journalism, I want to improve my personal, communicating and writing skills.
Thank you, Ladies, we look forward to working with you.
November 18, 2019 - The latest news from around Croatia’s airports for new flights to Croatia with updates from Zagreb, Split, Dubrovnik, Pula, and Zadar.
Avio Radar reports that last summer, British low-cost carrier Easyjet took over its first Airbus A321Neo aircraft. Today, there are six in its fleet. For the 2020 summer flight schedule, Easyjet has announced this aircraft on selected routes to Croatia and will land at four airports in Croatia to which Easyjet operates. The first arrival is in Dubrovnik on May 5, 2020.
London (LGW) - Dubrovnik (DBV), once a week, Tuesday, May 5, 2020
Paris (CDG) - Split (SPU), once a week, Wednesday, June 22, 2020
Bristol (BRS) - Split (SPU), once a week, Saturday, June 27, 2020
Milan (MXP) - Zadar (ZAD), once a week, June 25, 2020
Paris (CDG) - Pula (PUY), once a week, Wednesday, July 1, 2020
The Basel/Mulhouse (BSL) - Pula (PUY) line has also been strengthened for the 2020 summer flight schedule. Namely, this line will run three flights per week instead of this year's two flights per week. This line will operate on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, from June 23 to August 29, 2020.
In other flight news, Ex Yu Aviation reports that Czech Airlines will stop its seasonal service between Prague and Zagreb.
“At this moment, the route Prague - Zagreb is not planned for the 2020 summer season,” the carrier said for Ex Yu Aviation.
With the discontinuation of this line, Croatia Airlines will be the sole seasonal route from Zagreb to the Czech capital, which will operate next year from April 7th and fly four times per week until the end of October.
Recall, when Czech Airlines launched the service between the two capitals back in 2016, it ran throughout the year. Back in 2017, the airline moved to a seasonal service.
To read more about travel in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.