Classroom lesson · Pirin & Rila Mountains · 🇧🇬 Bulgaria

Pirin & Rila Mountains

Bulgaria's wild, sky-high mountain ranges

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Bulgaria has two spectacular mountain ranges in the south of the country: the Rila and the Pirin. They are home to the highest peaks in the Balkan Peninsula, hundreds of clear glacier lakes, ancient pine forests and lots of wild animals. People come from all over the world to hike, ski and breathe the clean mountain air.

Tell me more

The Rila Mountains contain Musala Peak — at 2,925 metres, it is the highest point in Bulgaria and in the entire Balkan Peninsula. The name Musala means 'close to God' in an old language, because the peak sits so high it is often in the clouds. From the top on a clear day you can see four countries.

In the Pirin Mountains there are more than 200 glacier lakes, each carved out by ice during the last Ice Age. These lakes have names like the Scary Lake, the Fish Lake and the Tear Lake. The water is so clear and cold that it looks almost blue-green, reflecting the rocky peaks above.

Both ranges are UNESCO Biosphere Reserves, which means they are protected wild spaces. Brown bears, chamois (a kind of mountain goat), golden eagles and Balkan chamois all live in these mountains. There are also ancient Bosnian pine trees in the Pirin that are more than 1,000 years old — they were saplings when Rila Monastery was being built.

In winter the mountains fill with skiers and snowboarders from all over Europe. In summer, hiking trails wind through meadows full of wildflowers, past waterfalls and up to ridges where you can see for hundreds of kilometres. Shepherds still move their flocks of sheep up into the high meadows each summer, just as they have for thousands of years.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a mountain peak be given a name that means 'close to God'? What do you think it feels like to stand that high up?
  2. 02The Pirin lakes were carved by ice thousands of years ago. What else do you know about the Ice Age and how it changed the land?
  3. 03Shepherds have been bringing sheep to the mountain meadows every summer for thousands of years. Why do you think they would do the same thing in the same place, year after year?
Try this

Classroom activity

Imagine you are planning a one-day hike in the Rila or Pirin Mountains. Draw a simple route map showing where you start, two things you would see along the way (a lake, a peak, an animal, a tree), and where you would stop for lunch. Give each stopping point a name.