Awesome video! Makes me want to go to High Tatras immediately. Itˇs a pity it was so cloudy on top. I was there a couple years ago and was extremely lucky for good weather, sky was clear and views to the west were amazing. I also like your commentary, especially the final speech.
High Tatras is a highest part of Carpathian mountains. So it is not a “brother of Carpathian mountains in Romania” but it’s actually a Carpathians itself. The highest peak is Gerlach which is obviously in High Tatras.
Correct. Like I say in the video "they're part of the same mountain line". The only reason I made the distinction and called them brothers is because the Romanian part is frequently called Carpathian mountains while the Slovaks never call them like that.
Slovaks never call them Carpathians? Maybe because we are properly thought names of each part of Slovak Carpathians and so then we refer to exact part that we are going to visit/hike? All of the Slovaks know that our mountains are called Carpathians and also that they are starting in Bratislava and ending in Serbia (while crossing Ukraine and Romania).
@@vierkavojcikova Properly thought of names? Do you mean that Slovaks know the mouintain names right? I'm aware of that. When I say "most people don't know" I'm not referring to locals but the rest of the world (the readers of Trip & Trail are 30% from USA, 10% UK etc). And anyway the Romanians know the names of the individual mountain lines as well. What's the arguement here?
Beautifull. Thank you for this video man.
Thank you for taking the time, I'm glad you like it.
So nice!
Awesome video! Makes me want to go to High Tatras immediately. Itˇs a pity it was so cloudy on top. I was there a couple years ago and was extremely lucky for good weather, sky was clear and views to the west were amazing. I also like your commentary, especially the final speech.
Thank you Martin! This is one of my favorite trips ever.
Europe 2020, so where to travel this time, no flights, just car driving. Of course to Tatras!!! Thankyou for video!
No disagreement here! Thanks for watching.
High Tatras is a highest part of Carpathian mountains. So it is not a “brother of Carpathian mountains in Romania” but it’s actually a Carpathians itself. The highest peak is Gerlach which is obviously in High Tatras.
Correct. Like I say in the video "they're part of the same mountain line". The only reason I made the distinction and called them brothers is because the Romanian part is frequently called Carpathian mountains while the Slovaks never call them like that.
Slovaks never call them Carpathians? Maybe because we are properly thought names of each part of Slovak Carpathians and so then we refer to exact part that we are going to visit/hike? All of the Slovaks know that our mountains are called Carpathians and also that they are starting in Bratislava and ending in Serbia (while crossing Ukraine and Romania).
@@vierkavojcikova Properly thought of names? Do you mean that Slovaks know the mouintain names right? I'm aware of that. When I say "most people don't know" I'm not referring to locals but the rest of the world (the readers of Trip & Trail are 30% from USA, 10% UK etc).
And anyway the Romanians know the names of the individual mountain lines as well.
What's the arguement here?
@@ChrisKamberisGuess she meant we use the names of índívídual ranges wíthín Carpathíans rather than call ít by one name.
Tatry są zajebiste
True 👍