'A Yellowstone for Europe': Romania's ambition for a vast new wilderness reserve
A project to create Europes largest forested national park aims to protect 100,000 hectares of wilderness as well as boost ecotourism in support of local communities
Jane Dunford
Sun 22 Oct 2023 02.00 EDT
Up on the hill we spy them: dark, imposing forms moving through the dense forest. Its a group of bison wandering wild in Romanias Făgăraș mountains. I stand silently with my guide Răzvan Dumitrache as the animals graze.
This area of Transylvania, at the southern edge of the Carpathian mountains, is among the wildest places in Europe. Brown bears, wolves and lynx roam the forested hillsides and bison were recently reintroduced after a 200-year absence as part of the work of Foundation Conservation Carpathia. FCCs ambitions are not small: it aims to create the continents largest forested national park. A 101,000- hectare (250,000-acre) wilderness reserve. A Yellowstone for Europe.
(Snip)
Romania has more than 6m hectares of forest, of which a significant portion is still virgin, unfragmented areas with no human settlement, home to some of the few remaining sectors of old-growth forest in Europe. But illegal logging has cleared vast swathes of forest, and the destruction continues.
(More at link)
https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2023/oct/22/a-yellowstone-for-europe-romanias-ambition-for-a-vast-new-wilderness-reserve