Urych is a village in Skole Raion, Lviv Oblast, of Western Ukraine. Local government — Pidhorodetska village council. Continue reading... From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
2. St. George Wooden ChurchDrohobych St. George's Church in Drohobych is one of the oldest and best preserved timber churches of Galicia. The church, dating from ca. 1500, consists of three parts. The central block is square in plan and comprises the nave. Two other blocks contain the double apse and the narthex. Between 1678 and 1711, the church was renovated: the interior was frescoed, the octagonal structures built up, and a new belfry appeared. It is one of the 16 churches that comprise a World Heritage Site named the Wooden tserkvas of the Carpathian region in Poland and Ukraine. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
3. National Park Skole BeskidsSkole National nature parks of Ukraine are preservation territories that are part of the Nature-Preservation Fund of Ukraine. The total area protected by national parks is approximately 1,111,600 hectares , for an average of 22,685 hectares but a median of only 14,836 hectares at Zalissya. The largest national park is Upper Pobozhia in Khmelnytskyi Oblast: at over 100,000 hectares . The smallest park is Derman-Ostroh National Nature Park, at less than 5,500 hectares . This category of the Nature-Preservation Fund was mainly established after the fall of the Soviet Union. There were very few parks in Ukraine and most of them were in the West. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
6. Shypit WaterfallPylypets Shypit is a waterfall is located on the Pylypets River, about 6 kilometres from the village of Pylypets, Mizhhiria Raion, Zakarpattia Oblast of western Ukraine The waterfall is 14 metres high. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
7. Latorica RiverMukacheve Latorica is a river in the watershed of the Danube. Its source is in the Ukrainian Carpathians , near the village Latorka. It flows from Ukraine to Slovakia , 188 km in total and west through the towns Svaliava, Mukacheve, Solomonovo, Chop and Velke Kapusany. The watershed is 3,130 km². Its confluence with the Ondava, in Zemplín, gives rise to the Bodrog river, itself a tributary of the Tisza. A part of its watershed was added to the Ramsar list of wetlands of international importance since 1993. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.