Imagine a place where you can hear the birds singing anywhere you go. When you look around, you see beautiful, unspoiled nature. This place is called the Bieszczady Mountains. As one of the last European non-urbanized mountain areas covered with natural forests (what is a natural phenomenon), Bieszczady mountains have always attracted people seeking freedom, sensitive men, loners, homeless, survivors and finally tough guys wanting to face life difficulties. Bieszczady mountain ranges are located on the south-eastern part of Poland, on the Mapa Bieszczadówborder with Ukraine and Slovakia. They are part of a great arc of the Carpathians, and more specifically – the Eastern Carpathians. Uplifted during Cretaceous period, they are young mountains. To Poland belongs only a part of the Carpathian Mountains – Western Bieszczady and the western part of Sanocko-Turczańskie Mountains. Sanocko-Turczańskie Mountains are low and their ridges, of regular and parallel system, reach a height of 600 to 700 m above sea level. The landscape is dominated by these long ridges with a regular pattern, extending parallely to each other from the northwest to the southeast. The highest peak is Tarnica (1346 m).