Bistricë (river)

Bistricë

View from the artificial lake on rivers' basin
Origin Syri i Kaltër, Delvinë District, Albania
Mouth Ionian Sea
39°50′38″N 20°1′52″E / 39.84389°N 20.03111°ECoordinates: 39°50′38″N 20°1′52″E / 39.84389°N 20.03111°E
Basin countries Albania
Length 25 km
Avg. discharge 40.4 m3/s (August) - 66.4 m3/s (Winter)

Bistricë (definite: Bistrica) is a river in southwestern Albania. It is the only river in Albania which ends in the Ionian Sea, and not in the Adriatic.

Etymology

Bistrica derives from Slavic word bistro, meaning "clear", "transparent".

Map with the drainage basins of the Albanian rivers: Bistricë is in the far south.

Geography

Bistricë starts from Mali i Gjerë (also known as Sopot) in Delvinë municipality directing initially versus south-west. The main source is near Krongj ("The Blue Eye" source), also gathering other sources from the nearby villages of Pecë, Kardhikaq, Velahovë, and other smaller brooks.[1] It later passes through Mesopotam and Finiq municipalities, parallel with the Sarandë-Gjirokastër road.

Initially the river ended in Lake Butrint, which connects with the Ionian sea through the Vivar channel. In 1958, it was deviated to Çukë channel.

The river is 25 km long.

Economy and tourism

The river is not navigable. There is an artificial lake with the same name (Albanian: Liqeni i Bistricës) built on its basin, and three hydro-power stations built in the '60.[2] The river's waters are used to a certain extent as a supply for the nearby fields of Vurg area. All the stations passed through the privatization process from 2010 with plenty of controversies.[3][4]
A well known touristic place is the "Azure Eye", often referred as "Blue Eye" (Albanian: Syri i Kaltër), a spring tributary to Bistrica river near the village named Krongj, with a rich flora and fauna.

See also

Sources

References

External links