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Croatian Automobile Club (Croatian: Hrvatski autoklub or abbreviated HAK) is the main Croatian automobile association – such as American AAA or British AA.With over 227,000 members, it is one of the largest non-profit associations in Croatia.
Imotski (Croatian pronunciation: [ǐmɔtskiː]) is a small town on the northeastern side of the Biokovo massif in the Dalmatian Hinterland of southern Croatia, near the border with Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Imotski, on the D60 route Blue Lake, near Imotski, just to the north of D60. D60 is a state road in Dalmatia region of Croatia connecting D1 state road in Brnaze to Vinjani Donji border crossing to Sovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina via Imotski. The road is 66.1 km (41.1 mi) long. [1]
Imotsko Polje (lit. ' Field of Imotski ') is a polje (karstic field) located on the border of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina near the city of Imotski.The larger part is in Herzegovina, while the Croatian part is in the inner Dalmatia region, and is the second largest in the country, covering an area of 95 square kilometres (37 sq mi).
D76 is a state road in Croatia that connects Makarska Riviera to Imotski and Bosnia and Herzegovina.Furthermore, the road has junctions to major roads, namely A1 motorway in Zagvozd interchange, connecting to Split and Zagreb, and D62 state road, also in Zagvozd, which in turn connects to Šestanovac to the west and to Vrgorac to the east.
Autoceste are marked with this sign in Croatia. The primary high-speed motorways are called autoceste (Croatian pronunciation: [ˈaʊtotsesta]; singular: autocesta), and they are defined as roads with at least three lanes in each direction (including hard shoulder) and a speed limit of not less than 80 kilometres per hour (50 mph).
Approximate area of the Dalmatian Hinterland. The Dalmatian Hinterland (Croatian: Dalmatinska zagora, Italian: La Morlacca or Zagora dalmata) is the southern inland hinterland in the historical Croatian region of Dalmatia.
The lake is inhabited with endemic and endangered spotted minnow (Delminichthys adspersus) [5] and Imotski spined loach (Cobitis illyrica). [6] [7] In the dry period of the year, this fish can be occasionally seen in surrounding springs, rivers and lakes, suggesting that there is an underground connection between Red Lake and other water bodies ...