Bosnia Is Beautiful, But Walk Wisely - Landmines, Memory and Respect in 2026 | A British Voice from Bosnia
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An Englishman in the Balkans is a personal podcast about life, travel, culture, and storytelling in Bosnia and Herzegovina, told from the perspective of a British-born creator who has made this country home.
Expect gentle reflections, real places, local voices, field recordings, and stories that go beyond the usual headlines.
Bosnia and Herzegovina is a beautiful, welcoming, deeply misunderstood country.
It is a place of villages, rivers, mountains, cafés, festivals, family gatherings, hiking trails, and everyday life. But it is also a country where the recent past still leaves traces, sometimes visible, sometimes hidden, and sometimes buried in the ground.
In this episode of An Englishman in the Balkans, I’m recording from the garden here in the village, with the ordinary sounds of rural Bosnia beneath my voice. Birds, dogs, maybe even the distant sound of a tractor. Peaceful sounds. Normal sounds.
And that is important, because this is not an episode designed to frighten anyone away from visiting Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Quite the opposite.
This is a personal, honest, and practical conversation about landmines in Bosnia in 2026 — what visitors, hikers, photographers, cyclists, drone users, and slow travellers should understand before heading off the beaten track.
I share a personal story from more than twenty years ago, when Tamara and I made a careless decision while walking near a former frontline area. It was a moment that reminded both of us how easily curiosity can lead you somewhere you should not be.
Bosnia is not unsafe in the way some people imagine. Daily life here is ordinary, peaceful, and full of warmth. People live, farm, walk, travel, go to school, attend festivals, support local sports teams, and welcome visitors every day.
But landmines and explosive remnants of war remain part of the country’s reality.
The risk is not everywhere. It is not on every road, field, village lane, or mountain path. But former frontlines, abandoned land, remote woodland, overgrown areas, and unmarked tracks still require caution and respect.
This episode is about balance.
Not fear.
Respect.
Respect for local knowledge. Respect for warning signs. Respect for marked trails. Respect for the landscape. And respect for the long, slow work still being done to make Bosnia and Herzegovina safer, field by field, path by path, village by village.
If you are planning to visit Bosnia, hike here, film here, cycle here, or explore rural areas, please listen carefully, use official resources, ask locally, and never treat the countryside casually.
Bosnia is beautiful.
But like many beautiful places, it asks us to pay attention.
Useful resources mentioned in this episode:
BH MAC - Bosnia and Herzegovina Mine Action Centre. EUFOR Mine Information Coordination Cell Mine Action Review. Bosnia and Herzegovina Official mine awareness and suspected hazardous area resources
Before I go, I'd love to hear from you.
If this episode brought back a memory, made you curious about Bosnia and Herzegovina, or simply gave you something to think about, why not send me a WhatsApp voice note?
You might have a question, a story of your own, or just want to say hello.
With your permission, I may even feature your message in a future episode.
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