As the holiday tourist season is over, Crimea is slowly sinking into a sleep, getting ready for the approaching winter. However, quiet November is probably the best time to enjoy Crimean nature, far away from the hustle and bustle of dusty metropolises.

Fortress ruins on the Kale-Burun rock (Burun-Kaya) of the Kurushlyu massif in the Bakhchisarai area of Crimea.

A view of the mountains and the sea in Crimea.

The village of Zalesnoye on the left slope of the Karalez Valley in the Bakhchisarai area of Crimea.

St. Nicholas Church, the only lighthouse temple dedicated to travelers and those who died at sea.

A bull in the Bakhchisarai area of Crimea.

An obelisk in Yalta, Crimea.

The Kale-Burun rock (Burun-Kaya) of the Kurushlyu massif in the Bakhchisarai area of Crimea.

A field in Crimea.

Church of Resurrection (1892) on the Red Rock near the town of Foros in Crimea.

A road in the mountains, Crimea.

Fortress ruins on the Kale-Burun rock (Burun-Kaya) of the Kurushlyu massif in the Bakhchisarai area of Crimea.

A view of the mountains and the sea in Crimea.

A horse seen against the background of Eski Kermen, a medieval town-fortress in the southwestern part of the Crimean Peninsula.

A mountain in Crimea.

The Black Sea near Foros, a resort town in Crimea.
