Wild Places That Offer More Than Just Landscapes

They offer presence, meaning, and quiet

Explore the most fascinating natural regions in Romania – thoughtfully designed for birdwatching, wildlife photography, and a deep reconnection with nature. You won’t find mass tourism here. You’ll find expeditions built on patience, ethics, and true field knowledge.

Danube Delta - Romania

A sanctuary for photographers and birdwatchers – a world of silence and slow rhythms.

Here, light dances on water, birds arrive on their own terms, and every morning begins like a revelation. The Delta isn’t just a place. It’s a tempo – a living space where you witness intimate wildlife moments: a pair of herons building a nest, pelicans fishing at sunrise, a white-tailed eagle gripping its catch. Each expedition is carefully planned around light, behavior, and silence. Only 6 people per tour, in a low-profile boat designed for water-level photography.

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Wild Dobruja (Dobrogea) - Romania

Arid hills, mysterious steppe, and migratory birds painting the sky

Dobrogea is not what you expect. It’s not lush green – it’s scorched, warm, and deeply authentic. A nearly forgotten space where silence cuts sharp and birdsong rings clear.
It’s the perfect place to photograph a bee-eater hovering just meters away, a roller frozen in the golden glow of midday, or a souslik darting between hills. You may also glimpse the lesser spotted eagle in wide gliding flight, the bittern camouflaged in reeds, or swifts tracing the sky in aerial choreography.
In these guided tours, we reach little-known spots far from paved roads, observe rare behaviors, and capture stark contrasts between stone, sky, and wing. Ideal for ethical birdwatching and documentary-style photography.

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Carpathians - Romania

Deep forests, mountain silence, and Europe’s last great wilderness

The Carpathians are a different kind of wild. Not open and luminous like the Delta, nor dry and exposed like Dobrogea, but vast, shadowed, and full of quiet tension. Here, mist drifts through ancient forests, light filters softly between spruce and beech, and every sound feels amplified — the crack of a branch, the distant call of an owl, the sudden movement of a deer at the forest edge. It is a place of patience and atmosphere, where wildlife reveals itself slowly: a brown bear emerging at dusk, a capercaillie calling at first light, a wallcreeper flashing against limestone, or a Ural owl hidden in the deep woods. Our guided tours are designed around timing, habitat, and stillness, giving you the chance to experience the Carpathians not as a checklist, but as a living mountain world. Ideal for ethical wildlife watching, bird photography, and those drawn to the raw beauty of Europe’s last great forests.

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Birds You Can See in Romania

Romania's 400+ species span waterbirds, raptors, forest species, and steppe birds. A selection of the most sought-after species by habitat.

Best Seasons for Birding in Romania

Questions About Birding in Romania

Romania has recorded more than 400 bird species, putting it firmly among Europe's top five birdwatching destinations. The Danube Delta alone accounts for over 360 of those — it is home to Europe's largest breeding colony of Dalmatian Pelicans, and Dobrogea hosts virtually the entire Central European wintering population of Red-breasted Geese.

April through June is the peak season — breeding colonies are in full swing, passage migrants are on the move, and daylight hours are long. May is consistently the single best month of the year. September and October bring excellent migration activity, while winter — December through February — delivers something spectacular in its own right: vast Red-breasted Goose flocks on the Dobrogea steppe, typically numbering between 15,000 and 50,000 birds, with historically even larger gatherings on record.

The Danube Delta is Europe’s second-largest river delta and its best-preserved wetland, stretching across 5,800 km² in eastern Romania. UNESCO designated it a Biosphere Reserve in 1990. It supports breeding colonies of Dalmatian Pelican, Great White Pelican, Pygmy Cormorant, and Squacco Heron, among others, with more than 250 bird species breeding within its boundaries.

Absolutely. Combined itineraries are available that pair a Danube Delta tour of four to five days with two days of Carpathian bear watching. The two regions sit roughly four hours apart by road. Custom programmes of seven to ten days are available on request — get in touch and we’ll put something together for you.

Access to the Danube Delta Biosphere Reserve requires an ARBDD permit, which is included in all Just Wildlife Tours packages. Entry into the strictly protected core zones is legally restricted to visitors accompanied by a licensed guide — all of our guides hold the necessary certifications. The Carpathian region is freely accessible without any permit requirements.