My favorite plase In Belarus is Belovezhskaya Pushcha. Belovezhskaya Pushcha is a national park within parts of the Brest Region and Grodno Region in Belarus adjacent to the Polish border. It is a preserved part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Białowieża Forest, the last primaeval forest fragment of the European woodlands that once stretched across the European Plain. It is home to a large population of European bison, the continent’s heaviest land animals. The border between the two countries runs through the forest with the Białowieża National Park on the Polish side of the border. Since May 2015 there has been a visa-free regime within the forest for hikers and cyclists at the Pererov-Białowieża border crossing is a national park within parts of the Brest Region and Grodno Region in Belarus adjacent to the Polish border. It is home to a large population of European bison, the continent’s heaviest land animals. The border between the two countries runs through the forest with the Białowieża National Park on the Polish side of the border. Since May 2015 there has been a visa-free regime within the forest for hikers and cyclists at the Pererov-Białowieża border crossingMost of the Białowieża Forest was declared a national park on August 11th, 1932 during the Second Polish Republic. After World War II the forest was divided in accordance with the Polish–Soviet border agreement of August 1945 between the People’s Republic of Poland and the Byelorussian SSR of the Soviet Union. Poland reopened the Białowieża National Park in 1947.
The park’s headquarters are in Kamyanyuki. In 2009 the Belovezhskaya Pushcha National Park celebrated the 600th anniversary of its reserve status. All of the hotels and cafes were rebuilt and new ones were added to the park. The Eco Education Center, which houses the Museum of Nature, was built. Approximately 300,000 people visit the park annually.