The main activity of our team is sale-trade of agricultural plots of land in south-east part of Bulgaria /Bourgas region/. We have old and newly repaired rural houses for those, who look for tranquility and picturesque nature no great way from the sea.
Most of the plots are facing main roads, and with various possibilities for using them /Petrol stations, motels, villa zone, wine-cellar, e.t.c./ The citys and villages around South Black Sea are our work area.
At a point roughly midway between Bourgas and Varna, the E-87 highway emerges from the hilly wooded terrain into a brief open coastal stretch around Obzor. Despite the town's convenient location and six-kilometer long sandy beach (the largest between Golden Sands and Sunny Beach), this remarkably pleasant spot is surprisingly uncrowded even during peak season. The origins of the town, which the ancient Greeks
knew as Heliopolis ("town of the sun"), can be seen in the small park which is lined with columns and statuary fragments from a Roman temple to Jupiter which once graced the spot. The Romans also built a fortress in the vicinity to protect their sea trading routes between Constantinople and the Danube. Medieval Bulgarians constructed their own Kozyak fortress nearby.
OBZOR - a town to the south of Dvoinitsa River mouth at the foot of the easternmost mountain spurs of the Eastern Balkan Range, 40 km north-east of Nesebur; sea and mountain resort at an altitude of 65 m. Population of 2000. Appears as the Mesambria emporium (trading settlement) Navlohos, in Roman times it is a coastal fortress. The existence of afforested mountain slopes and the long beach strip provides favourable conditions for recreation.
Seeing as how it would take an experienced archaeologist to locate the remains of either of the ancient fortresses, the best thing to do is relax and kick back on the extensive beach. When boredom sets in, head six kilometers north to Byala.
Founded in the 3rd century BC, Byala today is a mix of traditional working village and tourist resort and appears more prosperous than most Bulgarian villages, undoubtedly due to the thriving local wine industry. It also boasts an impressive setting atop bluffs that end abruptly at the water's edge. Stairs lead down to a secluded beach that curves north toward rocky Cape Atanas; to the south, another promontory separates the small sandy strip from the much longer beach at Obzor.
VICINITY South of Obzor, the highway courses for 14 kilometers through open vineyards and the heavily wooded Balkan range to Cape Emine, which overlooks the Bay of Nessebur. Bulgaria's stormiest cape has a lighthouse and the ruins of a medieval fortress and monastery. Today, a deserted church is the only remaining structure. The nearby hamlet of Emona had a Thracian sanctuary and, later, a temple to Jupiter. The name of the medieval Bulgarian fortress, Emona, was derived from Aemon, the ancient name for the Balkan Mountains.