Bohinj Lake is the  largest permanent and natural lake in Slovenia. The lake's surface is  at an altitude of ~ 525 m. The lake is 4350 m long (the longest  diagonal), the largest width (S-J) is 1250 m and the deepest part of  the lake is 45 m - the surface of the lake is 318 ha. The length of  the lake is 10,900 m. The lake is a glacial-tectonic origin: the  original bark was created by the intense erosion of the glacier to  the surface. The glacier bounced the bottom and covered it with the  frontal seas in the eastern part of the lake. The main tributary of  the lake is Savica, which in the western part of the lake breathes  through the sea with boulders and flows into the lake at Ukanc. The  lake is flowing - from the lake the Jezernica River flows, which,  after less than 100 m, along the left side, flows from the Vojnik to  Mostnica, forms the river Sava Bohinjka. At the northern edge of the  lake there are several underwater karst springs, the most famous  karstic spring of Govic.
    Interestingly, the height of the lake was  16 m higher than at the end of the last ice age, and at that time the  lake reached the present-day settlement Stara Fužina, as indicated  by the local fossil lake terraces. Bohinj Lake was included in the  Triglav National Park area in 1981. A beautiful view of the lake is  from the peak Mirčin peak (1540m).