A beautiful road from Kotor to Njegusi was constructed in the late 19th-century made out of 25 serpentines. On the way up, from 0 to 800 metres (2400 feet approximately) elevation, you will get to make a few photo breaks of the stunning Boka Bay.
Njegusi is a traditional village between Cetinje and Kotor, part of the territory of old Montenegro, where the Petrovic dynasty rulers were born. During Turkish rule, going through Njegusi was the only traffic road from Cetinje to Kotor and on to the Europe and the rest of the world. The most interesting part of your visit to Njegusi will be the 134-year-old restaurant Kod Pera na Bukovicu, where you can enjoy local products (smoked ham, cheese and grape brandy). A family who runs the restaurant will invite you to see the smokehouse and show you all about the process of making smoked ham.
Cetinje is the historic and current royal capital of Montenegro located in the field under the mountain Lovcen, at an average altitude of 670 metres. Because of its authentic architecture and a large number of historic buildings, relics, monasteries, churches and museums, this city was named “museum city.”