Beach Srima Vodice: Blue Flag Pebble Shore by Prvić
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Beach Srima, Vodice: The Blue Flag Pebble Shore Opposite the Island Where the Parachute Was Invented
Croatia | Srima | Šibenik Riviera
The island visible from Beach Srima across the narrow channel — Prvić, approximately 700 to 1,000 metres offshore — is the birthplace of Faust Vrančić, the 16th-century polymath from Šibenik who is credited as one of the earliest inventors of the functional parachute. His 1615 work Machinae Novae contains the illustration of Homo Volans — a man descending safely from a tower using a parachute of his own design — which predates subsequent parachute development and has secured Vrančić a position in the history of invention alongside the engineers and natural philosophers of the Renaissance. The Memorial Centre Faust Vrančić on Prvić is accessible by taxi boat from Vodice and from Srima itself, and the combination of the beach day at Srima and the afternoon excursion to Prvić is the specific Srima programme that the island’s proximity makes uniquely available.
Srima is a picturesque tourist resort connected with the town of Vodice by a row of weekend houses. The settlement existed in the Middle Ages, but its inhabitants fled to the nearby island of Prvić because of Turkish attacks and established a new settlement called Šepurine. They returned to Srima when the danger ceased at the end of the 17th century. The historical arc — medieval settlement, Ottoman-era evacuation to the island across the channel, post-Ottoman return — is the specific human geography of the Vodice riviera that the beach visit sits within, and the village of Šepurine on Prvić that the fleeing Srima residents founded is still visible from the beach across the water.
Srima Beach has 6,000 square metres of beach area with shingle surface, lifeguard service, accessibility for disabled persons, a café, a water park, a children’s playground, basketball, beach chair and umbrella rental, changing booths, and showers and sanitary facilities. It holds the Blue Flag and stretches approximately 2 kilometres along the Srima settlement — the southern end of the Vodice coastal promenade that runs 4 kilometres from Srima in the south to Tribunj in the north.
Getting There: 3km South of Vodice Centre, on Foot via the Promenade, by Bicycle, or by Car
From Vodice town centre, Srima Beach is approximately 3 kilometres south along the coastal promenade — a 20-minute walk keeping the sea on the left, or a 5 to 10-minute bicycle ride on the flat coastal path that connects the resort’s full beach sequence. The promenade runs continuously from Srima through Vodice to Tribunj, which means the walk from the Srima beach end to the Tribunj beach end and back covers approximately 8 kilometres of coastal promenade — the standard active day for visitors who want to see the full range of the resort’s coastal offer.
By car, the approach from Šibenik (13 kilometres southeast) takes approximately 15 minutes, and parking is available in the lots behind the beach area. From Vodice, the drive is five minutes south along the D8 coastal road. The settlement of Srima runs directly into the southern edge of Vodice’s resort zone — the boundary between the two is physical rather than institutional, marked by the change in building character from the denser Vodice hotel strip to the more spread-out holiday apartment and camping context of Srima.
The Beach: 2km of Pebble, Three Sunbathing Zones, Water Park, Basketball, Sandpit
Beach Srima features three sunbathing areas with rental parasols, a sandpit for children, and shallow swimming zones marked by buoys. The surrounding tree-lined area provides natural shade, and evening lighting creates a charming ambiance for sunset views of the nearby islands Prvić and Zlarin.
The beach surface is pebble and shingle throughout — the same Dalmatian riviera character as the Vodice beaches to the north, with the concrete sunbathing platforms in addition to the natural pebble sections. The swimming zones are buoyed and marked, the water shallow and warm, and the gradual depth profile makes the beach accessible for young children who need the extended wading zone.
The water park, the children’s playground, and the basketball court are the active infrastructure that gives Srima a family-complete character — not just the swimming and sunbathing but the court sports and the children’s splash zone that make the beach suitable for a full family day regardless of age. The sandpit is the specific provision for the youngest children who need dry sand play in addition to sea wading.
The Prvić Connection: Šepurine, Faust Vrančić, and the Taxi Boat
Prvić Island is the defining feature of the Srima beach view — the island that is visible from the shore throughout the day, 700 to 1,000 metres across the channel, with the village of Šepurine on its eastern coast facing the Srima waterfront. The historical connection is direct: Šepurine was founded by the people of Srima who fled the Ottoman threat and returned after the danger passed, leaving the island settlement they had founded to continue as a separate community.
Faust Vrančić was born in Šibenik in 1551 and had connections to Prvić — the island where his family held property and where the memorial centre bearing his name now documents his contributions to Renaissance engineering. The Machinae Novae — published in Venice in 1615 — contains 49 plates illustrating machines and structures including bridges, watermills, and the parachute figure, a work that anticipates engineering solutions that would be implemented centuries later.
The taxi boat from Srima and Vodice to Prvić runs regularly in the summer season — 10 to 15 minutes across the channel, accessible from the waterfront without advance booking in most cases. The visit to the Faust Vrančić Memorial Centre in Šepurine and the churches of Prvić Luka (the island’s other settlement, with four churches including a Franciscan monastery) can be completed in a half-day, returning to Srima beach in the afternoon.
Srima in the Vodice Beach Sequence
The full Vodice beach sequence runs from Srima in the south through the Lovetovo coves and the Imperial and Hangar (Male Vrulje) beaches in the Vodice town zone to the Plava Plaža (Plava Plaža Blue Beach Vodice) Blue Flag beach, and then to Tribunj at the northern end. Srima at the southern end and Plava Plaža in the middle are both Blue Flag-certified, while the town beaches have different characters — the Hangar beach (Male Vrulje) is the youth-oriented beach club zone, and the Imperial and Vićevica beaches fill the intermediate family and mixed-character positions.
For visitors who want the quieter, resort-settlement end of the Vodice beach sequence — the family apartment and camping zone rather than the hotel promenade — Srima is the southern alternative to the Plava Plaža town beach. Both carry the Blue Flag; the difference is the character of the surrounding settlement and the atmosphere of the beach zone.
Krka and Šibenik Day Trips from Srima
Srima’s position on the Šibenik riviera puts it within 30 kilometres of Krka National Park’s Skradinski Buk swimming waterfall — the most visited inland nature attraction in Dalmatia — and 13 kilometres from Šibenik old town with its UNESCO-listed Cathedral of St. James and the four fortresses of the Venetian defensive system. Both are accessible as day trips without overnight stays, and the Vodice-based excursion boat programme includes Krka departures from the harbour daily in summer.
Beach Srima in Vodice is the 2-kilometre Blue Flag pebble shore at the southern end of the resort, directly opposite Prvić island across a 700-metre channel — 6,000 square metres of beach with a water park, basketball, a sandpit, disability access, three sunbathing zones, the medieval settlement history that the Ottoman retreat interrupted, and the taxi boat to the island where the parachute was invented.
Walk south from Vodice along the promenade. The island will be across the water when you arrive.
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