The natural tall Sail Rock, is
also famous as Parus Rock, is a natural sandstone monolith located on the shore
of the Black Sea, in Krasnodar Krai, Russia, approximately 17 kilometers from
the resort city of Gelendzhik. The rock is unquestionably flat and narrow,
similar as the sail of a ship, and henceforth its name. It is approximately 30
meters tall and 20 meters long but only a meter thick. Contributing to its
image lies the fact that this rock is upright to the coastline. If you look it
from some distance, it looks like a boat with a huge sail has come ashore.
Adjacent to the base of the
monolith is an unusual hole of unidentified origin. Some people have faith in
that the rock was used as defense during the Caucasian War and the hole was
formed to shoot through at the enemy. Though, this is unsure because Sail Rock
is thin, and it is still not easy to puncture. Therefore this observation is well
supported by an incident described by the Russian writer, essayist and
journalist S.Vasyukov, where he saw a Russian battleship shoot four projectiles
at the monolith. Though the traces of the cannonballs were observable, but the
cliff was nowhere to be destroyed.
He wrote; why a battleship shot
at such a remarkable natural wonder is something one will surprise.
Appreciatively in 1971, the Sail Rock was declared a natural monument and is
now protected, at least, from human’s harm, though as far as sea continues to
erode the stack away. Aerial photographs of Sail Rock displays submerged rock
extending as much as 90 meters away from the monolith indicating the
"sail" was much longer at earlier times.
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