Why Kotor needs a local guide
Kotor is at the end of the Bay of Kotor, which is not technically a fjord but looks exactly like one. The old town is enclosed by 4.5km of walls climbing 1,200 meters up the mountainside. The Church of Our Lady of the Rocks sits on a tiny artificial island that locals have been throwing stones onto since 1452.
Kotor handles over 600,000 cruise ship passengers a year crammed into a medieval town built for a few hundred people. When three ships dock on the same morning, the old town becomes almost impassable. Most of these visitors photograph the Kotor Cats Museum, walk to the first viewpoint on the fortress walls, and shuffle back to the ship before it sails at 4pm. They never climb the full 1,350 steps to the San Giovanni fortress at the top where the view stretches across the entire bay and the only company is the wind. They never take a water taxi to Perast and then a boat to Our Lady of the Rocks, the tiny artificial island where locals have been tossing stones into the shallows since 1452 to keep it above water. To become a tour guide in Kotor means knowing the timetable of the cruise ships better than the cruise companies do. You get visitors onto the walls at 7am when the stone is cool and the bay is mirror-still. You arrange a boat from Perast before the tour groups arrive at 10. If you want to become a tour guide in Kotor, you need to know the mountain villages above the bay where Njeguski ham is cured in clean air and the views make you forget the crowds below. Becoming a tour guide in Kotor is about timing, altitude, and showing people a fjord that operates on a schedule dictated by the cruise port.