I agree it is very, very odd.
Komarnica is an area where people go hiking and kayaking. Other than that, it is not a tourist spot. It is a very rugged terrain. Even most people in former Yugoslavia don't know about it. The village of Komarnica is rather small. There is no industry there. I imagine people have small gardens, chickens, pigs, goats, and one or two cows. I cannot imagine how G. would have known about it, unless Seka had told him. Maybe she had some relatives there, possibly grandparents. But even if she had told him about it, why would he write it down?
Here is how one person from the area describes it:
"Somewhat neglected natural phenomenon is the canyon of the river Komarnica and its most beautiful part, the unreachable Nevideo (which means Never Seen). (It is difficult to reach and only a few have done it.) It is beside the village of the same name as the river. This is the village from which most of the Durmitorians come. This is the village from which the people often immigrated to Virak and Zabljak settlements. Nowadays it is somehow the end of the world. Almost nobody comes. Local residents live quietly, undisturbed by all the madness and tempo of civilization to which the urban people belong."
I am very much interested in what others think.
The road to Komarnica. Unpaved and rarely travelled.