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Beating the heat at Bulgarian mud 'spa'

Every summer thousands of locals and tourists flock to an improvised mud-and-lye "spa" on the edge of an open-air salt factory near the Black Sea city of Burgas.

  (Agence France-Presse)
Burgas, Bulgaria
Sat, July 27, 2019

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Beating the heat at Bulgarian mud 'spa' A man rests in the Salt-works lakes near the Black Sea town of Burgas in Bulgaria on July 25, 2019. Thousands of tourists visit the red salt lakes for mud baths, which are believed to help the healing of muscular disorders and rheumatism. (AFP/Nikolay Doychinov)

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f you're tiring of T-shirts and wide-brimmed hats to beat the summer heat, inspiration may be at hand from a Bulgarian summer tradition -- rolling around in the mud.

Every summer thousands of locals and tourists flock to an improvised mud-and-lye "spa" on the edge of an open-air salt factory near the Black Sea city of Burgas.

Apart from its cooling effects, people also believe there are health benefits from spending time in the basins of pinkish lye water at the site.

Lye -- a chemical by-product of the salt-making process known for its healing properties -- is found in the water itself giving it a thick, salty consistency.

For an entry fee of just one euro, you can spend as much time as you like floating around in the pools -- formed from one large lake -- before coating yourself in mud from the water's edge.

Read also: Record 42.6C in Paris as Europe heatwave hits blistering peak

Previously the "spa" was only popular with locals but has recently had something of a facelift, including new walkways and platforms.

The salt mine which owns the site says that it pulls in as many as 4,000 visitors a day.

German tourist Gerhard Mueller, 70, says he has become a frequent visitor after the mud helped relieve pain in his right shoulder.

Younger visitors meanwhile hail the mud's beautifying and rejuvenating effect. 

"It's very nice, your skin feels velvety and it gives you an overall nice feeling," 35-year-old Nataliya Yaneva from Burgas says with a smile, her face totally covered with mud.

After the mud dries, people wash it off in the lye basins or opt for a cold plunge in the Black Sea just across the reeds.

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