Mineral collecting across Hungary’s most scenic spots is back with guided mineral and fossil adventure tours tailored for nature-loving adults, families, and kids. Expect hikes through mountains and valleys, standout rock faces glowing under UV, hands-on collecting, and take-home finds. Trips depart on set dates, but groups over 10 can book custom times—pack sturdy shoes and a big backpack, because you can keep everything you can carry.
Sunday, February 22 brings a night-ready hunt in Pilisjászfalu, where striking calcite forms turn up on every outing—and most light up under both 365 and 395 nm UV-A. Guides sweep outcrops with UV to reveal walls that blaze neon—a spectacle on its own—but here you can actually collect those luminous pieces. Participants take home as many minerals as they can carry, and it’s not rare for the tour fee to pay for itself with a single lucky specimen.
On March 1, the group heads to Gyöngyössolymos. First stop: the Asztagkő abandoned quarry for barite, goethite, and quartz. After unloading at the cars, collectors who still have gas in the tank continue to an agate-jasper-chalcedony site. The initial approach is an easy 0.9–1.2 miles on foot to reach the quarry. Bring basic tools, containers for delicate pieces, and enough water and snacks for a two-stage day.
From March 27 to 29, Mátraszentimre hosts its viricselés (traditional birch sap tapping) within the Open Doors in Mátraszentimre (Nyitott kapuk Mátraszentimrén) program, paired with craft and food events and a market. Viricselés taps birch only in spring when the sap rises. Birch water is rich in nutrients, minerals, trace elements, and vitamins; it supports lymphatic cleansing and detox, reduces systemic inflammation, boosts immunity, and alkalizes the body. Topically, it nourishes and hydrates skin while reducing oily scalp and dandruff. Patience is key: draining 169 oz of birch water can take about three days. To make the wait worth it, the village lines up enough programs to fill a long Mátra weekend.
Three locations, surface finds, zero digging: this mountain crystal tour is designed so everyone gathers more than just a few points. Typical Mátra crystals run 0.2–0.8 inches, but 1.2–1.6 inches show up here too. Bring a backpack—sometimes clusters cling to bedrock and won’t fit in a tiny box—and a mason’s hammer to shift leaf litter or knock off excess rock. As always, take home everything you can collect.
Organizers reserve the right to change dates and programs.