The small, traditional village of Orova is built at an altitude of 309 metres in an area with dense vegetation. The village is located a few kilometres from Campos Avia and is known to the locals as “little Paris”.
There are two opinions about the etymology of the name of the village. According to the first, the name comes from the Slavic word "orovas", which means "island". In contrast, according to the second, the name is etymologically related to the ancient Greek word "orovos", which is the name of the plant orovi or rovitsa, the seeds of which are food for sheep and cattle.
Visitors can wander through the village's narrow streets with traditional houses, while the stone church of Agios Vasilios dominates its centre. Also, almost at the entrance of the village, there is the small church of Panagitsa. Finally, at a short distance from Orova, there is the old stone bridge that, in the past, connected the settlements of Gaitses (today's Kentro), Brida, Nerida and Biliova with the capital village of Kampos Avia.