Four kilometers north of Mojkovac is the passage of the Strait (1,007 m (3,304 ft)), through which it enters the expanded and well populated Leposnica Valley, the tributaries of Lim.
A hydrometeorological station has recently been set up in Mojkovac, so the future monitoring of climatic data will be more precise.
Mount Sinjajevina, with a land area of 120,000 ha in which 200,000 sheep can be planted, is one of the richest pasture cattle mountains in the Balkans.
They include potato, cabbage, beans, harbors and other continental vegetable crops, and most of the fruits are predominantly of plum, apple, pear, walnut and the like.
The forests of willow, oak, birch, beech, then fir, spruce, pine, and pestilence range from the Tara River to the foot of the largest mountain peaks.
The economic development of the Mojkovo region after the Second World War was based on mining, wood and machinery industries.
In 1951 KD "Vukman Kruščić", which in that period represented the center of the wood industry of Montenegro, started operating in Mojkovac.
Local football team is Brskovo, which spent a season in the country's second tier, playing home games at the Gradski stadion.