Monday, 13 July 2026

Latvia - Riga-diculously Nice Place

July 7-9


Hello everyone!


After spending the past few days exploring two cities that I have visited before, I headed north to a new country. One that I know very little about. Welcome to what is apparently the home of the Christmas Tree!


Like it's fruit, Riga was sweet and colourful

Site of the world's first recorded Christmas tree, from 1510

The middle of the three nations commonly clumped together as the Baltic States, Latvia is a bit of an unknown for me. I was therefore excited to get out and see its capital, Riga, as soon as possible when arriving, going for an evening run.

With a couple of stops, we took about 8 hours to get from Vilnius to Riga

Riga's castle was first made in 1330

Riga's Old Town is a UNESCO Wold Heritage Site

I was aware that it had an Old Town, like many European cities. I was not aware that it has many parks and green spaces. Very enjoyable.


Riga Cathedral

Riga City Canal

I was aware that the Baltic Chain, referenced in the Lithuania blog, passed through Latvia. I was not aware of the specific Latvian history and suffering at the hands of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. Though I wasn’t able to explore the KGB Museum, just reading posters in the entrance gave enough clues as to the horrors that happened inside the hauntingly beautiful building.

The footsteps showing the Baltic Chain. Our guide
showed us pictures of her in that chain in 1989.

A propaganda poster from the last 1930s

Called The Corner House, political prisoners would be
subjected to torture (and possibly worse) in its basement

A lot of the history you will see in Riga, a much larger city than Vilnius in Lithuania, is related to its challenges faced over the last 100 years or so. One of the most striking is something that I have already seen in Warsaw: Riga’s was also an Academy of Sciences. Locals call it ‘Stalin’s Birthday Cake’, even though he was long dead by the time it opened in 1961.

View of Stalin's Birthday Cake from the river

Like the Warsaw version, it has been repurposed
since independence was secured in 1991

One interesting person I learnt about here is a man called Zanis Lipke. The Latvian national retrained to become a contractor for the Luftwaffe, then used his position to smuggle Jewish workers out of Riga’s ghetto. He saved dozens. A memorial, and the remains of a synagogue burnt down by the Nazis with many Jews locked inside, can be found to the east of the Old Town, next to the original site of Lipke’s house.

The face above the writing is that of Lipke

The synagogue memorial


For all this talk of 20th century history, Riga’s story actually goes back a lot further. The city itself is over 800 years old, with its cathedral being founded in 1211. Its charming Historic Centre is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and has a wide variety of architecture looming over cobbled streets. One quirky section is called the ‘Three Brothers’: three narrow terraced houses next to each other that all have differing colours and architectural styles.


Riga's imposing cathedral and square

The oldest is the white house

Nothing sits atop the Three Brothers, unlike a building near Riga’s Great Guild. A man was rejected from registering with the guild a long time ago, so put a statue of a cat on top of his roof to distract people looking out of the guild’s windows. Near the cat is a replica of a large stone head which was found in Latvia almost 200 years ago. The original is in Riga’s Cathedral.

The man was eventually invited
into the guild. He refused.

The stone head replica

Another quirky story of Riga’s past is connected to its medieval walls, specifically what is now called the Swedish Gate. The story goes that a young woman fell in love with a Swedish officer, whose barracks were outside the walls. One night he didn’t show up, so the woman went to look for him. In doing so, she broke curfew. Naturally, her punishment was death by being buried alive within the wall of the gate. This then became haunted, with the ghost only eventually being appeased by the creation of an art piece positioned further down the street. So the story goes…

Where the man in the blue shorts is looking
is where the woman was 'built alive'

The art piece, with the easy name of 
Geisterdenkmal, was made in 2015

Whether you believe the old tales or not, this Historic Centre district is beautiful to walk around. It’s even better to kayak through - an artificial canal has been created that gives you another gorgeous perspective, particularly when the sun is shining!

The canal follows the line of the city's old defensive moat

Riga's Freedom Monument, which survived
being taken down by the Soviets


As part of my rather long paddle, I passed Riga’s Central Market. I was told that this is the largest market in the world, which I really don’t think is true. Made of 5 hangars, it is sizeable, sure, but it’s not that big. What it does have - which I found out when walking around in it the day after my paddle - is lots of great food and by far the cheapest beer you can find in the city.


There are over 3,000 stalls in and around the Central Market 

It could be Europe's largest, though is much smaller than
the world's largest market, said to be Yiwu in China

The beer is sold in plastic bottles (they give you a cup
if you ask) - 1 litre was just over 3 euros

This paddle, undoubtedly the highlight of my brief stay in Latvia, also took me through the other side of the city which is bisected by the Daugava river. It took me downstream to the Riga Radio and TV Tower, which is hard to miss at any point in the city. Incredibly, it is the tallest structure in the European Union.

368 metres tall

You can't get much closer than this - the tower
is closed, due to be reopened in 2029

Around the corner, there was complete tranquillity. Gliding along a still stream through lilypads and long grass, it was as if I had been transported to somewhere like the Okavango Delta. Amazing to see a side of Riga that not many do, and definitely kept me going whilst I was paddling over 3 km against the river current to get back.

Apparently if you are born in July, this is your birth flower

This stream is called Biekengravis - I'll call it Latvian Okavango

I was told there was a surprise on my route -
a canoe slalom course! I...struggled...


Riga has been a very pleasant surprise. A city with a lot going on, whilst never feeling too big or too busy. A city with Old World charm mixed with modern amenities. Relatively cheap whilst not neglecting quality. I imagine the atmosphere when their not-original Christmas tree is erected is different (and much colder), but Riga has been a lovely place to spend a couple of summer days.


Salad very much optional

Paddling on the Daugava

Paddling in Riga's canal


Love you all,


Matt

Saturday, 11 July 2026

Lithuania - Church Crossing

July 5-7


Hello everyone!


7 hours on a train, with a quick change halfway in a nondescript village called Mockava, has taken me from Warsaw to another capital city, one with which it has quite a close connection. Like Warsaw, I have also been here before, albeit in 2012 rather than 2008.


Gediminas' Tower

Stucco interior of the Peter and Paul Church

Vilnius is Lithuania’s capital. Lithuania and Poland were combined in the European Middle Ages into the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which was the largest state in Europe at its zenith. Though they had a dispute over the city shortly after the end of World War One, the two countries seem to have a happy enough relationship.

The distance between Warsaw (blue) and Vilnius (red) is just under 500 km.
The Hill of the Crosses, mentioned later in the blog, is the yellow dot.

Knight at a Statehood Day ceremony


There is a sort of medieval European charm to Vilnius. It might be its cobbled Old Town streets. It might be its castle tower, squat but soaring above the river on a green mound. It might be the university district: starting in 1579, Vilnius University is the oldest in the region.


I scaled the tower in 2012 - long
before that, it was made of wood

The Old Town also dates from 1387

It may also be the number of churches. There are over 50 in the city, which makes it quite interesting that Lithuania is said to be the last European country to ‘adopt’ Christianity, apparently in 1387. There are many types of church that cross over the city, making it a bit of a Christian melting pot.

An interesting cross outside the Peter and Paul Cathedral

Churches are also in the university area of the city


Before that time, the area comprising modern-day Lithuania was strongly pagan. Elements of that are still elements of national pride: whilst here, there was a large folk music and dance festival in the national stadium. Some elements, such as Uzupis, are less revered. 


Lithuanians are proud of this soup, called šaltibarščiai.
It is tasty, but cold. Even though it is summer here, I
don't think it's warm enough to justify a cold soup.

The main export is apparently this cheese

Užupis means ‘other side of the river’, and is a small neighbourhood in the east of Vilnius. It was essentially abandoned and in disrepair after the fall of the USSR; to rectify this, the government offered very low rent. Artistes soon moved into Užupis, and decided that they would create their own republic.


Not recognised by anyone

"Border control" - you can get a
stamp, but it's not advised!

Own president, own parliament, own currency…and even their own constitution. The latter is displayed in multiple languages, and places emphasis on pets and individual freedom (arguably in that order). There was talk of being given free waffles if you do 15,000 steps - not in the coded document, but I did find that in a pizza place in Užupis (with the caveat of buying an overpriced drink, so I didn’t).

The constitution. Other nuggets include, "Everyone has
the right to die, but this is not an obligation"

The symbol of Užupis is an angel
who is standing on an egg

What Užupis doesn’t have is many churches. Don’t fret, the rest of the city more than makes up for that. Some interesting churches in Old Town include the Church of St Casimir (with a three-handed portrait of a saint), the Church of St John’s (with a 69 metre tall bell tower), and the Cathedral of the Theotokos (one of the oldest Christian churches in the region).


The Gate of Dawn is a major pilgrimage site for Catholics in Lithuania

The Church of St Catherine

The largest and most used is probably the city’s central cathedral. The exterior is unspectacular, and I find the small plaque nearby more interesting. It’s the finishing point of the Human Chain, created in 1989 during the Singing Revolution. People joined hands through the three Baltic capitals (Tallinn, Riga, Vilnius) in protest at the Soviet regime and to call for independence. Over 2 million people in the chain. The plaque below is the finishing point of the chain.


Thre are suggestions that this spot was a
place of pagan worship in the 13th century

The end point of the Baltic Chain, which at the time
was one of the longest human chains in history

Another cathedral is also a bit ‘meh’ from the outside. Entering the Peter and Paul Cathedral, however, transports you to another world. Over 2000 stucco decorations, all very intricate and creating an incredible 3D effect off the ceilings and walls. I didn’t know about this church, and was stunned by its interior.


Looks pretty average from the outside...

The original church was destroyed by the Russians

There are also quite a few Russian Orthodox churches in Vilnius. One of these is the Orthodox Church of the Holy Spirit. The inside is ornate and emerald-coloured inside. The outside has a picture of three Catholic saints. Two of these were captured and executed for refusing to renounce Catholicism, performed by hanging them from an oak tree outside. The third saint met a similar grisly fate.


The names of the saints were Anthony, Ivan and Eustachius

The green interior of the church

The other Orthodox church of note has a statue of two hands outside. The long story offered by our walking guide - and one I struggled to stick with due to tiredness from a 3am wake-up to watch England’s World Cup match with Mexico - was connected with Peter the Great. It essentially goes that the Russian overlord baptised an African slave called Gannibal here in order to show his prospective wife that water is safe. Gannibal then ends up becoming a nobleman and has been proven to be the great-grandfather of Pushkin, a famed Russian writer.


St Paraskeva Church

The symbol outside is of two hands side-by-side,
one for Gannibal and the other for Puskhin


Many of these churches have crosses, as you would expect. You probably wouldn’t expect an indistinct place a couple of hours northwest of Vilnius to have hundreds of thousands of crosses. All on the same hill. It’s imaginatively named the Hill of Crosses. A cross (pun intended) between place of historical significance and what looks like a scrapyard, it is an extraordinary sight.


UNESCO recognises cross-making as a key part of
Lithuanian national and religious identity 

Estimates of the number of crosses vary wildly, but there
are well over 100,000. No, I didn't count them...

There are legends and facts about this place. The legend is that there was a man with a sick daughter. He was told about a magic hill, put a cross and candle there, said a prayer…and she got better! Can you imagine! The reality is that nineteenth-century Lithuanians were rising up against their Russian masters, who decided to kill many of them and refused to give permission for them to be properly buried. The locals then came to the hill and added crosses in their honour.



Two accidental fires since independence have
actually have destroyed many crosses

In their later guise as Soviets, the Russians tried to literally remove the hill with bulldozers. This didn’t happen, and the crosses were restored after Lithuanian independence in 1991. Pope John Paul II visiting two years later helped solidify the Hill of Crosses as a pilgrimage site. It’s remarkable to see how many different nationalities are represented amongst the chaos of the crosses.


The story goes that when the bulldozers came, the big boss'
daughter drowned on the same day in a nearby lake,
which was obviously a sign to not raze the hill

There's a Portuguese flag there if you look closely


It’s not just Christianity that has been an influence in the modern-day land of Lithuania. For a while in the twentieth century, there was quite a large Jewish quarter. Awfully, Vilnius’ Jewish population were later shunted into two inner city ghettos by the Nazis. The smaller ghetto, housing invalids or the elderly, was only utilised for a few weeks. 30,000 Jews had been murdered in a forest outside of the city. Placards indicate that of the 58,000 Jews who had been in Lithuania at the start of the war, less than 3,000 survived it.


These streets were in the ghetto zone

Very different now, with this shop
seemingly specialising in macaroons

After a tumultuous twentieth century, Lithuania seems settled as a relatively small, independent nation. Statehood Day was celebrated whilst I was here. I stumbled upon a concert and cannon firing. Having woken up very early to watch football, the jolt I got from the cannon definitely made me more alert!


There was a displa of singing and dancing at this square -
I stayed until that large grey cloud decided to rain quite hard on me...

This was a female youth choir


The country was the first European country to grant women voting rights, in 1918. The centenary of this was celebrated by putting female figures in traffic lights.


Nothing says gender equality like a traffic light

Vilnius seemed quite a youthful and outdoorsy city - this complex has
a skate park, basketball courts and beach volleyball

Other quirky things found in Vilnius include a ‘lucky belly’, a memorial to Frank Zappa and a Veuve Clicquot cafe that is locally called ‘Love Story’. Nothing to do with Taylor Swift, it is connected to two rich people who fell in love in Vilnius. I’m guessing they liked flowers…


Zappa never went to Lithuania, nor has any
connection to the country. Very odd statue.

"It's a love story, baby just say...coffee?"

Like Poland before, the country is anti-Russian and very pro-Ukrainian. There are over 50,000 Ukrainian refugees in the country, which has a population of about 2.9 million.


A sign epitomising the sentiment of the city

Russia is not signed up to the ICJ, so I doubt he cares

When I left in 2012, I was a bit underwhelmed by Vilnius. Returning as quite a different person in 2026, I can say that it - in pleasant weather, which didn’t always happen - has left a better impression on me. It’s never going to be a major tourist hub, but it isn’t trying to be. It’s got its quirks, from a breakaway republic to a huge number of churches relative to its size, and it is historically and culturally distinct enough to be a good place to spend a couple of days.


With a latitude of 54°N, Vilnius has long evenings in July

I had a lovely rainy morning run in Vilnius 


Love you all,


Matt