Showing posts with label Vilnius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vilnius. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 August 2023

Vilnius to Riga

 


Jessica Redmerski the American Novelist said:

A bus ride is like being in another world.

We are going to test her thesis today as we travel by Bus, well Luxury Coach really, from Vilnius to Riga.



But before we get into that detail, a little about the way the morning started.  


Morning

I woke at 4.30, the room here has plenty of plug sockets (which is proving to be a key measure of success on this holiday). So, all our devices were charged (a laptop and phone for me, an iPad and phone for Drew, plus camara battery and a weekly charge of each of our electric toothbrushes means there needs to be a lot of charge points).

The room has a lovely large desk and I have plenty of photos to edit, so I continued with that task until Drew woke up at 6am and I made tea for the two of us. There are a good selection of teas in this hotel.


Breakfast

We went down for breakfast at 7am and, like yesterday, we enjoyed a wide range of pickled food, and Drew managed to squeeze in some sweet treats at the end of the meal.





Journey to the Bus Station

We leave the hotel at 9am and walk down to the Bus Stop. We catch the 53 bus, that takes a slightly longer route than the 1G we caught on arrival. We saw parts of the newer city, with lots of people heading to work on this bus. After 7 stops we arrived opposite the Bus Station (and near the railway station, very keen on integrated transport here) 



3 day ticket

When we arrived in Vilnius, I think I expected the city to be bigger than it turned out to be. Well in truth it is quite a big city, but the centre is much more compact than I expected. On arrival, as we were staying two days and they offer a 24 hour or 72 hour ticket via the Traffi app and we opted for the latter. A day ticket is €5 and a three day one 8, therefore having only caught the bus four times, we made a loss on this deal, a single is 0.90 so four is 3.60, a 4.40 loss, so any return visit I'd plan things in other ways including using the app for single tickets, which seemed to work fine. The intangible value of knowing you have a ticket on the app which you could have used throughout the stay may be hard to account for but does give a sense of confidence. So, we didn't have to panic about ways to pay as we headed to the bus station. (See picture at the top of the post)


Why the Bus?

Like the case between Warsaw and Vilnius, the Vilnius Riga route would traditionally have been done by crossing into Belarus on the way - this option is no longer available, so it was Coach or car hire. An EU funded programme called Rail Baltica is working on connecting these cities from Warsaw, through Vilnius, Riga and Tallinn to Helsinki. However, apart from the Warsaw-Vilnius section, which is well on the way, the other parts - where there are no existing lines to be upgraded - will take until the late 2030s.
 

Bus Station

The Bus Station in Vilnius is open and airy, we joined the already forming queue at stop 19 and about twenty minutes later the bus arrived. 




Our luggage was checked in at 10am, ready for departure at 10.20am and we were given sticky labels with a luggage number, so we got the right luggage at the end of the journey.


The bus driver used his mobile to scan our pdf ticket and spoke to us by personal names based on that data - a friendly touch. He told us our seat numbers, [Co-Pilot's note: I think, dear readers, I have a recollection of the words: "Okey Dokey" from the driver!!] which we already knew, and we boarded the bus and took our seats.


The bus was, to me, surprisingly comfortable. I've done some National Express journeys recently and these seats had more leg room, and faculties than those. In particular the technology was good, with films, TV shows and Maps in multiple languages. We also had a socket between us and tables large enough for my laptop - so I used the time catching up with my holiday accounts, making notes on previous days we hadn't yet blogged about. 




While the wi-fi was excellent it wasn't quite up to photo uploading, so we didn't post any of the blog content.  


The Route



The bus went out of Vilnius about four blocks to the right of where we had caught the bus this morning, we saw the River Neris for the last time as we crossed it and the coach stopped at an out of town shopping area where it picked up passengers who were staying in the North of the City. From there we were ten minutes to the main road which is good A road, rather than motorway in style, this is the A2 or E272. 


We were due to go on to the A7 (E67) but there were road signs informing the driver of major road works ahead, so instead at Panevėžys we went through the town centre and on through the Žaliosios girios biosferos poligonas - Nature preserve - through the village of Stumbriskis and on to the 191 to Vabalninkas and the 124 which at Biržai becomes the 190 and runs parallel to our original route and entered Latvia at Germaniškis (the Lithuanian name for the town) and Skaistkalne (the Latvian name) at 11:40am 



We rejoin our original route at Lielvārži with 20km to go to Riga.



Arriving in Riga

We arrive at Riga at 2:50pm and walk 450 meters from the Bus Station, again integrated with rail, to the hotel. The area is like a building site, as the Rail Baltica project is starting to take shape here and various tram lines have to be dug up and rerouted to allow for the extra space for the trains. 



The walk was simple, but challenging with all the cobbles, cases which roll away happily on many surfaces don't like cobbled streets, so we ended up carrying them, rather than rolling them.


Following Google's directions we missed the hotel twice! This was not Google's fault but Riga's. As we were to discover over the next 36 hours - Riga is full of little streets and side alleys and if you don't look down each one of them you could be walking around for hours 10 meters from the building, but impossible to get to it.


Thankfully, we retraced our steps and facing towards the station not away from it, we could easily see the hotel, three meters from the entrance to a small street - the moral of the story is to look backwards as well as forwards when navigating Riga.




Rixwell Old Riga Palace Hotel

The Rixwell Old Riga Palace Hotel has a very impressive frontage, and even more historic inside. The walls of the annex, in which we stayed, joined to the front of the building by a 3-meter walkway, entirely enclosed, is built into a very old building with walls three to four feet wide. It gave the rooms a very quaint look, though Drew was a bit concerned that the window was more like a porthole and that there would be no way out in case of emergency.



Why Rixwell Hotels? 

As with the other two places where there wasn't a convenient IHG hotel I'd looked at Booking.com for hotels in Riga and had found the Rixwell chain, their site mentioned they were a local hotel brand and booking would be cheaper directly - so I signed onto their website and booked for here, and for our next venue, Tallinn - both which have Rixwell hotels. They were 20% cheaper online on their website, than Booking.com could manage. 


Getting to know Riga

We settled in and sorted ourselves out. Drew decided that as it was still early afternoon, we could go out and orientate ourselves - especially as he is going to do the laundry tomorrow morning while I am in Mass.



We walked through the city and found it really attractive. 


Given the time taken by laundry tomorrow we spent three hours site seeing, especially on the area north of the river, that might be called new town, as the area south is clearly old town.


Freedom Monument

We came to the amazing Freedom Monument in the centre of the town between the old and new parts of the City.



Dinner

We decided that as we were out, we would go for dinner early before returning to the hotel - Drew had worn me down and managed to persuade me it was time for a pizza [Co-pilot's note: I, dear readers, have a slightly different recollection of events. I merely said that something Italian might be good tonight. The fact that, some simple-minded people (you know who) conflate Italian cuisine with pizza is not my fault.] [Pilot's note: I love Italian cuisine in all its glory, from the tomato based sauces in the South, to the rice, peas, cheese and fish through the dishes of the North and everything in between - but when Drew says: "Pizza is the only true food group" he means it and is regularly complaining that I don't give him enough. I offer his t-shirt as indication of the prompting I was getting. The photo is from when it was new, but it has been on at least two days during the holiday 😁]. 

Drew's new t-shirt (photo taken in July)

We went to Peppo's Contemporary Neapolitan Pizza.


We began with a mixed plate - Sundried tomatoes in oil, eggplants (aubergines) in oil, green olives from Sicily, Apulian Taralli, rocket salad, cherry tomatoes, extra virgin olive oil and a pinch of whole sea salt from Trapani. It was fresh, refreshing and delightful.


This was served by a lovely, freshly cooked Focaccia with lots of rosemary cooked into it. Excellent.



Drew had the Pizza Amatriciana, he says it was delightful. The heat from the pizza oven had given a lovely, charred flavour to the meat and the spiciness was running all the way through the sauce. The base was crispy where it should have been and soft at the edges - this is perfection.



I sadly have to admit, that even with my reservations about eating pizza ro often, the pizza here was fantastic. The Pizza Calabrese Bionda which I had was spicy with Nduja and other herbs. The mozzarella was gooey and delightful. The crust was light and fluffy and perfect with the flavours. 



I mentioned in yesterday's post that Drew hadn't had as much sweet food on this holiday as usual, so I persuade him, that with their lovely food this would be a good place to try some. He opted for the Dolce Pistachio which he expected to be the size of the earlier focaccia with pistachio and pistachio cream, but it was enormous - the size of a whole new pizza.



Still, you can see the contentment in his face as he bit into it.



We returned to the hotel by 9pm and after editing and uploading some photos - and realising that while we had crossed a time zone on Saturday, the camara was still on Central European Time, so I had to re-edit the details on Flickr! Otherwise the phone (right time) and camara (wrong time) pictures get out of order!! The worries of a Flickring journeyer! 


Task almost complete it was 11pm when I got ready for bed. Looking forward to exploring Riga more tomorrow.

Monday, 21 August 2023

Vilnius - 700 years old and looking good for her age


 

A native of Vilnius, Irina, 41 (quoted by the Summer of Solidarity Website) says:


the old city of Vilnius makes you feel like you are inside of a fairytale


and I couldn't say she is wrong. The fairytale feel of the city includes both rivers - the Neris and the Vilnele - as well as the Old Town which evokes the many layers of Lithuania's history with Polish, German and Russian influences over that time.



But, of course, first a little about the beginning of our day. 


Morning

I have a late lie in, by my standards, I don't wake until it is 6am and it is light already - normally at home I wake at 5am, or earlier if it gets light earlier. Snoozing until 6am is a surprise to the system and doesn't help with keeping up with the photos and the blog. I'm beginning to think that long journeys on trains, though they feel (and are) comfortable are actually more tiring than one feels at the time, as this pattern of late waking faced me the first day in Berlin too.


Sunday Mass



I had originally planned to go to Mass in the nearby church of the Archangel Raphael, but when looking at Mass times I had seen that the Cathedral had Mass at 8am  (and 9am, 10am, 11.15am, 12.30am, 5.30pm and 6.30pm). As this seems a good time to go to Mass and get back to the hotel for a late Sunday breakfast, they open from 8am to 11am, I'd decided on this arrangement. The difference is between 350 meters and 1.2km (about .8 of a mile) in walking and a fresh Sunday morning walk is a great way to get to Mass.


I had got ready and left the hotel at 8.40am, getting to Mass at 8.55am. It is an amazingly lovely day, a few degrees cooler than Warsaw, but sunny and fresh.


Mass

My Universalis app, which I use daily in the UK for readings and the changing prayers of the Mass, and have used successfully in the US (where they use a different translation of the readings), Spain, Portugal, Denmark, France (well actually in French in a church in Copenhagen) and Italy - and on this holiday in Germany and Poland - doesn't stretch to Lithuanian or any of the Baltic Languages. Luckily there was a Lithuanian Mass sheet in the Cathedral, so I was able to join in the Mass (by guessing the sounds of some of the letters) and follow the words in Universalis in English - especially the ones which change daily, like the collect prayers and readings. 


The priest was a man in his 30s and had a very resounding voice. When I go to Polish Mass I often think the priest is shouting at people, due to the tone of the language, not his actual shouting. But Lithuanian, while sharing some Polish (and some German) words, doesn't sound harsh at all. I'm put more in mind of the prayerful tones of Mass in Croatia. 



The Mass was a lovely celebration with a congregation of mixed age from 5 years to 90 years olds (at a guess).  Today's first reading is a favourite of mine from 1 Kings 19:9,11-13. Where Elijah seeks to experience God, he is faced with a mighty wind, an earthquake, a fire but the Lord was in none of these. 

After that there came the sound of a gentle breeze. And when Elijah heard this, he covered his face with his cloak and went out and stood at the entrance of the cave.


Knowing the Lord in silence, being present to him as he is present to me, is such an important part of my experience of prayer, that having it reinforced by the message of the prophet feels like a blessing on this morning. Perhaps that was what the priest was saying in his homily, but I have absolutely no idea!! I can hope and pray!


Mass finished at 8.45am and I went back to the hotel.


Breakfast

The breakfast at the hotel was amazingly generous. With cheese, cooked meats, pate, pickled corn, pickled onions, pickled red cabbage and pickled carrots. 


Then there was soused herring, herring with vegetables and, something I've not seen before on this trip - sprats in oil. I loved all of them, probably to much, but they are delicious and the sprats were a real treat as I have them so little at home. 



There was also a fantastic range of salad vergatables, tomatoes, cucumber, peppers, lettuce. 


Then, of course, there were the cooked items. Smoked sausage, bacon - the unusual, to my mind, southern fried chicken (as we would call it)


crapes with curd, curd being very common on breakfast menus here, scrambled eggs and porraige 


Oh, and of course there was the dessert course of various fresh fruits. What a feast, we didn't eat all of it, of course, but we did quite a bit of damage! We won't be eating again for some time!




Things to note about Lithuania

Befofe I go into the details of the day, there are a few things that come to my notice about Lithuania.

1 - I had no idea how Catholic it is!! With 250 people at one of the seven masses in the Cathedral today and another six churches, each with four or five masses of their own - a whole lot of the population is going to be at Sunday Mass - not counting the Orthodox population who will be at their Liturgies too. 

2 - Thy number floors from 1 up. It is a system that I have always thought of as American for numbering floors - i.e. the Ground is number 1, not 0, thus our room 710 is on the sixth not the 7th floor. It turns out that this is true of all the Baltic States and Helsinki! Poland following the Western European tradition, is the last we shall see of it for some time.

3 - Lithuania uses numbers not day names - so signs, like the breakfast sign in the hotel says:

I - V - 6.30 - 10

VI - 7.30 - 11

VII - 8 - 11 


this is true in shops, churches, indeed everywhere I saw signs with days - unlike the naming of floors, this was a specific feature of Lithuania and we haven't encountered it anywhere else this holiday. Though finding out about it did make sense of the question the receptionist had asked me when checking in:

Receptionist (Looking at my passport which has the month in the first three letters) - What number is February

Haydn (looking a little puzzled) - zero two

Receptionist (also looking puzzled now) you mean two (or maybe he thought II as the numbers, apart from room numbers, all take Roman Numerals!


Gediminas' Tower

Anyway, at 10am, after a quick visit back to the room we were out and ready for our visits to Old Town, Vilnius


Our first target was a place we had seen when walking back from dinner last night - Gediminas' Tower. This tower is on the site that the first castle in this town, originally wood, was built by Grand Duke Gediminas. Thus, he is credited as being the founder of Vilnius. He also founded a dynasty that over the centuries came to rule not only here but in Poland, Hungary and Bohemia too. A brick castle was built here by Grand Duke Vytautas in 1409 - the current building was a reconstruction by a Polish architect in 1933, based on archaeological research. 



The Castle is reached by a small funicular, though there are steps we thought it unwise to climb all 135 at this hour of the morning with a lot of walking still to do in the day.



The Tower was a great place to take lots of photos of the town, especially out into the commerical parts of the new town, where our hotel is placed. They are in this selection below:



We also took some shots of the Hill of the Three Crosses, here early Franciscan missionaries were killed by the local inhabitants who wanted none of the 'new' religion. 



Cathedral Square

Though another Mass was on by the time we got to the Cathedral we were able to see the Bell Tower and take photos of the many and various statues on and around the Cathedral.



Vilnius University

We continued along Pilies Street to the University of Vilnius. Here we saw the amazing paintings which adorn the walls of the University courtyard. 



We also visited the Church of the two St. John's (the Baptist and the Evangelist). Mass had just finished so we were able to take in the church which during Soviet times was a warehouse but has been carefully restored. It now marks many of the people who made Lithuania the country it is today, be they philosophers, poets or teachers. 



Literatų Street

Literatų Street translates as Literati street and it took its name from the many printing houses and bookstores which were located in the street and from the fact that the famous Lithuanian poet Adam Mickiewicz, him of the big statue we saw in Warsaw (and will see more of later today) lived.


During 2009 when Vilnius was the European Capital of Culture the people working on the project decided to make use of the name and create a series of plaques marking artists, especially those involved in literature, who had some (however loose) connection with Vilnius or Lithuania. There are now 200 such plaques on display.





Churches

At the end of the street, we came to the small, pretty, Orthodox Church - dedicated to the Mother of God.



From here we walked up to two much larger churches just a few meters away.




The first was a Franciscan church dedicated to St. Bernadine of Siena who had founded a religious order, nuns of which, before the arrival of Russians in Vilnius had a large convent just along the street. The convent gardens are now a park.



The second is St Anne's, donated by a member of the Lithuanian ducal family called Anne - it is a pretty church and was full of tourists, but retains its role in the community too.


The Republic of Užupis 

Užupis is a small district in Vilnius, separated from the town centre by the River Vilnelė, which gives the town its name. In 1997, the residents of Užupis, largely students at the Art Academy and others looking for a more laid back way of life [Co-Pilot's note: Hippys!!!], declared the area a republic and designed and wrote its own constitution, flag and other emblems of statehood. The lasting effect was to gentrify Užupis as more and more people came to the area.



The Dalai Lama, held with reverence by the community here, visited on one occasion due to an invite from a follower. He, and Buddhist ideology in general, is very evident in the district.  

There is an Angel at the centre of the district. Its Constitution in multiple languages (sadly no Welsh) is on a series of walls.




The Diehard Coffee Shop



By this time, having walked in every increasing temperatures (89F) in the sun, it was time for a break. We saw a full coffee shop, so walked a bit further up the road to an enjoyable place. The Diehard Coffee shop, here we were invited to sit with the staff members as we got introduced to them and to Igor, who used to work with McKinsey Consulting in London. He was very friendly and engaged us in conversation, fine when it was about business and our trip. A bit more challenging when it proved to be about his love for the Premier League - though Drew managed to bluff most of the responses based on his friends on Twitter.


Ordering coffee, while a pleasant and relaxed process, did take some time. I ordered an Americano and was asked if I wanted an American Americano or a European Americano - I hadn't known until today that there was a difference. Apparently, an European Americano is two espressos and an equal amount of hot water on top - an American Americano is double that amount of water to espresso ration!! I was here because I was thirsty, so I went with the American version. I was then asked which bean I wanted, there were three: Brazilian, Ethiopian or Coconut Brazilian, each with different characteristics. I went with the Ethiopian, which seemed to gain approval from the guy serving us and from Igor. Drew had a Latte, his only decision was Oat or Cow - a common query about milk across Europe these days! As a non-drinker of milk I'd not realised quite how often oat or almond or coconut milk is used in the UK and elsewhere, but the figures indicate it is very common.



Die-Hard Runners Cafe is called this as it is a runners' cafe, so Drew was able to share stories of his half-marathons with people who had done them and many more halves and full marathons. I'm hoping it inspires Drew to do more of these as it means I get more holidays and more nice meals 😊


The walls of the cafe have winners' medals [Co-pilot's note: I, dear readers, like this description of the medals. I have a number of them and as someone who is a genetic runt with a dodgy right leg, it is good to know I am a winner!!] from all over the world. I wondered whether Die Hard films had a runners' reference, but the waiter explained that the owner had done training with some of the elite Kenyan athletes (they often win marathons) and the training programme was called 'Die Hard'.



The coffee was welcome and amazingly tasty as well as providing interesting conversation. We left at 2pm and walked up to the end of Užupis having loved our time there. 


Viewspot

After crossing Užupis we came to a lovely park with ducks and climbed up to the area called Subačiaus apžvalgos aikštelė, this gave an excellent location for a view back to the Town - as it is one of the few high places in Vilnius. 





The other attraction of the Observation area was that buses ran from there and our next stop was at the other end of town. So, we caught the Bus 89 to what is called the Gate of Dawn. From Game of Thrones fans this sounds very much like a GoT location, but that is the Gate of Dorne, not Dawn 😉


The Gate of Dawn

The Gate of Dawn is the one remaining original entry to the Old Town. From the outside the gate doesn't especially stand out, but from the inside it is quite spectacular.  



There is an amazing Icon of Our Lady of Mercy which has stood here for 450 years. You are able to enter the shrine and pray, which I did, but not take photos at the shrine or in the church below. Still it is a very spiritual place, full of faith in the gentle and loving mercy of the Lord. 



We walked into the Old Town and passed lots of lovely shops and restaurants - this part of the town is very tourist focussed. Still we did see yet more of the wonderful churches of Vilnius. 


More Churches

First was the Orthodox Cathedral, though we could only take photos of the outside it was calm and peaceful inside.




Next was the sixteenth century church of St. Teresa and Drew and I got mixed messages when he asked: "How come it is that old when she died more recently". I of course assumed Drew was talking about St. Therese of Lisieux, who was a few centuries later than St. Teresa of Avila for whom the church was dedicated. I was surprised by his detailed knowledge of the saints, until it became clear that he was talking about St Teresa of Calcutta, a much more recent saint! 


The final church we visited was dedicated to a local Saint - Casimer. A open, well-lit church, this parish clearly has an active community - lots of images on the walls of the Parish Youth Group on pilgrimage, and evidence of Tigger and Piglet in the box of toys in one of the side chapels.



The Town Hall

Our last visit of the afternoon was to the Town Hall and the Presidential Residence (which abut each other). It was here a few months ago that NATO had their annual meeting and signs of the NATO flags are still all over town. It is the town hall that is shown in the photo at the top of the blog.


Back to the Hotel

We took the Bus number 10 back from old town via cathedral to our hotel.


By this time the heat, and the walking, had overcome us. We strolled back to the hotel. It had been 6 miles of walking and another mile and a half by bus. The miles excluding the 1.6miles I'd done walking to Mass and back that morning. Perhaps it was no wonder I needed a cold shower and an hour to cool down. 


Two hours later at 6.30pm it was time to go out for dinner.


Dinner

Revived by our showers we went out at 6.30pm and decided to walk back in to town. We found Lokys after a period of walking up and down a street as Google Maps told us we had passed it - it turned out it was up an alley off the street. So, we arrived almost exactly on time (two minutes early) for our 7pm booking.



Lokys (the Lithuanian for Bear) is a restaurant based on foods from earlier days in the Lithuanian story. We enjoyed the experience of exploring such unusual flavours.


We began with bread, rye, which was served with a beetroot spread. The bread was tasty, but the beetroot blew me away. The tangy flavour of this slightly sweet vegetable went so well with the bread that it seemed it should be a permanent condiment for it. 


Drew had Salad with beef served with sun-dried grape tomatoes, walnuts, radishes, berries, cherry tomatoes and blueberry relish. This was as amazing as it looks, a lovely cooked piece of beef, with delicious salad veg brough together by the relish.



I had opted for salad with smoked fish served with sun-dried grape tomatoes, walnuts, radishes, cherry tomatoes and blueberry relish. The little pieces of smoky fish were mixed in with the leaves, the walnuts added earthiness to the flavour and the radish a little heat the cherry tomatoes were a sweet flavour and again the blueberry worked so well with the rest of the dish.



Drew had decided to take a risk and opt for the Beaver stew with tomatoes and mushrooms, served with mashed potatoes seasoned with spinach - while neither of us had had beaver before, Drew decided he wanted to taste it. He said it certainly didn't taste like chicken 😉 . Rather it tasted like a richer more flavoursome pork. It seemed to have a similar texture to boar meat. He enjoyed it and eat every bit of it.



I went a little more conventional, having the Meats of the restaurant - venison and boar steaks and a game sausage - served with parsnips, fried tomatoes, sauteed potatoes, artisan honey steak sauce and mint relish. I've had all these meats before, but really enjoyed the way they worked together. 



Drew finished with Rye bread delicacy with hazelnuts, cranberry jam and burnt morels. He found the texture unusual but liked the taste. He hasn't been having many desserts this holiday, but would happily enjoy this one again. 



We left the restaurant and wandered back to the hotel. It became cooler as the evening wore on, but was in no way uncomfortable. We passed the cathedral for the last time.



And got to bed at 10pm. A busy, somewhat exhausting, but absolutely fabulous day. We had walked 7.5 miles and done 24,000 steps (according to Google Fit), Drew whose stride is a little shorter than mine normally does more steps than me, but today (with the extra walk to and from mass) he has only done 21,580. Only being used in a comparative not an absolute manner in this case 😂