No Name Description
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A very beautiful and expressive tree, it is found on the land of what was once the Vīceži Semi-estate.
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The Oak of Kemeri which grows in front of the Pienenīte preschool on Tukums Street is of local importance and is protected.
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This tree is in the park of the Sēja Estate and is one of the four trees in Latvia that have a circumference of more than four metres.
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This is Latvia’s largest small-leaved lime tree (Tilia cordata). Some of its mighty branches are held up by supports. There are large holes in the trunk that have been covered up to prevent water entering the holes and causing even more rot. Just like many other trees of this size, this was a sacred tree in the past
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This is the thickest common juniper (Juniperus communis) in Latvia and the Baltic States. It stands in the middle of a field and looks wonderful. The tree is sometimes known as the Rieteklis juniper, because the Latvian poet Rieteklis (Jūlijs Eduars Balodis, 1856-1940) like to sit under it.
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This is an unusually shaped pine which, according to legend, was planted by the king of Sweden during the Great Northern War.
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This tree, too, was supposedly planted by the king of Sweden – and upside down, no less.
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This is the thickest European wild apple tree in Latvia. It is just lovely when it is blossoming.
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This is a large, outstanding and expressive tree, Latvia’s thickest Norway Maple (Accer platanoides).