No Name Description
N/A
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.
N/A
This is an unusually shaped pine which, according to legend, was planted by the king of Sweden during the Great Northern War.
N/A
This is the thickest Black Alder (Alnus glutinosa) in Latvia
N/A
This is the thickest European wild apple tree in Latvia. It is just lovely when it is blossoming.
N/A
This is the thickest European Ash (Fraxius excelsior) in Latvia and the Baltic States. The homestead where the tree is found is the memorial museum of the painter Ģederts Eliass, and for that reason, the tree is sometimes also known as the Eliass ash tree.
N/A

An impressive two-trunk tree at the Nigliņi homestead, this is one of the most impressive trees on the Liv Shore.  The Liv language teacher Zoja Sīle was born here.  The Medieval Old Cemetery Hill – once used as burial grounds – is nearby.

N/A
This is Latvia’s thickest common pine (Pinus slyvestris)
N/A
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.
N/A
This is certainly the thickest White Willow (Salix alba) in Latvia and perhaps the thickest one in the Baltic States. Many of its mighty branches are resting on the ground, and the enormous monolithic trunk has been split. There’s a small information stand alongside the tree. A pathway which starts at the Raganu cliffs can be taken to the tree.