No 50155
Self drive tour
Self drive tour Independent travel Lithuania

Manor gardens and parks

Klaipėda – Kretinga – Palanga – Mažučiai – Rucava – Nīca (104 km) or Liepāja (125 km)


  • Klaipėda is a city in Lithuania on the Baltic Sea coast. It is the third largest city in Lithuania and the capital of Klaipėda County. It is worth visiting the Klaipėda Old Town and looking for the sculptures that are scattered around the old part of the city. Visit the Clock Museum, the Klaipėda Castle and Castle Museum, and the Lithuanian Sea Museum and Dolphinarium.

  • Klaipėda University Botanical Garden was founded in 1993 in the picturesque valley of the Danė River. It covers an area of approximately 9.3 hectares. Over 250 plant species grow naturally in the garden. In order to give visitors an understanding of the regional traditions, the botanical garden has a coastal ethnographic garden with flower arrangements characteristic of this area. This garden features plants of 14 species, primarily medicinal and culinary plants. The garden offers a variety of educational programmes and invites visitors to picnic in designated areas.


  • Kretinga Manor Park is one of the oldest surviving 16th–18th century manor parks in Lithuania. This is a mixed-style park that covers an area of 23 hectares. It was given its beginnings by a huge orchard started by Vilnius Bishop Ignotas Jokūbas Masalskis. Zubov, who later managed the manor, added a park alongside which was given the general name of “Summer Garden”. This was like a counterbalance to the Winter Garden, which was the conservatory set up inside of the manor.



    During the war and post-war years, the park suffered greatly – only part of the linden and horse-chestnut alleys survived, as well as the historic centuries-old oaks, the thickest of which has a trunk 1.9 metres in diameter. In the southern part of the Kretinga Manor Park, where the orchard once stood, now stands the Astronomy Calendar and Sundial; hedges and alleys have been formed, flower beds and rock gardens have been added, collections of dahlias, peonies and tulips are being cultivated, and fragments of the rose gardens, the walking paths, and the rest areas are being restored. Memory Lane marks the most important dates in the history of Kretinga and the Kretinga Museum, and the restored manor fountain has become a particularly popular place for guests of the town to relax.




  • Palanga is the biggest and the most universal seaside resort of Lithuania. Take a stroll down Basanavicius Street, stop for a second in the Musical Fountain square; spend the afternoon in Birute’s Park and Amber Museum, relax on Palanga Beach, enjoy sunset on Palanga Bridge.




  • The Tyszkiewicz residence – Palanga Manor, with its magnificent palace (which now houses the Amber Museum) and Birutė Park, is one of the best-preserved, well-maintained and most visited manor complexes in Lithuania. Birutė Park was built in the area where the sacred Birutė Forest and Birutė Hill once were. The landscape garden was created in the late 19th century by the renowned French landscape architect Édouard François André, who had been commissioned by the Tyszkiewicz counts. The place selected for the park is unique in terms of both nature and culture: the palace was incorporated as the main accent between the park’s pond and the legendary Birutė Hill – an ancient Lithuanian shrine overlooking the sea. The masterfully designed park features a great variety of views and moods, with skilfully crafted paths, grounds decorated with flower gardens, two ponds, and small architectural elements.




  • The Palanga Amber Museum is one of the biggest amber museums in Europe. Housed in the Tyszkiewicz’s Palace, the museum is surrounded by the Botanical Garden of Palanga so it is a must-visit if you happen to be in the garden already. The museum exhibits hundreds of interesting and unique amber pieces, and also tells and illustrates the development of amber craft. The palace itself is also a very beautiful landmark built in Italian neo-Renaissance style with an impressive statue of Jesus in front of it.




  • The largest Japanese garden in Europe (16 ha) began to be formed in 2007. The grounds are home to gardens and a collection of traditional aromatic plants where heritage cultivated plant species are nurtured. The heritage cultivated plants include carrots, beetroot, and cabbage, among others. A very large collection of heritage tomato varieties has been assembled. Of note are the onion – especially onion and garlic collections, which are characterised by different varieties. The aromatic and medicinal plant collection includes southernwood, mint, mugwort, oregano, lovage, thyme and other traditional folk medicine plants.



    Summer is the best time to visit the garden, but it’s a nice place to take a walk year round.





For meals we recommend:



- Cafe „Pas grafą“, Kretinga District



- Cafe „Vienkiemis“, Kretinga District



Latvia / Lithuania border.




  • The project for the development of the Rucava Arboretum began in 1996, when Salaspils Botanical Garden dendrologist Raimonds Cinovskis, Ināra Bondare and representatives of Rucava municipality agreed on the establishment of experimental plantations on the Rucava Manor Hill. The plantation creation started in 1998. Later, plantations were also made in the center of Rucava and at Rucava Elementary School. Plantations are replenished annually with new and exotic plant specimens from around the world.

    The "Garden Festival" traditionally takes place in May, during rhododendron and magnolia blooing season.


  • Gardens in Nīca - seven arrangement gardens can be viewed, with gardening traditions of the Nica area which are around 50 years old.





Accommodation in Liepāja and surroundings:



- Guest house „Poriņš”



- Cottages „Šķiperi”



- Guest house „Chill in”



- Country house „Brakši”



 

Distance driving 125 km