Curonian Spit

 The Curonian Spit, also called Neringa, has been named as a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of outstanding natural beauty. It is also a Lithuanian National Park.
The Curonian Peninsula is a popular nesting place and an important bird migration route. Here you can see whooper swans, white-tailed eagles or sheldrakes. 
Another attraction of Curonian Spit is Nagliai nature reserve. It is known for the “Dead Dunes”. The entire length of the dunes is made up of ravines of the most intricate patterns blown by the wind. Between 1675 and 1854 the sand blown by the westerly winds buried four villages! Take a walk on the hiking trail and see the breathtaking beauty of this natural and sensitive landscape. 
Nida is the main settlement on the Spit. It is about 50 km south of Klaipeda and is on the border with Kaliningrad (Russia). Nida offers you a peaceful, soul-cleansing alternative to the rush and bustle of normal life. Here you can see the authentic fishermen’s cottages and beautiful weathervanes. Visit the Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann’s house-museum or Kazimieras Mizgiris amber gallery. Admire the magnificent panorama from the 53 metres high Great Dune.

It is worth visiting Curonian Spit at any time of year. The Curonian lagoon freezes over in winter and is an extraordinary site to behold.

Curonian Spit National park, fisherman house in Nida
Things to do in Nida
The Nobel Prize winning German author of Death in Venice, Doctor Faustus and scores of other novels, Thomas Mann (1875-1955) spent the summers of 1930 and 1931 in Nida.

His summer house, which overlooks the lagoon, is now a museum. Many of the rooms have been given over to exhibits charting the man’s fascinating life both here and abroad. A tour of the museum with an expert offers a fascinating way to spend an hour or so whilst in Nida.

A beautiful old wooden fisherman’s cottage restored to its traditional appearance both inside and out as it was in the 19th century. This small yet evocative museum is crammed full of relics and the tools of the fishing trade from the late 19th and early 20th century.
Address: Naglių st. 4
Dating from 1888, this classic red brick Gothic beauty functioned as a museum during Soviet times. It was handed back to the Church exactly a century after its construction.

Inside are a relatively new organ, some fine stained glass and a lot of iconography relating to the local fishing industry. Of most interest however are the graves in the attached ethnographic cemetery. Known in the local parlance plural as krikštai (christenings). These peculiar graves feature markers at the foot of the graves rather than the usual headstone arrangement. Using masculine-named wood for deceased males and vice-versa and carved with horses’ heads, plants and birds. The footstones, for want of a better word, are placed thus to help the deceased rise up on Judgement Day.

Information from: http://www.inyourpocket.com

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