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Nature, plants and animals of the Kaliningrad region. The most beautiful plants of the Kaliningrad region - spring hit parade Climate and surface waters

The Kaliningrad region is a unique region of Russia. First of all, due to its geographical location. In our article you will find a description of the nature of the Kaliningrad region, with photos and a story about the most interesting places. In particular, you will learn about the topography, climate, flora and fauna of this region.

Kaliningrad region: geographical location and natural diversity

Kaliningrad region - motherland for more than one million Russians. It is located in Eastern Europe and is an exclave Russian Federation, that is, it has no land borders with its main territory. The region borders on Poland (in the south) and Lithuania (in the north and east). From the west it is washed by the waters of the Baltic Sea.

The diversity of nature in the Kaliningrad region is simply amazing. Here, on a relatively small piece of land, you can see Various types landscape: sand dunes, coniferous forests, oak groves, lakes, swamps, lush meadows... The territory of the region is densely dotted with rivers, rivulets and streams, and its depths hide real riches.

We will now tell you in more detail about the nature of the Kaliningrad region, its relief, climate, flora and fauna.

Relief and minerals

The terrain of the region is predominantly flat (see map below). The maximum heights (up to 230 meters) are located in the southeastern part of the region, where the Vishtynets Upland is included in the borders of the Kaliningrad region. Some land areas are located below sea level. Most of them are in the Slavsky district. These are the so-called polders - lands under constant threat of flooding. The average surface height of the region above ocean level is only 15 meters.

Another unique feature of the nature of the Kaliningrad region is the presence of real sand dunes within its borders. They are found on the Baltic and Curonian Spit. The largest of these dunes reach a height of 50-70 meters.

The subsoil of the Kaliningrad region is rich in various minerals. The main wealth of the region is, of course, amber. According to geologists, it contains about 90% of the planet’s “sunstone” reserves. In addition to amber, the Kaliningrad region has deposits of oil, brown coal, rock and potassium salt, phosphorites, sand and peat.

Climate and surface waters

The climate of the Kaliningrad region is transitional from marine to temperate continental. The Baltic Sea has a significant influence on the weather and climatic conditions of this region. So, average annual temperatures decrease from +7.5 °C in the southwest of the region to +6.5 °C in its northeastern part. In summer, the air here warms up to +22…26 °C, and in winter the thermometer can drop to –15…–20 °C. True, both prolonged heat and prolonged frosts are not typical for this region.

Average annual quantity atmospheric precipitation ranges from 600 to 750 mm. Most of them fall in summer and autumn. Snow cover does not last long. In autumn, stormy winds often sweep over the region, especially windy weather is typical for the coastal zone.

The Kaliningrad region has a dense and well-developed river network. A total of 148 rivers flow through its territory. The largest of them are Neman and Pregolya. The basins of these two rivers cover almost the entire territory of the region. There are quite a lot of lakes in the southeastern part of the region. The largest among them, Vishtynetskoe, is located on the border with neighboring Lithuania.

Flora and fauna

The flora of the Kaliningrad region includes about 1,250 species of higher vascular plants. Many of them were brought here from other regions, in particular from the Crimea and the Caucasus. The total forest cover of the territory reaches 18%. The most forested eastern regions of the region are Chernyakhovsky, Nesterovsky and Krasnoznamensky. On the Curonian and Baltic spits, artificially planted forests perform important function containment of sands migrating deeper into the continent.

All forests in the region are secondary; they were planted in the 18th-19th centuries. Basic forest-forming species– spruce and pine. Birch, maple, oak, hornbeam, and linden trees are also common. In the Zelenogradsky and Pravdinsky districts there are areas of beech forest, and near Zelenogradsk itself there is a grove of black alder.

The fauna of the Kaliningrad region numbers over 700 various types, of which 325 species are birds. Largest representative animal world - elk. Roe deer, deer, fallow deer, wild boars are found here, and predators include stoats, foxes and martens. Wolves were exterminated by the 70s of the last century.

Curonian Spit

An amazing corner of nature in the Kaliningrad region is the Curonian Spit, located in the northwestern part of the region. This is a narrow strip of land stretching almost 100 km from Zelenogradsk to Klaipeda, Lithuania. The width of the spit does not exceed 2 km. National Park, founded here, in 2000 became an object World Heritage UNESCO. The most interesting natural monuments on the Curonian Spit are the Efa dune, the famous “Dancing Forest” and the beautiful Swan Lake.

Vishtynets Lake

This body of water is called the European Baikal for its depth, reaching 54 meters. The lake marks the border between Lithuania and the Kaliningrad region of Russia. The purest water, remoteness from large populated areas, rich avifauna - all this makes Lake Vishtynets an excellent place for a relaxing holiday and unity with nature.

Red Forest

In the southeastern part of the region there is the legendary Rominten (or Red Forest) - a huge forest area with an area of ​​360 km 2. The beauty of this area of ​​nature in the Kaliningrad region was appreciated by German nobles, who, since the time of the Teutonic Order, organized Sunday hunting here. Rominten is an alternation of hills, dark dells and picturesque forest lakes that were formed during the Ice Age.


In the Kaliningrad region, not far from the village of Rybachy, there is a strange, eerie place. However, it is just as beautiful. The Dancing Forest is a very popular and very mysterious local attraction, shrouded in an aura of legends and superstitions. The incredibly curved tree trunks seem to be spinning in some kind of frantic dance, and the reason for this “behavior” has not yet been precisely determined. This forest, which is part of national park The Curonian Spit attracts tourists and photographers like a magnet.

Strange place

The forest appeared here in 1961 - it was artificially planted to strengthen the sands. More than half a century has passed, and during this time those who grew up here coniferous trees took on very intricate shapes. What force bent them so bizarrely? Scientists are still scratching their heads over this. It seems that the trees are dancing, and those who venture to walk through this place say that the further you go into the forest, the more aggressive the “dance” becomes.


What is especially strange is that in this forest you can hardly hear the singing of birds and there are almost no animals here. Well, people who have visited this place, for the most part, admit: the sensations are strange. Some visitors feel a sudden surge of energy, while others, on the contrary, experience headache and a feeling of fatigue and apathy arises.

Even more eerie is that there is deathly silence in the forest. It is violated only by excursion groups that periodically visit here, because this place is a very popular tourist route.

It is worth noting that on the Round Dune, where the Dancing Forest grows, not all the trunks have a strange shape - the “dancing” trees are concentrated in a certain (however, quite large) area.


What is the reason for this “dance”?

Researchers have not come to a consensus on the cause of the curvature of tree trunks.

According to one version, the deformation could have been caused by certain natural phenomena, supposedly occurring in this place - for example, a sharp change in wind direction, temperature changes. There is also a hypothesis about the special composition of the soil in this place.

Proponents of another hypothesis blame everything on insect pests, the invasion of which was allegedly once observed in the forest. A version has been put forward that the trunks were damaged by the voracious caterpillars of the wintering shoot moth butterfly.


Scientists confirm their hypothesis with the information that the shoot loach usually damages young shoots of pine trees, and, moreover, devours mainly the apical buds, and almost does not touch the lateral ones. As a result of the disappearance of the apical buds of the tree, the lateral buds begin to actively grow, which subsequently causes the trunk to bend. Scientists note that these caterpillars most often eat pine shoots growing on poor soils poorly saturated with groundwater - just like on the Curonian Spit. However, to the question “Why did the caterpillars ruin only a certain area of ​​the forest, and not all the trees?” there is no clear answer.

Supporters of the third hypothesis see the reasons for the “dance” of trees in the mobility of local sands. Geologists say that the Round Dune stands on a “cushion” of clay, which causes such mobility - in combination with the constantly changing direction of the wind, the angle of inclination of the dune is supposedly constantly different. Hence the curvature of the trunks. Other dunes of the Curonian Spit, according to the authors of this hypothesis, do not have such features.

What speaks in favor of the “non-mystical” versions is that many trunks in the Dancing Forest are not bent along their entire length, but only in the lower part - which means they were deformed only by initial stage plant growth.


There are also those among researchers who see the reason for the deformation of trees in the powerful energy of this place, which has not yet been studied by the scientific community.

Mystic?

Lovers of horror stories and mystics put forward their versions. According to one of them, the trees were affected by certain chemicals that were sprayed by the Germans before the Second World War - at a time when the famous German gliding school was located on the Curonian Spit. By the way, many famous record-breaking pilots emerged from its walls. The last flight at the gliding school took place in January 1945.


There are also those who argue that the reason for the curvature of the trunks is the sacredness and “special and mystical status” of the forest. They say that in ancient times very ancient oaks and beeches grew here. Local pagans considered these trees sacred. They worshiped them to such an extent that they once killed a famous Christian missionary because he disrespected the trees, or, more simply, violated the boundaries of the sacred grove.

The most mystical of the versions is that this place is a kind of portal to other worlds.


Legends

Local residents, of course, create beautiful legends about this forest. For example, that one day young witches allegedly came to the forest for their Sabbath. They began to spin in their wild dance, but in the midst of the dance, for some reason they suddenly froze rooted to the spot in their strange poses. So the sorceresses remained forever in this forest, turning into twisting pines. In connection with this, a strange sign even appeared - they say that if you crawl inside the spiral of such a twisted trunk, you can rejuvenate yourself by one year. And if you climb twice, you will become two years younger and so on.


There is also a more romantic fairy tale legend. They say that once, many years ago, a pagan prince was hunting in these parts. Suddenly he heard a beautiful, bewitching melody and followed the sounds. Coming out into the clearing, the young man saw a beauty playing the lyre. They immediately fell in love with each other, but the girl set a condition for the prince: she would marry him only when he accepted Christianity. And to show her pagan lover the power of the Cross, she made the trees around them dance.

They say that 13 years ago an experiment was conducted in this forest - young pines were planted to see how they would grow. Time passed, but the trees did not bend. True, they grow very slowly, which again suggests that there is clearly something anomalous in the forest.

Are trees under threat?

But local environmentalists are sounding the alarm. They pay attention to the fact that trees require careful handling. In particular, walking through the forest is allowed only on specially designated bridge paths, fenced with railings. The administration asks tourists not to hug pine trees (this will erase the bark) and not to trample the soil. Conservationists and the park administration point out that the most unique and popular trees of the Dancing Forest have already died.


For example, several years ago the famous ring tree died - its bark was damaged and root system. This is due to the fact that tourists constantly sat on the tree, climbed through the ring, touched the trunk, and trampled the ground. For ecologists, the forest is not a mystical place or a photo zone, but, above all, unique monument nature.


Text: Anna Belova

The Kaliningrad region is represented by a plain. The climate is transitional from maritime to... It rains about 185 days a year. Hot or frosty periods are short-lived, and snow does not last long.

About 148 rivers, more than 10 km long, and 339 rivers, 5 km long, flow through the region. The biggest hands are Neman, Pregolya. There are 38 lakes in the territory. The largest is Lake Vishtynetskoe.

Vishtynets Lake

Vegetable world

In this area, mainly and. Largest quantity forests are located in the east. Pines predominate among the trees.

Pine

Violets, toadflax, and wood sorrel are found in the Red Forest.

Violet

Toadflax

Kislitsa

Trees also include oaks, birches, spruces, and maples. Deciduous species - beech, linden, alder, ash.

Linden

Alder

Ash

On the territory there are medicinal plants, berries - blueberries, blueberries, .

Blueberry

Blueberry

Cranberries and cloudberries grow in marshy areas.

Cranberry

Cloudberry

Mushrooms grow in the region, some are listed in the Red Book. Some of the mosses and lichens, irises and lilies are included in it.

Some plants that were brought from other places on the planet. One of these representatives is Ginkgo biloba.

This tree is considered a "living fossil". It can reach a height of 40 meters.

The tulip tree growing in Moritz Becker Park is the only one. It is over 200 years old. The tree trunk is forked, the leaves are large, and it blooms in late June with yellow-orange flowers.

Red oak comes from the eastern United States. A mature tree reaches up to 25 m in height. The trunk is covered with gray bark. Flowering occurs simultaneously with the leaves blooming. Oak is frost resistant. This species is a symbol of the Kaliningrad region.

Red oak

Rumelian pine is native to Europe. Is a decorative look.

Robinia false locust is a fast-growing tree that is drought-resistant. Popularly called white acacia. The tree can reach up to 30 meters, the average height is 20.

Robinia pseudoacacia

Bear onion is a local representative of the flora. Listed in the Red Book. It has a specific odor similar to garlic. It contains vitamins and microelements.

Bear bow

Maiden grapes triacid brought from Far East. It grows slowly and has a hard time withstanding the winter. In autumn, the clusters take on a rich scarlet hue. This grape is listed in the Red Book of the Russian Federation.

Animals of the Kaliningrad region

The region is inhabited by predators, rodents, and ungulates. One of the large animals is the elk.

Elk

Roe deer and fallow deer are also found. Several thousand roe deer and several hundred deer live on the territory. Sika deer are rare and valuable species.

Roe

Doe

Wild boars are rare animals for this region, but nevertheless they can be found. The area is inhabited by many stoats, martens, foxes, and ferrets.

Boar

Ermine

Marten

Fox

Ferret

Wolves are rarely seen among wild predators. Rodents - beavers, .

Wolf

Beaver

Squirrel

Lynx is found in forests. Due to poachers, the number of individuals has decreased.

Lynx

Lesser noctule lives in deciduous forests and parks. A very rare sight. Lives mainly in tree hollows. After sunset he flies out to hunt.

Birds of the Kaliningrad region

Birds – about 140 species, some species are extremely rare.

The red kite nests only in this area. It can be found from March to September. It feeds on small reptiles, fish, and carrion.

Red kite

The snake eagle belongs to the hawk family, a species in danger of extinction. Lives in pine and mixed forests.

Snake eater

The peregrine falcon is a species from the falcon family. Rare individuals winter in the Kaliningrad region.

Peregrine Falcon

Fishes in the Kaliningrad region

There are up to 40 fish species in the reservoirs. Marine species include herring, sprat, flounder, and Baltic salmon.

Salaka

Flounder

Baltic salmon

The region reaches 22%. The largest forest areas have been preserved within the Nesterovsky, Krasnoznamensky, Slavsky, Polessky, Gvardeysky and Bagrationovsky districts, where forest cover ranges from 37 to 23%. There are more than 1,250 species of higher plants in the region's cover, about 1,000 of which are introduced into landscaping culture. These are woody, shrubby and herbaceous plants, brought from other continents of our planet. Thanks to the softness, plants brought from, Western Europe, with , from , with . These include tulip tree, Japanese scarlet, Canadian poplar, Amur velvet, magnolia, oriental plane tree, European and oriental beeches, Crimean juniper and many others.

The main forest-forming trees are spruce, pine, oak, maple, and birch. Spruce is most widespread in forests in the eastern regions of the region and occupies 25% of the total area.

Pine forests occupy approximately 17% of the forested area in the region, they are most significant in the Krasnoznamensky, Nesterovsky, Zelenogradsky regions, on the Curonian and Baltic Spit. In separate small tracts in the region there are oak forests where European oak grows. In Polessky, Zelenogradsky, Pravdinsky, Gvardeysky districts there are ash forests and linden forests. Small areas of beech forests are in the Zelenograd and Pravdinsky districts.

Up to a quarter of forest areas are occupied by birch forests, sorrel forests and herbaceous plants in the Bagrationovsky and Pravdinsky districts of the region. Low areas of soil with long excessive moisture occupied by alder and black alder forests. They are widely represented in Slavsky, Polessky, Gvardeysky and Zelenogradsky districts.

About a third are hayfields and pastures. The set of grasses in the meadows includes about 30 species: bentgrass, bracken, fescue, cocksfoot, mintgrass, clover, alfalfa, timothy, mouse pea, meadow grass and others. On the best floodplain hayfields, the yield reaches 40 c/ha.

There are several hundred in the region with total area more than 1000 km2, mainly in the interfluves and in the river valley. Pregolya. They have important water protection and water regulation significance, are habitats for wild animals, many of them are rich in berries (cloudberries, blueberries, blueberries, cranberries, lingonberries), mushrooms, medicinal herbs and plants.

The fauna of the region belongs to the European-Siberian zoogeographical subregion, the zone of coniferous-deciduous forests, and the coastal province. Animals in the region are represented by ungulates, predators, rodents, insectivores, and bats. They are distributed mainly in forests, where the living conditions of animals are least modified by humans.

The order of ungulates includes the largest animal in the region - the elk, as well as other representatives of the deer family - red and sika deer, roe deer and fallow deer.

The largest number of roe deer in the forests of the region is several thousand. Elk and red deer number in the hundreds. Fallow deer are extremely rare and are found in the Polesie region (there are several hundred of them in Russia). Sika deer were brought to the region quite recently. They were released on the territory of the Novoselovsky animal farm, where they are bred to produce antlers - a valuable medicinal raw material. Small herds of wild boars are found in many forests in the region.

Predators include foxes, martens, horis, stoats and weasels. Wolves were completely destroyed by the 70s, but since 1976 they have reappeared and are hunted year-round.

Among those leading a terrestrial lifestyle, the most common are rats and mice; leading a semi-aquatic lifestyle - beaver, nutria, muskrat; leading an arboreal lifestyle - squirrels.

Insectivores are represented by moles, hedgehogs and several species of shrews, chiropterans - by bats.

Birds inhabiting forests and fields, lakes and swamps, cities and towns of the region are numerous and diverse. Among them there are both species that permanently live in the region, as well as migratory ones, as well as those that make large and small migrations. The autumn and spring migration routes of many millions of northern birds pass through the Curonian Spit. On the spit in the village. Rybachy is located the Biological Station of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, whose specialists study the migration of birds.

Most of the forests in the region contain birds from the order passerines (finches, starlings, tits, swallows, flycatchers, warblers, bluebirds, redstarts, larks, bramblings, warblers); from the order of corvids (crow, raven, jackdaw, magpie, rook). In addition to passerines, there are woodpeckers, crossbills, various pigeons, and large birds such as hazel grouse and black grouse. There are also predator birds- hawk, harrier, owls, owls, eagle owls.

Partridges, hen harriers, and storks live in the fields and meadows; waders, cranes, and herons live in the swamps. Reservoirs are populated different types ducks, geese, seagulls. The decoration of many is the mute swan.

Fish in inland waters are represented by freshwater species(58 species, in Curonian - 42, in Kaliningrad - up to 40 species).

From sea ​​fish There are herring, sprat, cod, flounder, and salmon. Semi-anadromous species (rising to spawn in the lower reaches) are smelt and herring, anadromous species (going up rivers to spawn) are whitefish, fisherman, Baltic sturgeon, salmon, eel. Bream, pike perch, roach, smelt, crucian carp, ruffe, perch, and pike are widely distributed. The rivers are home to not only typical river fish such as burbot, catfish, chub, and ide, but also trout and grayling, which are typical for the foothills.

The Kaliningrad region is one of the smallest regions of Russia in terms of area.

But despite this, you can find a wide variety of natural landscapes here. And oak groves, and pine forests, and many kilometers of swamps and meadows, and even sand dunes on the Curonian Spit.

The entire Kaliningrad region is dotted with rivers, rivulets and streams. And on sea ​​coast The main Kaliningrad resorts are located - Svetlogorsk and Zelenogradsk. They have federal status. However, you can relax by the sea in other wonderful coastal towns: Pionersky or Yantarny.

You can relax in the Kaliningrad region not only in summer. Healing air and a developed network of balneological institutions allow you to relax and heal throughout the year.
Choose , or plan your own trip with the help of ours.

Baltic Spit

The Baltic Spit is an amazing natural monument that has preserved its virgin charm.

The Baltic Spit is named one of the most unusual peninsulas in the world, writes The World Geography portal.

How to get there?

You can get to the Baltic Spit by taking a ferry from Baltiysk.

Departure from Baltiysk - from the 1st berth from the Peter the Great embankment (50 meters from the lighthouse and the monument to Peter the Great).

Spit ranks fifth in the ranking after such attractions as the Canadian La Dune de Bouctouche, Zlatni Rat in Croatia, the Spanish La Manga del Mar Menor, and Ocean City in America.

The Polish part of the spit has long been developed by the tourism industry, but on the Baltiysk side the spit has long remained a restricted area.

On the one hand, because of this, the infrastructure on the spit is practically absent with the exception of a small tourist center, on the other hand, here tourists are given a unique chance to feel like “savages”.


At your service are endless beaches, the Baltic Sea and the freshwater Kaliningrad Bay, pine forests, fields full of berries. Extreme sports fans can explore the dungeons of a former military base, and street racers race on the runway of an abandoned military airfield.

Kaliningrad Bay



The Baltic Spit separates from the sea another extraordinary attraction of the southern coast of the Baltic Sea - the Kaliningrad Bay.

The Kaliningrad (Vistula) Bay is a water area located in the southern part of the Baltic Sea. It is bounded from the north by the southern coast of the Zemland Peninsula and the Baltic Spit, which separates it from the sea from the northwest.




This is a beautiful lagoon that combines salt and fresh water, popularly called transitional waters.

Red Forest

In the southeast of the region is the Red Forest - the legendary Rominten, which was once the largest forest in Germany.

Rominten Forest or Red Forest is a huge natural Park on the Vishtynets Upland. The majority (2/3) is located in Russia, and the smaller part (1/3) is in Poland. The area of ​​the largest forest in the region is about 360 square meters. km.



The alternation of hills, valleys and dells, gentle slopes turning into colorful lakes - all this was formed during the Ice Age. Thanks to this topography, the area has its own special quiet and calm climate.

Since the times of the Teutonic Order, Romintskaya Pushcha has been a place where a week-long hunt was organized for the order's grandmasters.

Favorite hunting spot for German rulers

The unique forest landscape is home to many animals.

The forest is home to 47 species of mammals, including red deer, elk, wild boar, beaver, roe deer, martens, muskrats, and weasels. There are raccoon dogs, wolves, lynxes and otters.

The Red River is home to fourteen species of fish, including eel, pike, ide, barbel, and brook trout.

The flora of the Red Forest is no less diverse - approximately 100 species of plants are classified as rare.


Romintskaya Pushcha is a paradise for lovers of cycling and hiking.

You can walk for hours in the Red Forest - the diversity of the landscape, the murmuring of streams, lakes, mushrooms, berries and bird chimes.

Vishtynets Lake

Lake Vishtynetskoe – unique lake of glacial origin and is the oldest, deepest, largest, cleanest in the Kaliningrad region, it is often called the European Baikal.



Vishtynets Lake is rightfully considered one of the main assets of the natural world of the south-eastern part of the region. The reason for this is not only the impressive size of the lake, but also pure water, the volume of which is so large that it can be considered one of the most valuable sources of drinking water in Europe. All this, plus the remoteness from populated areas, makes Lake Vishtynetskoe a wonderful place for a relaxing holiday alone with nature.

How to get there?

The best way to get to the lake is by car - first to the town of Nesterov, then south through the village of Nevskoye. Another option is possible - to Nesterov by bus or train, and from there by bus.

Be sure to stop in Yagodnoye, where the Pissa River flowing from the lake is blocked by a dam on which the picturesque ruins of an old mill are located.

To get to know your surroundings better natural world In this area, you can stay in one of the rural estates in the Nesterovsky district.

Curonian Spit

There are places on earth that invariably evoke feelings of amazement and admiration. The Curonian Spit is rightfully considered one of these unique corners of our land - a narrow strip of land between Baltic Sea and the Curonian Lagoon, which stretches 97 km from Zelenogradsk to Klaipeda.



If you came to the Kaliningrad region for one day and you have time to explore only one attraction, then do not waste time thinking - you simply must visit the Curonian Spit. It is no coincidence that the Curonian Spit National Park is included in the UNESCO register of protected natural heritage.

At the narrowest part, the width of the spit is 800 meters, at the widest – 2 kilometers, the total length is 98 kilometers. Since 1987, the Curonian Spit has been a national park, and in 2000 it was included in the World Register of Natural Heritage by UNESCO.

Ornithological station "Fringilla"

The Curonian Spit is sometimes called the “bird bridge”; migratory birds stop here on their way from north to south. If you're lucky, you can become a witness, and sometimes even a participant, in ringing.

A special attraction of the Curonian Spit is the local ornithological station “Fringilla”, one of the first in the world.


The forest is located on the 38th kilometer of the road that runs along the spit towards Lithuania.

No one has yet given a logical explanation for the “dancing forest,” which does not prevent one from enjoying the view of this unique natural phenomenon.

How to get there?

You can get to the Curonian Spit by taxi, bus or private transport. Passengers of private transport and taxis are charged an environmental fee, the amount of which depends on the type of vehicle and the number of passengers.

Buses to the Curonian Spit and along it run from Kaliningrad, Zelenogradsk and Svetlogorsk - 3-4 times a day. If you take a bus, ask the driver to stop near the Dancing Forest.

The mystery surrounding the origin of the phenomenon, the mysticism and unusual shape of the trees make the place especially attractive to tourists. This interest led to negative consequences for forests - trampling of soil, harming tree bark. To protect and preserve the trees, the territory of the “Dancing Forest” was fenced off, and a special path made of wooden flooring was laid out for tourists.


Come visit us to see everything with your own eyes! Believe me, you will want to come back here more than once.

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