Onions and Fish

10/09/2023

We set off on the bikes to learn about the Old Believers. We arrived at the first museum. It was shut. At this point, I realised I’d not brought the bike lock keys. We’d locked the bikes up, but now no way of unlocking them. Fortunately, it was under 5km for me to march back to Jez. I drove back to J, Corrie and the bikes!  With the keys!!!

The other museum was also shut. So were both the churches. There were (living) family members tending the graves in the cemetery, so we didn’t like to go in. Shut, shut and shut.

However, a restaurant was open. Let’s have lunch then!  When we were full time in the motorhome, Sunday was cleaning and go out for lunch day. Well, we managed half of that.

The Old Believer’s were fishermen and renowned for pungent onion growing. You can guess what a lot of the menu was!  I had fish soup followed by bream. J had smoked fish salad and then chicken. All very good, although homely.

My Old Believers tea was the most interesting. Served black, with a sugar and cream tablet sweetener. Essentially … fudge. I noticed I wasn’t the only diner eating it!

At least the guidebook was able to fill in some information about the Old Believers. During the 1600s, Russia adopted the Greek Orthadox religious practices. The changes seem minor to us. Things like how many fingers are used for the sign of the cross. Those who refused to adopt the changes were persecuted. So they left and made their home on the shores of Lake Peipsi. They made their living from fishing and selling onions. We saw many folk selling bags of onions along what is called the Onion Road. This really is the most ‘foreign’ place we have been this trip.

Old Believer’s Church. Shut.
View of Lake Peipsi. The Russian border runs through the middle. Only about 30 km across to Russian.

Estonia … megaphones and Rouge

09/09/2023

James ran and I swatted mosquitos whilst doing Pilates. It was a driving day with stops.

The first stop was a forest installation of megaphones. University students created them. Lying inside, you should hear amplified forest sounds. Unfortunately, there was no wind so little to hear. Other than one bird and Corrie having a pee!

Our second stop was Rouge. The guidebook described it as the prettiest Estonian village. More the location than the village. Pretty, as there were ground undulations and water. The driving has been pretty boring through Latvia and Estonia so far … flat, fields and forest. Very long, very straight roads with not much habitation.

A typical farm of several buildings

We did the short walk up to the crow’s nest observation tower, only to discover a food festival. Result. Interestingly most of the signs were in Russian … had to put Google translate onto Detect Language. We met a British lady gin and vodka producer who had moved to Estonia 13 years ago with her small family.

We shared lunch. Didn’t know what we were getting, just pointed … it was fish.

Pudding was an ice cream from the village shop. A local apologised for cutting the queue and then asked what we were doing here. He went on to quite forcibly state that in 2 years, Russia would invade. They had built the military infrastructure on the other side of the border. Once the Ukraine was sorted, Russia would invade Estonia. It’s sobering to reflect that the borders we know now have shifted over centuries and will continue to do so.

Our destination was Lake Peipsi, the 5th largest lake in Europe and forms the border with Russia.

Our pitch view … Russia is out there.