Listvyanka: Picturesque town by Lake Baikal

Both during the winter and summer many scientists and academics come to Listvyanka from a whole variety of countries to explore the legendary lake. Source: Lori / Legion Media

Both during the winter and summer many scientists and academics come to Listvyanka from a whole variety of countries to explore the legendary lake. Source: Lori / Legion Media

Go to gw2ru.com
Disclaimer:
This article is from the archive of the Russia Beyond project.
We have rebranded as 'Gateway to Russia' and now offer even more articles and resources about Russia.
Explore our updated website:
https://www.gw2ru.com/
Throughout the year, many tourists, scientists and academics come to Listvyanka from a whole variety of countries to explore the legendary Lake Baikal.

It is practically impossible to miss it or confuse this pretty town with anything else. Listvyanka is the final destination of the shortest federal highway in Russia – the Baikal highway. The old gravel road was asphalted in a record time in the 1960s, when the Soviet government was getting ready for American President Eisenhower’s arrival. In the end the meeting did not take place, but the new road transformed an old village into a tourist Mecca of the Baikal area.

The great geographical location had also made an impact – Listvyanka is situated right next to Irkutsk. Besides this, you can get to Angara’s riverhead in only an hour – and this river is the only one that flows from Lake Baikal. Regular ship navigation attracts even more tourists who are willing to go to completely different parts of the Baikal area. Both during the winter and summer many scientists and academics come to Listvyanka from a whole variety of countries to explore the legendary lake.

How to get there

You can reach Irkutsk by train or plane, and then after that it is only approximately 68 kilometers to Listvyanka. You can go by car on the Baikal highway, or if it’s summer, take a ferry from the Raketa pier. Everyday there are taxi vans and buses, which can drive you there from the Irkutsk bus terminal. The journey time is not more than an hour.

The lake can be unpredictable and the weather can change when you least expect it, but even so the Baikal region and especially Listvyanka is only second to California in the league table of sunshine hours per year.

However despite all the positive aspects of this little secluded spot in Siberia many travel guides write that you should start your trip in Listvyanka “only if you don’t have a choice – that is if you don’t have the chance to travel on the Trans-Baikal railway.” This is not true. Yes, without doubt the best views on the lake open up when you look out of a window of a Baikal-Amur train or from the Olkhon Island… but Listvyanka is a place where you can at the same time admire Baikal, dive into its history and try some lake fish.

The Baikal pier

The first written information about Listvyanka can be found in traveller’s notes from the second half of the eighteenth century. These places were hard to get to, so only Cossacks and fugitive exiles were not afraid to explore.

Source: Lori / Legion Media

In the beginning of the nineteenth century the most important business in Listvyanka was the shipbuilding industry. The icebreaker ships Baikal and Angara, which were built in England, were assembled here. The village prospered very quickly, and soon Listvyanka, through which the commerce passage between Russia and the East lay, came into its golden period. This is how the village transformed into a Baikal pier and at the same time became an important administrative area in the Russian empire.

Where to stay

There are a total of 8 hotels in the village, a few kilometers away there are 5 more. You can either lease a room from locals or live in the Mayak hotel right on the lakeside – it’s up to you.

Taltsy

Listvyanka’s guests must pay a visit to the architectural and ethnographic Taltsy complex, which can be found around the 47th kilometre of the Baikal highway. Since 1980, Taltsy was included in the list of 5 largest museums in Russia under the open sky. Here you can get an eyeful of different historical monuments, architecture and ethnography of the 17- 20th centuries.

Tsar-fish

The centre of Listvyanka is full of life on weekends. Cars, parked everywhere, make it impossible to drive through the main road, which gets narrower the further you get. Before the Irkutsk water power utility station was constructed, buildings on the shoreline were erected in two rows – the houses were on each side of the road, and some were so close to the lake that sometimes the water splashed right onto the windows. However, in the late 1950s the main street was turned into a one-way road and many houses were relocated in order to save them from being flooded. Trying to get through the cars, tourists head towards the miniature beach. But before this they should be sure to take some Baikal fish with them.

Source: Lori / Legion Media

Market clatter can be heard all around Listvyanka. This is because the grandmas behind their wooden counters are telling you to try “the best fish ever”. There is a new era in Listvyanka – the era of commerce and lease. The locals make up recipes to cook Omul, whitefish, herring and Baikal oil fish. All the locals here know how to attract a hungry tourist who had heard so many stories about the incredible taste of Tsar’s fish.

You can learn about the deepest lake in the world in the Baikal museum, which is situated right in Listvyanka. This is the lake museum in Russia that was created with the help of the Limnologichesky Institute. It was founded in 1993 to analyze and keep records about the Baikal. Tour guides can tell travellers how the lake was formed, why it is unique and who lives in its water. In this museum you also have the chance to look at fish and seals in the aquarium, look at protozoa through a microscope and to virtually go 1000 meters beneath the Baikal waters.

Where to eat

You can have a great supper in the Proshliy vek café, or in the restaurant/ barbeque bar of the Mayak hotel. Most of the time tourists buy food at local markets and then get settled on the lakeside in garden-houses or right on the rocks.

What to see

The Shaman rock — a reserved cliff right next to the Baikal Lake, near the riverhead of Angara. It’s a natural landmark of the Pribaikalskiy National Park.  Inhabitants of the Angara River for centuries have believed that this cliff has unusual powers.

Source: Lori / Legion Media

Cherskiy peak — a mountain peak 700 meters high, there is a scenic viewpoint right next to it. If the weather is fine then you can see Listvyanka from there and the vastness of the Baikal Lake. You can reach the top of the peak either by foot or using a cable lift.

Nerpinary – here you can see a show of trained seals. They sing, dance, play with a ball, count and even draw. Seals from the Baikal are very loveable and funny creatures.

This is an abridged version of an article first published by Siburbia.ru. Read the original version in Russian.

All rights reserved by Rossiyskaya Gazeta.

This website uses cookies. Click here to find out more.

Accept cookies