Motorcycle tours through the Baltic states — coast, forest and gravel from May to October.
Seven days through the last German-held front in the East. Fortifications, battlefields and evacuation routes along the Lithuanian coast and rivers — the history of 1939–1945 riding distance from the road.
Seven days through the Soviet Union's forbidden islands. Coastal gun batteries, abandoned military installations and the pine forests of Saaremaa and Hiiumaa — closed to outsiders until 1991, still carrying the weight of it.
Six days through the last German holdout on the Eastern Front. Deep gravel, forest tracks and the battlefields of western Latvia — the Courland Pocket held until the war was already over everywhere else.
Eight days through the landscape that made the last pagans of Europe possible. Hill forts, river defences and ridge-top gravel roads across northern Lithuania and southern Latvia — the terrain that held the Teutonic crusade at bay for two centuries.
These routes are built for riders who want more than a road trip. Every day has a reason — a coastline worth riding, a track worth the detour, a stop that earns its place on the map.
Routes are designed for GS-class touring bikes. You need to be comfortable on gravel and long days. No off-road racing required.
Maximum 8 riders. Enough to share the road, small enough to take tracks that buses and car convoys can't.
You ride your own motorcycle. No rentals — these tours are for riders who know their machine. European plates, full insurance.
Every stop has context. Not a lecture — just enough to know what you're looking at and why it matters.