Ventė Cape

Cape in Lithuania
The lighthouse at Ventė Cape
Ornithological station and a museum
Nets in the bird ringing station

Ventė Cape (Lithuanian: Ventės ragas, German: Windenburger Eck), sometimes referred to as Ventė Horn or Ventė Peninsula, is a headland in the Nemunas Delta, in Šilutė district, Lithuania. It is known as a resting place for birds during their migration, particularly in autumn. Ventė Cape Ornithological Station – one of the first bird ringing stations in Europe still in operation – was opened here by Tadas Ivanauskas in 1929.

The Cape, being in the former Memel Territory, was part of Germany until 1919. The Teutonic Knights erected a castle here, called Windenburg, but it no longer exists. There is an 11-metre-high lighthouse, built in 1863 during the Prussian period, though it is not currently in use.

Ventė Cape in autumn morning, Heligoland traps visible

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ventė.

55°21′N 21°12′E / 55.350°N 21.200°E / 55.350; 21.200

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