Explore Oka Valley: Journey Through Russia’s Historic Waterway

Discover the Enchanting Oka River in Russia

You might recall the names of great Russian rivers like the Volga or the Yenisey from geography lessons, but the Oka is unlikely to be one of them despite its easy-to-remember and affirmatively sounding name. Yet, as the main transport route of the ancient Muscovite princedom, it has more history and at least as much appeal for travelers as its more famous counterparts.

With Oka cruises now resumed after a 20-year break, a chain of millennia-old historic towns along its banks are beginning to rival the Golden Ring as worthwhile destinations in the vicinity of Moscow.

The kremlin in Kolomna, a popular day trip from Moscow and a stop for river cruises © Natalia Volkova / Shutterstock
The kremlin in Kolomna, a popular day trip from Moscow and a stop for river cruises © Natalia Volkova / Shutterstock

The Oka River is one of two major tributaries of the Volga, and its basin borders on that of the Dnipro, which is why Kievan Slavs – led by their Viking princes – used it as the main route for colonizing the lands that form the historic core of what we now know as Russia. Wooden Viking-style boats, the ladyas, were pulled by ropes across narrow and low-lying watersheds.

Originating in southern Russia, the Oka flows north via the charming town of Oryol before resolutely turning east near the industrial city of Kaluga. For the next few hundred kilometers, it skirts the border of the Moscow region. Its wooded banks have long been favored by residents of the Russian capital for weekend picnics and for building summer cottages. The river also passes the first cluster of dachas (country houses) and bohemian haunts near Serpukhov and Tarusa.

The house-museum of Russian poet Sergey Yesenin in the village of Konstantinovo © Luka Kikina / Shutterstock
The house-museum of Russian poet Sergey Yesenin in the village of Konstantinovo © Luka Kikina / Shutterstock

This upper section of the Oka is not covered by cruises. They originate in Moscow and follow the Moscow River down to its confluence with the Oka at Kolomna (120 km east of Serpukhov and 113 km south of Moscow). This little gem of a town is a popular day-trip destination for Muscovites, with the main highlight being a section of the wall and two towers that remain from the town’s kremlin (medieval fortress). Other remnants of the ramparts and towers are scattered around the courtyards of 18th-century merchants’ stone houses and traditional wooden cottages.

A couple of local museums showcase major local crafts. One is dedicated to the production of large bread loaves known as kalachi, while another focuses on Russian-style marshmallows, pastila. Both experiences culminate in a tea party prominently featuring each of the products. However, the quirkiest sight in Kolomna is Artkommunalka – a museum-cum-art-residence that meticulously re-creates the atmosphere of a 1960s communal flat inhabited by millions during Soviet times. A variety of interactive tours and quests are on offer (all in Russian), but perhaps the best experience is to pre-order lunch in the communal kitchen and play kitchen dissidents for the duration of your stay.

The elegant churches inside the walls of Ryazan's ancient kremlin © Leonid Andronov / Shutterstock
The elegant churches inside the walls of Ryazan’s ancient kremlin © Leonid Andronov / Shutterstock

Moving further upstream, most cruises call at Konstantinovo, the birthplace of Sergey Yesenin. This cherub-like bohemian playboy, born into a peasant family, became Russia’s most celebrated decadent poet. He sealed his tragic pop-star fame by ending his life in 1925 after a series of unsuccessful marriages, including one with the American dancer Isadora Duncan. Even if you don’t speak Russian, it’s worth coming here, if only to admire the beautiful scenery and gain a glimpse of early 20th-century peasant life.

The next major stop is Ryazan (205 km from Moscow), a city more ancient than the capital. Although its Soviet looks may not exhibit its history extensively at first sight, it retains the original kremlin with a few elegant churches nestled within its medieval walls. Furthermore, fans of biology and psychology might be attracted to the little wooden cottage that contains the house-museum of academician Ivan Pavlov, known for his work on Pavlovian reflexes. He received the Nobel Prize in 1904, although his experiments on dogs were quite obviously cruel even by the standards of his time. They inspired Mikhail Bulgakov’s famous dystopia, A Dog’s Heart.

Kolomna, Konstantinovo, and Ryazan are accessible from Moscow via E30 (Ryazan road). Trains for Kolomna and Ryazan depart from Moscow’s Kazan station (Kazansky vokzal).

The Khan's Mosque in Kasimov, erected by the Tatars in the 15th century © Pelikh Alexey / Shutterstock
The Khan’s Mosque in Kasimov, erected by the Tatars in the 15th century © Pelikh Alexey / Shutterstock

After Ryazan, the Oka enters a territory so remote it’s only beginning to emerge on travelers’ radars. Upon entering the vast marshy area of the Meshchera woods, the river passes Kasimov – a town with an intriguing history and well off the trodden path. In the 15th century, Moscow princes gave Kasimov to renegade Tatar princes whose descendants helped Ivan the Terrible to conquer Kazan in 1552. This is when the town became a place of exile for Kazan princess Syuyumbike, with myths surrounding her alleged leap to her death from a reclining tower to avoid being captured.

The Tatar influence becomes apparent as soon as you arrive at the main square, where the most prominent building is a late medieval mosque that now houses a nice regional museum. Together with a large dilapidated Russian cathedral, this whitewashed anthill-shaped windowless structure gives the town both an exotic and a desolate feel. Surprisingly for such a remote place, Kasimov boasts a very decent rustic hotel with a quality restaurant. The Zhukova Gora, occupying a large log house that faces a wide green field, features spacious rooms with large balconies and self-catering equipment.

Kasimov is 273 km from Moscow, reachable via the one-lane R105 (Yegoryevsk road). Frequent buses from Moscow’s main bus station take five hours and 30 minutes to cover the distance.

A church in the ancient Russian city of Murom on the bank of the Oka river © Dance60 / Shutterstock
A church in the ancient Russian city of Murom on the bank of the Oka river © Dance60 / Shutterstock

The next stop is Murom, Russia’s third-oldest settlement (founded in AD 862) that bears the name of the now-extinct Finno-Ugric group subjugated by Kievan Viking princes and subsequently assimilated by the Slavs. Today, it displays a smattering of dilapidated old churches and merchants’ houses that are worth strolling through for a few hours. There’s a nice regional museum, and with a bit of luck, another museum will be opened in the childhood home of Vladimir Zworykin, a Russian-born American inventor revered as the father of television.

Across the river and accessible via a newly constructed bridge, the town of Vyksa boasts a recently restored mansion-house of the Batashev brothers, who built a metallurgy plant here in the 18th century. Its present-day owners sponsor the annual Art-Ovrag festival (held in June) – a remarkable contemporary art event that involves a parade of rafts (think floating carnival platforms) on the plant’s water reservoir.

Murom (313 km from Moscow) can be accessed by direct train or bus from the Russian capital, or by bus from Vladimir. From Murom, cruises continue to Nizhny Novgorod – one of Russia’s most scenically located cities that stands at the confluence of the Oka and the Volga rivers. Some boats make a full circle traveling upstream along the Volga and returning via the Moscow–Volga canal; others continue downstream towards Kazan. Oka cruises are operated by companies such as Mosturflot and Vodokhod.

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