
There are places you plan to visitโand then there are the ones that call you to arrive.
So sits Zen Forest, a secluded retreat in Lithuaniaโwaiting for people to come when something in them is ready: ready for stillness, for truth, for the kind of quiet that stays with you.
At Editoire, we amplify the voices of those who bring good into the world through sustainable and regenerative travel.ย
Through a partnership with Om Creative, a slow travel creative studio on a mission to discover these people and places, we present Episode 2: Zen Forest. This second episode takes us into a zen retreat (original: โZen Miลกkasโ) designed with thoughtful intention to encourage mindfulness, authentic connection, and genuine transformation.
Join the team as they bring their mission to life, seeking outย the visionaries behind these spaces and exploring these purposeful environments through up-close storytelling.ย

Arrival
We had been following Zen Forest online for a long time, drawn to its simplicity and the depth of practice it seemed to foster. As a Zen practitioner myself, this place has always intrigued me. On a chilly December day, we finally made the drive from my birth town of Kaunas, winding through silent forest roads, hoping to understand it more deeply.
Linas Ryลกkus, the founder of Zen Forest, greeted us with a no-nonsense warmth, inviting us into his home, which sits beside the main retreat building. Over cups of coffee, we spoke about life, philosophy, and the winding path that led him here.

Linas had a prominent career as a TV producer, director, and executive, yet, despite his professional achievements, he felt drawn to a different life โ one rooted in simplicity and contemplation. He spent years obsessively searching for the right location, exploring countless properties. When he finally arrived at this particular spot, something clicked immediately.
He knew he had found exactly what he’d been searching for.

A Space Unlike Any Other
Many retreat spaces juggle financial survival with their original mission, often becoming event venues on the side. Zen Forest refused to compromise. Here, the focus is unshakable: meditation, practice, and retreat. Teachers and visitors sense it immediately: the absence of outside interference, the residue of silence in the air. As Linas explains:
โThis place was built for retreats and nothing else. You can feel it immediately โ thereโs no other energy here.โ
The land itself sets the tone. The Neris River, the second largest in Lithuania, flows past the retreat, its waters reflecting the thick forests that line its banks. Nearby, ancient burial sites mark centuries of human presence.

The retreat comprises ten rooms across two houses, a spacious Dharma Hall for meditating and other practices, and open land for those who prefer to set up tents to sleep beneath the trees.

A sauna and a wooden hot tub sit beside a pond that never runs dry, offering a natural cold plunge in winter or a pleasant swim in the summer.
The design of Zen Forest is simple, intentional, and functional. No unnecessary decoration, no distractions.
Each space serves a purpose, each element quietly guiding visitors toward stillness.
Wholesome vegetarian meals are prepared with care, reflecting this philosophy of simplicity and nourishment. Every part of Zen Forest is designed to support those who come seeking something beyond the surface.

Intentional Design
Thereโs a quiet reverence to Zen Forest.
Inside the Dharma Hall, calligraphy by Zen masters, along with hand-painted scrolls and traditional artwork, line the walls โ nothing ornamental, everything deliberately placed to encourage contemplation.
Outside, the Buddha statue offers a unique story: originally from one of Lithuaniaโs most notorious nightclubs, it silently witnessed years of excess and wild parties. When the nightclub closed, the statue found its new home at Zen Forest.
Today, both the Buddha statue and the main retreat building have received blessings from Korean monks and Zen masters, reflecting the authentic Zen spirit of the space. As Linas thoughtfully remarks, โLife is strange. This Buddha saw everything in the club, and now it meets people seeking silence and peace.โ

The Balancing Act: Ethics and Sustainability
Retreats donโt run on ideals alone. Zen Forest had to become self-sustaining without diluting its purpose. Linas shrugs off the question of ethics versus business, โโThere is no contradiction,โ he says. The retreat funds itself, booked well in advance, proving that a space built with integrity can thrive.
Thereโs no handpicking of โidealโ guests. People find their way here because they need to. Some come with teachers, others on their own, looking for something they canโt quite name.
It doesnโt matter. The space does its work, regardless of expectation.

A Zen Way of Being
Linas is a true Zen practitioner, not in a performative way, but in the way he carries himself and approaches life. No fluff, no unnecessary embellishment. There’s a well-known Zen saying: When walking, walk. When eating, eat. This could easily apply to Linas and the way Zen Forest operates. No detours, no indulgence in excess. Just what is needed.
Linas himself explains this plainly: โThe situation itself tells you what needs to be done. If I [were] a monk, Iโd sit in a monastery. But I’m here, so maintaining this place โ that is my meditation.โ

How to Get to Zen Forest
Coordinates: 54ยฐ57’15.7″N 24ยฐ38’55.5″E
From Vilnius: Drive along the Ukmergฤ highway. Around the 35th kilometre, take the exit towards Bartkuลกkis. Continue driving towards Musninkai. After passing Musninkai church, turn left towards ฤiobiลกkis (12 km). About 200 meters after crossing the white ฤiobiลกkis bridge, turn left immediately after the small cemetery.
From Kaunas: After passing the ฤiobiลกkis sign, turn right just before the small cemetery. When you reach ฤiobiลกkis church, turn left, then immediately turn right downhill. After about 70 meters, turn left onto the unpaved road leading towards the river. Continue along this road as it bends slightly to the right, and it will lead you directly into the retreat yard. Note: The first gates you see are not for the retreat. Continue following the path as it curves right, guiding you straight to Zen Forest.

This article is written in partnership with Oceanmoon Creative, a traveling creative studio rooted in slow travel philosophy.
Find more on Zen Forest: