Home Blog Page 5

Hike the Islands

Many of our most enduring memories of living on Paros come from our trail hikes both into the interior and along the coast. Yet reliable information about the trails on most of the islands is hard to find. See our brief bit about Paros trekking

Now for four Cycladic islands that has been remedied with a new authoritative book. This guidebook offers 35 day walks across the four Cycladic islands of Paros, Naxos, Amorgos and Santorini. Each island offers a unique walking experience and the walks range from easy 4 km town tours to 16 km hikes visiting remote peaks in wild interiors. This is the first guide to feature the new 50 km Naxos Strada, which is introduced as a series of five day walks.

Hike Greek islands

“Independent hiking is a healthy social-distancing-friendly activity, and a great way to enjoy the Greek countryside. Even the most popular of the Cycladic islands retain a bucolic atmosphere in their interiors and have extensive networks of traditional paths – once the main thoroughfares for farmers and shepherds.

‘The guide’s English author Gilly Cameron-Cooper and her husband Robin lived in Athens in the early ’90s, where Gilly worked as a journalist and travel writer. Ten years later, they gave up demanding London jobs and “downshifted” to set up a walking tour business based out of the island of Naxos. They later added programs of guided and self-guided walking trips on Paros, Amorgos and Tinos.

What’s in the book?

‘More than 300 kilometers of walking routes – enough for several weeks of exploring – including the 52 km, coast-to-coast hiking trail ‘Naxos Strada’. In fact, it’s the first book to publish it. There are detailed route directions, with insights into what you see along the way (including wildflowers, landscape features and archaeological sites). Practical travel information, maps and route summaries help you plan your vacation in advance, and there are about 200 color photographs as well, and some Greek language tips.

Naxos Strado

‘All four islands have networks of traditional paths, landscapes ranging from dramatic to gentle, and interesting stories to tell. Together, they give you the whole, intense Greek experience.

What makes each of these islands unique?

Naxos is the largest island in the Cyclades, with the most wonderfully diverse landscape, scattered with traces of ancient history. There are mountains of marble and granite, broad inland vales of olive groves and farmland, year-round streams, and unspoilt stretches of coastline.

Paros has a softer, more cosmopolitan ambience: monasteries that are ­oases of calm in secret folds of countryside, and some of the finest examples of paved ‘Byzantine’ paths.

Amorgos is remote, insular, and sensual, with a stark, rugged beauty and dizzying cliffs plunging down to the beautiful waters that inspired Luc Besson’s film The Big Blue. It also has the most potent aromatic shrubs in Greece.

‘Santorini is sensational for its volcanic rim that rears up from a sea-filled caldera, for a Bronze Age city excavated from layers of ash, cave houses cut into cliffs, and for interesting ways of growing tomatoes and grape vines on barren, waterless land.”

Quotes taken from article in Greece-Is.com

Curated Content

0

Greek Island lifestyle — Content I have gathered from the wide internet world. Enjoy

[WD_FB id=”2″]

Which is the best?

0

A look at travel advice

As I browse travel sites on the internet and read questions I try to answer what I can in order to share our knowledge. Also I enjoy and learn from other’s answers. Just last week someone wrote to say they were planning a three week trip to Greece. What should they look for? what to avoid? which islands were best? any tips? Someone else wrote back the perfect answer. “I recommend the Lonely Planet Guide Book. They take about 750 pages to answer your questions.”

We are glad to help with specifics such as ferry routes, rates, good places to stay, eat, local buses, what things should cost and the like. Yet each visitor is different; there are no bests. No one likes to suffer the consequences of a mistake, yet having an adventure turns an ordinary day into a lifetime memory (Ask Karin about our Samaria Gorge experience!) A little discomfort from stretching your boundaries is good for the soul, I believe.

My major advice to prospective travellers is to have a good attitude and everything else will fall into place as it should. You may not walk the most direct route to your destination but you will learn, experience and grow more by not trying for pre-packaged perfection. Besides plans never work out anyway. I once advised one enquirer that if he needed his connections to be precisely on time, don’t come to Greece.

Finally, we have all heard the number one travel advice: Pack light! This month I finally met someone who follows it. Experienced travellers who were here for a week with only what the rest of us would call a day pack each. Well done, Doug and Maryrose.

Speaking of best, here is what I wrote about choosing your Greek island: https://hubpages.com/travel/Best_Greek_Island

Excerpt from July 2002 Newsletter

Despotiko

0

Despotiko is a delightful side trip from Antiparos, which itself is a delightful side trip from Paros. However, since its main attraction is an active archaeological dig and reconstruction from ancient Greece, I have detailed the island on our sister site Visit-Ancient-Greece: Despotiko

The Greek Gift Game

1

The Greek Gift Game

By Karin, December 2007

Well, the past couple of days have been interesting . . . in a Greek Way!

First off, Papoose (Grandfather) had his Name Day. Since he is such a sweet old man, I decided to bake something for him. I made a plate up of Cranberry Bread with orange and walnuts, a Lemon Bar cookie I make, and Chocolate Bars (sort of like a brownie).

Around noon I decided to walk up to their house. It was drizzling, and coming into their garden area was really soft and pretty; very farm-ish and stuff around from fall, just cozy. The door was closed, so I knocked…and his voice started yelling inside. I did not know what he was saying, and in a bit I knocked again. Again, more of his loud yelling. What I wondered was, is he warning me, “Don’t come in my pants are down!” or was he saying “Come in, the door isn’t locked!”? So timidly and bravely, I opened the door; he started yelling some more. Thank goodness his wife YaYa (Grandmother) came quickly…and of course welcomed me with hugs and smiles. I handed her the plate to which she immediately helped herself to a cookie. Papoose was insistent I sit. “Katsee, katsee” and half stood up as if to push me into a chair!

The room was nicely warmed by the fire in the wood stove, it was cosy, the TV was going and Papoose was sitting at the table with a beige crocheted shawl around his shoulders. I greeted him with, “Kronia Polla” (Many years) which is the saying you give on Name Days. He was very pleased, warmly shook my hand, grinned very big, and then seeing I wasn’t sitting yet indicated I was to sit on a sofa bed. NOW! Then he sat down, but immediately got up, and put a pillow behind my back! Eighty six years old, but not too old to be a gentleman!

Then the conversation stopped! What to say? How, in my limited Greek, and their limited English do we talk? If we were a room full of Greeks, the air would be filled with everyone talking and no one listening to anyone! I just started to feel awkward when YaYa came to the rescue by rushing around the room, going from kitchen to wood stove with a large round battered pan filled to the brim with macaroni and dove (pigeon)! Yes, those little birds that fly around our fields are now food for winter stomachs! I must admit, it smelled delicious. YaYa uses this wood stove for cooking, baking and all the while it heats the main room of the house. Her tiny kitchen is just a room for washing up and preparing food.

Papoose explained to me about the photographs on his wall. They are old family pictures. I understand enough Greek to know sister, friend, son, daughter, etc.. I found them fascinating. He also showed me his stripes (3) that came off his military uniform when he was a young man. There were photos of a very impressive young Nikos and of a HUGE bull taken at the port of Parikia. I felt the room had so many stories. What a pity we could not really communicate.

Anyway, I stayed about 30 minutes in which we attempted to make small talk, watched news coverage on the TV in the real awkward moments, and of course I was treated to the usual Name Day cookie and a small glass of suma! We joked about drinking before lunch!

When I got up to leave, I was immediately given gifts to take back home, which is what the Greeks do. No matter what you bring, you carry away more! I was given 3 grapefruit, 2 oranges, 8 green tomatoes and Name Day cookies for Michael.

lemons
Another day’s gift . . .

The next morning we squeezed the oranges…WOW!, so sweet and smooth….then we squeezed 2 of the grapefruit! Now that was a treat beyond belief. I am not a grapefruit lover, but this juice was really wonderful! It makes one wonder how we can abide drinking juice from the supermarkets. There is just NO comparison.

OK, so today I am busy packing, organizing to leave for the USA. YaYa knows I am busy–so she wants to help by showing up this morning with a huge bag full of horta she had just picked! That was really a special gift, as she has bad knees, so it was a job of real friendship that she did this. However, I really did not want to be at the kitchen sink, cutting the roots off 1,000,000 little dandelion, etc. plants, washing them, then rinsing them at least twice. Imagine, an entire bag full! The job takes my inexperienced hands about 2 hours! Then you cook it down like spinach; it does take a big bag to get a decent portion. Unfortunately, I am not so keen on horta. It is usually served with vinegar or lemon and a little olive oil.

After cleaning half the bag I stopped for the day. We will have what I cleaned for supper with a bacon omelette and some of the fried green tomatoes. I thought of giving the rest away, or even (and this IS bad) throwing it to the goats! But when I think of YaYa down on her bad knees, in the wet rainy soil, I know tomorrow we will finish up the bag. And I will be more healthy for it!

Now, back to my packing. I definitely will find a nice box of chocolates from America to give them when I come back–and leave their house with more gifts from YaYa….you can never win! I like this game!

2021 Update: YaYa (Yah Yah) is interviewed for a remembrance project and a photo of Papoose in 2019 (deceased 2020): Pre-tourism Aliki

DominoQQ slot pro thailand https://slotgacormax.win/ https://wwwl24.mitsubishielectric.co.jp/ daftar judi online judi bola online judi bola resmi