Kalispera! Good Evening! I have returned from Greece safe and sound. What a lovely country! The food is fabulous and the people are wonderful! Their air conditioning, however, leaves a lot to be desired. To say it was hot in Athens was an understatement. These days in a effort to be more 'green', I think, some hotels are designed so that when you are not in the room the electricity is off. Your card key is supposed to be inserted into a special slot on the wall and only when you do this will the power come on. As a result the room takes half the evening to cool down. I don't know what's supposed to happen to any food you have in the refrigerator. I spent my time in Greece hot and sweaty, but then, I was in Greece, so who cares? Next time I'm in Greece I'll make sure it's in the spring or fall.
This is the view from my hotel room! What a sight! I have to say the hotel lived up to it's name - the Acropolis View Hotel. The location was excellent. Close to ancient Athens and the metro. I had a simple 5 minute walk to the metro followed by a 45 minute ride to the airport and I was all set. . .
And the view from the roof at night was spectacular. Most buildings had lounging areas or restaurants on their roofs. I had dinner at a Japanese place one night (yes, I was a bit tired of Greek salads by then) with an up close and personnel view of the Acropolis all lit up. It was a 10 minute walk up a very steep hill to the Acropolis. And boy was it hot up there! And crowded! I was there for my tour at 8:00 am sharp when it opened. By 8:30 am the place was over run by hordes of people. The dreaded tour bus groups had come! Between the tour groups and the heat by 10:00 am I was ready to get off the hill. I spent the rest of the day exploring ancient Athens. I visited Roman and Greek ruins. The ancient agora is very well preserved. This was the center of the city in ancient times. The market and civic buildings were there as well as temples and monuments. It sits at the base of the Acropolis hill on the north side. So I happily tromped around marble boulders and rubble that were once magnificent temples. I was in heaven!
I took a day tour to Delphi, the home of the ancient Oracle and the Sanctuary of Apollo. To ancient Greece this was the center of the earth, the 'navel'. Most of what I saw of the Greek countryside was agricultural and the trip to Delphi was a wander through what must be the heartland of Greece. There were miles and miles of olive tree groves, pistachio groves, tobacco fields(Greece is one of the largest consumers of tobacco in the world) and who knows what else. The Sanctuary of Apollo perches on the slopes of Mt. Parnassus about 800 m above sea level. In fact, you can see the Gulf of Corinth from the Sanctuary. The roads are winding and narrow and barely fit two big buses passing in opposite directions. At times the buses inch by each other until one or the other gets clear. You are literally on the edge of your seat just waiting to hear the screech of metal as the buses pass each other. . . Some how it never happens, though. The first picture above is the Sanctuary of Apollo looking down the valley to the ruins of the gymnasium in the distance. And the picture on the right is the actual ancient Oracle of Delphi. The physical center of the ancient world . . .
I was in Athens for 4 days then on to Crete for a week. . . Again, I stayed in a great location. I had a marvelous view of the Aegean Sea from my balcony. There was a constant breeze from the water so it relieved some of the heat. I spent a day each exploring the ancient Minoan palaces of Knossos and Phaestos. Both must have been magnificent in their day. . .I met a friend at Knossos who seemed not to be bothered by me sitting in the shade trying to cool off. . .
The Palace of Knossos was home to an advanced and cultured Minoan civilization that was suddenly and violently wiped out by a volcanic eruption and subsequent tsunami that originated on the island of Santorini, known in Greece as Thira. Half of the island was blown away by a volcanic eruption 200 times more powerful than the eruption of Krakatoa, which is thought to be the most powerful in recent memory. I went on a day trip to Santorini and amazingly didn't get sick on the boat trip. Of course, that was after taking 2 Dramamine pills and wearing a scopalamine patch (also had nausea pills with me in case the prophylaxis didn't work). But, hey, I didn't get sick. And those of you who know me well, know for sure that I can't usually tolerate being on a boat, right Shari? The boat was a super fast catamaran passenger only boat so the ride was relatively calm.
To say Santorini is beautiful is doing it an injustice.The view from the rim is breathtaking. The small islands you can see in the distance are the tops of extinct volcanoes. And the water that you see was the island before it blew up. The volcano erupted and the water rushed in to fill the crater that was left. The island is C-shaped as a result with dramatic cliff side houses that are literally built into the rock. The eruption caused widespread devastation throughout the islands. There is a 30 meter thick layer of ash that fell and this is the pale creamy colored rock that the houses perch on.
The island was resettled and the people chose to build into the cliffs. You can take a cable car to the top or ride a donkey if you like. I chose to take a bus on what was a hair raising, hair-pin turning journey! Santorini was definitely a highlight of my tour. If I ever go back to Greece and go island hopping I will spend some time on Santorini.What amazed me so much were the colors. The aqua color of the water was so vivid and the white on the houses blinded the eye. And you could wander for hours among the small hillside streets window shopping. It's an island ripe for tourism and the cruise ships descend with regularity.
I flew back to Athens from Crete and spent a couple days leisurely touring the city with one entire day reserved for the National Archaeological Museum. This is the place that houses many of the ancient wonders found in Greece. It's a wonderful introduction into Greek history. There were Mycenaean, Minoan and Roman treasures. I don't have enough space and wouldn't want to bore you with all the pictures I took while in the museum. I wouldn't have missed it. I also went to the Olympic Stadium just to say I was there. It's been remodeled but for the most part it is the original structure.
So, long story short, I had a great time! It was a trip I've dreamed about and it was everything I'd hoped it would be. I've been back for two weeks now and yesterday I booked my next adventure. . .
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