Category: Greek Island tours & excursions (page 3 of 4)

Pic of the day: Exploring Delos island

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Tourists walk a path below the Temple of Isis (center left) while other Delos island visitors climb stairs to the summit of Mt Kynthos (upper left)

Tourists walk a hillside path on Delos island (foreground) while other visitors climb steps to the top of Mt Kynthos (upper left). The monument near the center of the photo is the Temple of Isis. Click on the photo to view a full-size picture.

 

Island sail tour is a must for Milos visitors

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Milos tour sailboat

A poster at the Adamas marina advertises the daily Milos tours that J & J Yachting offers on the sailboat Joanna I

 

 

Milos must-see / must-do: One of the top tourist activities on Milos in the southwest Cyclades is a day trip that actually takes place off the island — on a sailing yacht or tour boat cruise along the marvellous Milos coastline.

Created by 3 million years of volcanic activity, Milos boasts some of the most impressive landscapes in all the Greek islands, including dozens of breathtaking beaches and a spectacular 139-kilometer-long coastline.

The stunning coastal scenery is best viewed from the sea, of course, and a variety of sailboat tours and day cruises are available from Adamas, the main port town on Milos. Excursions typically depart the Adamas marina between 8 and 10 a.m. in the morning, and return by sunset. Many of the sailboat tours take sightseers past western Milos as far as the dramatic cliffs at Kleftiko, near the island’s southwest tip, while other excursions travel completely around Milos. Some tours offer trips to Antimilos, Kimolos and other nearby islands.

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Our sailboat tour to Sykia and Kleftiko on Milos

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Excursion sailboats anchored at Kleftiko on the southwest coast of Milos

Excursion sailboats anchored off the scenic cliffs at Kleftiko near the southwest tip of Milos. Click the photo to view it full-size.

 

 

Stunning scenery: It has been nearly six years since we took a sailboat tour along the scenic western coast of Milos, but my memories of the trip are still so vivid it seems as though it happened only yesterday.

As I described in the preceding post — Island sail tour is a must for Milos visitors — sailboat excursions and boat cruises rate among the top recommended tourist activities on Milos, thanks to the island’s spectacular coastal scenery.

A sailing tour was at the top of our personal “must-do” list when we visited Milos for the first time in mid-September 2007, but we had to wait several days to take one of the popular excursions because high winds forced most boats to remain in port.

It was well worth the wait.

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Delos ferry prices & times unchanged for 2013

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Delos ferry ticket booth

The Delos island ferry ticket booth at the Mykonos Old Port

 

[Editor’s Update: For information about extended opening hours and extra Delos ferry service in 2014, please see my April 2 2014 report Visiting Delos will be easier this summer with Sunday openings, longer hours and extra ferries.]

 

 

No change: Some good news for people travelling in the Cyclades on tight budgets this summer —  prices for visiting Delos island from Mykonos have not increased this year. It still costs €17 for a return ferry ticket (same as in 2012), while admission to the grounds remains €5 (a price that hasn’t changed in years).

According to Greek mythology, Delos is the sacred island on which the Greek gods Apollo and Artemis were born. Administered by the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism, Delos is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the top Greek island tour destinations for archaeology and history buffs. Day trips to Delos rank among the top “things to do” for visitors to Mykonos, which is the closest nearby island, and are popular excursions from Naxos and Paros as well.

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Visiting Delos island, the sacred cradle of Greek gods

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Delos island

Fascinating ruins and antiquities abound on Delos island

 

House of the Trident on Delos island

… an outstanding archaeological site where visitors encounter the vestiges of ancient Greek history and mythology as they wander the vast outdoor museum to explore remarkable ruins like the House of the Tritons, above

 

Daytripping back in time:  One of the top sightseeing attractions for visitors to Mykonos isn’t even situated on that island — it’s a short ferry ride away, on a separate island altogether.

It’s Delos, a UNESCO world heritage site where visitors can observe scores of antiquities and other riveting remnants of ancient Greek civilization just by wandering through remarkable outdoor ruins and a museum filled with amazing archaeological treasures.

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Visiting Delos: So much to see, indoors & out

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House of the Masks on Delos island

The House of the Masks …

 

The Temple of Isis on Delos Island

The Temple of Isis …

 

House of Hermes on Delos Island

The House of Hermes …

 

House of Dionysus on Delos island

… intricate mosaics, like this one in the House of Dionysus …

 

The Agora of the Competialists on Delos Island

… and ruins and antiquities practically everywhere you step, like these in the Agora of the Competialists, will enthrall you for hours on Delos

 

Delos Archaeological Museum

And when you need a break from the intense summer sun, you can cool off while viewing hundreds of sculptures, mosaics, frescoes and antiquities …

 

Delian lions

… including the original marble Delian lions, now displayed in their own special gallery inside the Delos Archaeological Museum

 

Ruins and treasures aplenty:  If you’re a big history and archaeology buff, a half-day excursion to Delos probably won’t offer nearly enough time to explore the vast outdoor ruins, let alone the treasures inside the Delos Archaeological Museum. There’s plenty to see, and after three separate visits we still haven’t seen it all.

But visiting Delos involves a lot of walking, usually under a hot, bright sun, and that makes it even more challenging to view as many of the island’s highlight attractions as possible in just one trip.

 

Hordes of tourists at the four houses with mosaics

Competing for viewing space with hordes of people in huge guided tour groups certainly doesn’t help, either. When we took a guided tour in 2006, we practically got trampled trying to see some of the spectacular mosaic floors at the four famous houses — the House of Dionysus, the House of the Tritons, the House of the Dolphins and the House of the Masks. About half a dozen different tour groups, with up to 50 people in each, converged on the houses at nearly the same time. There was some pushing and shoving as people from different groups tried to squeeze past each other to view or photograph the mosaics, and I couldn’t begin to count the number of times that I got bumped and jostled or had my feet stomped by other tourists trying to get in front of, behind or around me. It wasn’t pleasant, and I only got brief glimpses of some of the mosaics. The floor mosaic in the House of Dionysus was the only one I was actually able to photograph.

 

Heimdall’s tip for viewing the mosaics

Heimdall, a TripAdvisor.com destination expert for Antiparos, has planned his Delos visits strategically so he has been able to view and photograph the mosaics without the crowds and hassles we have encountered. Heimdall told me he catches the very first (9 a.m. ) Delos ferry from Mykonos, and heads directly to the four houses — basically moving in the direction opposite to the one most tourists are inclined to take when they enter Delos. This plan of attack puts Heimdall at the mosaics long before the tour groups and other throngs of sightseers descend en masse, giving him a prime opportunity to shoot unobscured photos of the stunning mosaics. Sometimes he’s the first person to arrive, so he doesn’t have to worry about shadows or squeeze past other people blocking the narrow wall openings through which the mosaics can be viewed.  Be sure to check out his impressive Mykonos & Delos album on flickr. (I’ll admit I’m jealous Heimdall got those amazing pics, because I had to settle for stealing quick glances of the artwork — usually over somebody else’s shoulder!)

 

Don’t miss the museum

Many visitors don’t bother going in the Delos Archaeological Museum, preferring to explore the outdoor sites, but it’s worthwhile visiting its galleries to view the many sculptures, reliefs, mosaics, pottery, figurines, jewellery, and scores of small tools and household items that had been used in day-to-day life in ancient Greece. It’s also where you’ll see the original Delian marble lions; the ones on the outdoor Terrace of the Lions actually are replicas. (The gallery with the lions was roped off the last two times we’ve been to Delos, so we had to view and photograph the lions from several feet away. )

Many of the museum’s treasures were discovered in the late 1800s during a major archaeological excavation project that the Ecole Française d’Athènes  (French School at Athens) launched on Delos in 1872. (The research project actually continues to this day.) In 1904, the Archaeological Society of Athens built what was originally a five-room museum to house and display some of the finds, while many more antiquities unearthed on the island were sent to Athens for display at the National Archaeological Museum. Expansions in 1931 and 1972 increased the Delos museum’s size to nine rooms.

The photos below will give you a good idea of what you’ll get to see, both outdoors and inside the museum, when you visit Delos yourself.

 

Map of ruins on Delos island

You can view and download this basic map of the Delos archaeological site from the visitgreece.gr website operated by the Greece National Tourist Organisation (GNTO). I have circled the area where the four houses with the famous mosaics are situated. If you take the 9 a.m. ferry from Mykonos to Delos and head directly to that area upon arrival, you should be able to view and photograph the ruins at your leisure before large tour groups arrive and crowd the site.

 

Delos island

Inside the entrance gate to Delos. The Orca, one of the excursion boats from Mykonos, is docked at the pier just outside the ticket booth.

 

the Sacred Way on Delos Island

A couple strolls the 13-meter-wide Sacred Way

 

Delos island

Tourists explore the ruins closest to the entrance gate

 

Delos island

This visitor looks like she’s walking through a field of tall grass …

 

a pathway on Delos island

… but she was actually walking one of the paths that meanders through the ruins

 

Agora of the Competialists on Delos island

This small round structure in the Agora of the Competialists was constructed from marble and dedicated to the Greek god of commerce, Hermes

 

Delos island

A narrow street separates rows of stone houses

 

 Delos island

A pair of columns tower above plants and tall grasses

 

ruins on Delos island

A solo visitor walks a path surrounded by ruins of ancient buildings

 

Delos island

A column stands next to a footpath that passes between ruins of ancient houses

 

Sanctuary of Dionysus on Delos Island

Two phallic monuments at the Sanctuary of Dionysus

 

Sanctuary of Dionysus on Delos island

Explicit phallic images adorned many public and private buildings on Delos. The phallus is a symbol of the god Dionysus; in ancient times, the Greeks believed that phallus symbols would ward off evil spirits.

 

Establishment of the Poseidoniasts on Delos island

Columns in the Establishment of the Poseidoniasts

 

Delos island

Tall stone walls remain intact on this large house

 

Stoa of Phillip in the ruins on Delos island

The Stoa of Phillip next to The Sacred Way

 

A Minoan fountain on Delos island

A Minoan fountain

 

a pathway on Delos hillside

A pathway on a Delos hillside. Good walking shoes are advised, but we — and other tourists — have walked extensively on Delos wearing sturdy sandals.

 

Terrace of the Lions on Delos

The Terrace of the Lions

 

Terrace of Lions at Delos

Spring wildflowers surround one of the Delian lions

 

Establishment of the Poseidoniasts on Delos

Columns in the Establishment of the Poseidoniasts

 

 House of Hermes on Delos Island

Visitors approach the House of Hermes

 

House of Hermes on Delos Island

Looking up at the House of Hermes

 

wildflowers and ruins on Delos island

Looking toward Ano Remiataris island across a field of wildflowers and ruins

 

House of Dionysus on Delos island

Columns rise above the stone walls of the House of Dionysus

 

House of Dionysus on Delos island

Columns and the mosaic floor inside the House of Dionysus

 

Temple of Isis on Delos island

The Temple of Isis

 

Temple of Isis on Delos island

Overlooking the Temple of Isis from the adjacent hillside

 

Building remnants on Delos island

Rows of column segments, bases and other foundations of ancient buildings

 

Delos view of Mykonos island

These visitors have a good view of Mykonos as they explore the ruins

 

a house on Delos island

Looking down on the remains of an ancient house

 

palm tree on Delos island

An elegant palm tree near The Sacred Lake

 

House of the Tritons on Delos

Lion head consoles carved into a column at the House of the Tritons

 

ancient commercial port on Delos

Seaside ruins of the ancient commercial port on Delos

 

Delos snack bar and archaeological museum

Approaching the snack bar, left, and the Delos Archaeological Museum. The snack bar has seating on an outdoor shaded terrace, but prices for its beverages, light snacks and souvenirs are quite steep. If you’re travelling on a budget, bring bottled water and a picnic lunch with you to Delos.

 

Delian lions in the Delos Archaeological Museum

The heads of three of the original marble Delian lions

 

Delian lions in the Delos Archaeological Museum

Peeking below the bellies of the Delian lions

 

a fresco in the Delos archaeological museum

A plaster wall painting in the ‘daily life’ gallery

 

panther mosaic in the Delos archaeological museum

A colourful panther mosaic

 

sculpture in Delos archaeological museum

The museum has six separate rooms of sculpture and reliefs

 

sculpture in the Delos archaeological museum

A close view of the face of one of the sculptures

 

Delos Archaeological Museum

Phallic symbols and sex-themed artifacts in a display case

 

Mosaic of Hermes and Athena

This giant mosaic of Hermes and Athena has been mounted on a wall at the juncture of two Hellenistic sculpture galleries

 

Mosaic of Hermes and Athena

I waited for the gallery to empty so I could snap this photo of the mosaic …

 

Delos archaeological museum

… without getting someone else’s head and body in the picture

 

Hermes and Athena mosaic

An image near the upper right-hand corner of the frame for the huge wall-mounted Hermes and Athena mosaic

 

Delos archaeological museum

One of the wall paintings in the daily life gallery

 

wall painting in the Delos archaeological museum

Another wall painting in the daily life gallery

 

wall mural in Delos archaeological museum

Another colourful plaster wall painting

 

Delos Archaeological Museum

A giant frame supports the tall Statue of Ofellius Ferus

 

sculpture in the Delos archaeological museum

People at my gym practically kill themselves doing squats in the hopes of someday boasting a rock-hard butt like the one on this sculpture …

 

Delos Archaeological Museum

… while this sun-streaked, trim torso confirms that six pack abs have been revered since ancient times

 

antiquities in the Delos Archaeological Museum

An interesting collection of facial expressions!

 

 

Visiting Delos: How to get there

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Google map showing Rinia Delos and Mykonos

This Google map image shows Delos island’s location between Mykonos, right, and Rinia, left. Mykonos offers the closest and most convenient access to Delos, with ferry service from the Mykonos Town harbour

 

[Editor’s Note: Please see my Visiting Delos in 2016 post for current Delos information, including new ferry ticket prices and new fees for admission to the Delos archaeological site.]

 

Getting there from Mykonos: It’s relatively easy to reach Delos from Mykonos, which just happens to be the closest populated island.

Every day except Monday, when Delos is closed to the public, excursion boats depart the Mykonos Town harbour in the morning, and return in the early to mid-afternoon. Three different boats — the Delos Express, the Margarita and the Orca — offer round trips that typically depart at 9, 10 and 11 a.m., and return from Delos at 12:15,  1:30 and 3 p.m. I say “typically,” because the service depends upon both the season and demand. In May 2011, for instance, boats departed Mykonos only at 9 and 10, and returned at 12:15 and 3. In extremely windy or stormy weather, the boats might be cancelled altogether. You don’t have to return on the same boat that took you to Delos; you’re free to select whichever returning boat you prefer.

 

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Visiting Delos: Get an overview of the ancient ruins with a scenic hike to the summit of Mt Kynthos

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Mt Kynthos on Delos island

A visitor points toward Mt Kynthos from the Delos harbour

 

Delos island

From the mountaintop, visitors can appreciate the vast extent of ruins on the island. The Delos Archaeological Museum is the large building at upper right.

 

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