Category: Greek Islands photos

  • Amorgos is a hiker’s paradise

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    Amorgos hiking path

    You will feel like you’re on top of the world while hiking on Amorgos. This particular trail leads from Egali to Chora along what’s called “the spine of Amorgos”

     

     

    Amorgos hiking path sign

    Start points for many of the hiking routes on Amorgos are well-marked by signs. This one even shows the approximate walking times to the destinations indicated.

     

     

    Wonderful walks: If you like to see vacation destinations on foot rather than through the windows of a rental car or tour bus, you can’t beat the Greek Islands. Most islands, especially those in the Cyclades, are ideal for walking and hiking. Some, like Sifnos and Amorgos, boast extensive networks of footpaths and donkey trails that take visitors to scenic parts of the island that can’t be reached by vehicles.

    Amorgos is one of our favourite destinations for hiking.

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  • Island dining: Astropelos taverna in Astipalea

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    .Astropelos taverna menu

    What’s for dinner: An artistic illustration of Astipalea island’s scenic Chora village appears at the top of the menu on the outside wall of the Astropelos taverna in Livadi. Below is one of our photos of Chora, shot during our May 2009 visit to Astipalea.

     

     

    Chora on Astipalea

    A view of the enormous Kastro (castle) that towers above Chora on Astipalea

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  • mygreecetravelblog.com is now on Flickr!

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    Click on the image to view a small-format slideshow of photos posted on Flickr.com, or click here to view full-size photos directly from the blog’s Flickr photostream

     

    New Year, new photostream : Regular readers will recall that my blog posts often included links to online photo albums that I had uploaded to Webshots.com. Unfortunately, the company that owns Webshots decided to close it down last month, so the thousands of photos I had posted there are no longer available for viewing.

    I’m pleased to report that I have established a mygreecetravelblog.com photostream on Flickr.com. It’s still in the early stages of development, with just three collections of pictures available for viewing so far (sets of photos from Ios in 2011, and from Paros and Mykonos in 2012). But I will be creating new albums and uploading more photos regularly.

    Please bear with me while I gradually rebuild an online photo collection. I had around 20,000 photos of Greece in over 200 different albums on Webshots, and can’t possibly recreate all of those albums because of the amount of time it would take. But you’ll still be able to see plenty of my photos on Flickr — there are already more than 1,700 on my photostream.

    Happy New Year, and happy photo viewing!

     

  • Greek holiday pic of the day

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    Greek salad

    A yummy Greek salad and an ice-cold bottle of Mythos beer

     

    Favourite snack: When I was grocery shopping one day last week, I got a sudden craving for a crisp Greek salad — our favourite lunchtime “snack” and dinnertime starter when we’re in Greece. So I picked up some feta, cucumber, olives, green peppers, tomatoes and a red onion.  The salad I assembled back home looked appetizing enough, but was a huge disappointment to eat. The vegetables were crunchy but bitter (the onion actually gave me severe heartburn), while the tomatoes were tasteless and had the texture of soggy cardboard. The feta felt almost spongy, and had a sharp, slightly sour flavour, while the olives also seemed spongy, and tasted bitter and salty. Major letdown!

    I should have known better — the taste and texture of our vegetables, even at the best of times, is never even remotely comparable to their flavour-packed counterparts in Greece. And now that we’re heading into winter, our vegetables will be even more dreadful. So no more Greek salads until next spring. With luck, we’ll make it back to Greece at that time … and if we do, you can be certain we’ll enjoy an authentic, tasty Greek salad with nearly every meal.

    Until then, I’ll try to satisfy my cravings by pretending I’m back at Taverna Glafkos in Naoussa, on Paros, enjoying the delicious Greek salad pictured above that I enjoyed for lunch one day last May.

     

  • Cool pools: Santa Maria Village hotel on Milos

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    Santa Maria village hotel

    A quiet moment at the Santa Maria Village hotel swimming pool

     

    September swims: For our fourth trip to Greece, in 2007, we decided to travel during the second half of September instead of taking our holiday in late May or early June as we usually do. We figured that, after a long hot summer, the sea would be comfortably warm and so would hotel swimming pools. At least, that’s what seasoned travellers had told us to expect, and that’s what I kept reading in the TripAdvisor.com forums.

    But when we got to the first hotel of our island-hopping trip that September — the Santa Maria Village at the port town of Adamas, on Milos — we were shocked to discover that the swimming pool water was ice cold. Other guests who said they had been expecting to do a lot of swimming were also taken aback by the water temperature.

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  • Greece holiday pic of the day

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    islands near Arki Greece

    Some islands that the Nisos Kalimnos ferry passed shortly after departing Port Augusta on Arki, en route to Agathonisi and Samos. Our ferry ride began at Patmos.

     

     

  • Greece holiday pic of the day

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    Agriolivado Bay at Patmos

    Clouds soar above Agriolivado Bay on Patmos

     

  • Warming up with some Naxos beach memories

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    Agios Prokopios beach Naxos

    Looking across the brilliant turquoise sea as waves softly break against the sand at Agios Prokopios beach on Naxos

     

    Feeling the chill: Clouds. Wind. Rain. That pretty much sums up the dreary, depressing weather we’ve been experiencing here in Toronto since late October, when Hurricane Sandy started moving out of the Caribbean on its way to wallop the USA’s eastern seaboard. We were supposed to see a mix of sun and clouds on Sunday, Monday and again today, but the sunshine didn’t last for more than a few minutes. So you can imagine how envious I felt this morning when a friend in Athens bragged about being on her way to the beach because it was a balmy 29 degrees (Celsius).

    At the time, I was sorting through photos from our visits to Naxos in 2005 and 2006, looking at pictures of some of the island’s beautiful beaches. Just out of curiosity, I checked the weather for Naxos. The island wasn’t getting the same blast of heat as Athens, but the temperature was still a summery 24 C.  Meanwhile, we were shivering with a high of only 2 C.

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