Category: Greek Islands

  • Greece holiday pic of the day

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    a street in Paroikia on Paros

    Children play outside shops on a street in the Paros port town, Parikia

     

  • On my bookshelf: Greek Island Hopping

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    Greek Island Hopping 2007 by Thomas Cook Publishing

    The cover of my 2007 Greek Island Hopping guide by Thomas Cook Publishing

     

    Great guidebook: It’s already five years old, but much of the information in my well-worn copy of Greek Island Hopping 2007 is still so relevant and useful, this is the first book I pick up whenever I need to plan a trip or find an answer for questions that friends or I might have about travelling in Greece.

    Known as the Bible of Greece travel guidebooks, the Greek Island Hopping series is written and researched by Frewin Poffley, who packs an incredible amount of detailed and helpful information — along with maps, illustrations and photos – between the covers of each year’s thick paperback edition. (There are 720 fact-filled pages in my 2007 version.)

    The book’s primary focus is on ferry travel, explaining how to go from one destination to another using Greece’s complicated and often confusing interisland ferry network.  But it also offers a wealth of information about things to see and do on each island, as well as in Athens and all of the ports on the Greek mainland. The book also provides advice about accommodations, but that content seems to be aimed chiefly at backpackers and budget travellers seeking wallet-friendly hotel options, as well as hostels and campsites. (It won’t give much guidance if you’re trying to decide between two 5-star caldera view hotels in Oia, on Santorini, but if you’re going to be paying €500+ per night for somewhere to sleep, you’ve probably got a travel agent making those arrangements for you anyways.)

    I find the guidebook particularly useful for its maps of port towns, key island villages, and important tourist attractions, such as the archaeological ruins on Delos island and The Asklepieion on Kos, to name just two.  And while there’s a staggering amount of dry — but important — factual data in the guidebook, Poffley’s candid, personal descriptions of each destination make for an amusing and fun read. (I don’t always share the same impressions about some of the islands, but I can see where Poffley’s coming from with many of his sharp-witted observations.)

    Greek Island Hopping 2012 hits bookstores later this month, and can be ordered online. Don’t go island hopping without one!

     

    Greek Island Hopping by Thomas Cook Publishing

    The Greek Island Hopping books provide incredibly detailed information about the Greek ferry network, including routes, ferry lines, and individual boats.

     

    Greek Island Hopping by Thomas Cook Publishing

    The book features information about each island and its ports, with maps, photos and illustrations showing how to get around and where to find key attractions

     

    Greek Island Hopping by Thomas Cook Publishing

    Not only does the book tell you how to ferry from one island to another, it even shows how to get from one village to another once you’re there. This 2-page map, for instance, shows hiking paths that run the length of Amorgos.

     

    Greek Island Hopping by Thomas Cook Publishing

    The book’s colour map and detailed descriptions of Delos Island will help you enjoy the historic archaeological ruins completely at your own pace, instead of in a huge tour group or with an expensive private guide

     

     

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    Chora village on Astipalea

    A blue-domed church and the tall stone walls of the medieval-era Kastro command attention from the mountaintop above Chora village on Astipalea

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  • A colourful Oia memory gets whitewashed

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    Armeni Village Rooms & Suites Oia Santorini

    The snow-white Santorini clifftop villages of Imerovigli and Fira provide a dramatic, distant backdrop for the distinctive blue and orange colours on the exterior of the caldera-view Armeni Village Rooms & Suites

     

    Armeni Village Rooms & Suites Oia Santorini

    … which we photographed during a visit to Oia in 2005  …

     

    Armeni Village Rooms & Suites Oia Santorini

    … but as this photo I discovered today on the Armeni Village website indicates …

     

    Armeni Village Rooms & Suites Oia Santorini

    … the hotel has ditched the blue and orange, and now sports a simple stark white exterior. (Photo from the Armeni Village Rooms & Suites website.)

     

    Santorini whiteout: We’ve been to Santorini three different times, but I’ve always had vivid memories of a specific hotel we photographed in the incredibly picturesque and romantic village of Oia back in 2005 — memorable because of its distinctive blue and orange exterior.

    After looking at the photos today, I checked out the Armeni Village website and was surprised — and, to be honest, a little dismayed — to see it doesn’t look quite the same. The blue and orange paintjob is history, and the hotel now sports a simple but sophisticated stark white exterior.

    The Armeni Village certainly looks elegant, and expensive, but to me seems to have lost much of its charm and appeal by whitewashing its eye-catching colour scheme. Now, it’s just another typical white Greek luxury hotel on a spectacular cliffside location.

    But at least one important thing hasn’t changed: the hotel’s incredible caldera views.

    If you want to experience them for yourself, you can still reserve a double room for as little as €110 per night — provided you can travel in April or early May. If you wait until June, that same room will cost you €170. And if you can’t travel until July or August, get ready to fork out at least €230 per night. Might sound like a lot of money for a room, but then it’s in Oia … and that marvellous, timeless view is priceless.

     

     

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    Kastro village on Sifnos

    Approaching the hilltop village of Kastro on Sifnos. In medieval times, Kastro was the capital of the charming Cycladic island.

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    a peacock on a fence at Palace of Knossos in Crete, Greece

    Palace peacock: We encountered this beautiful big bird while exploring the ancient Minoan Palace of Knossos near Heraklion on Crete

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  • Greece holiday pic of the day

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    Folegandros Greece

    White cube-shaped houses and hotel buildings sit on a terraced mountainside overlooking the Aegean Sea northwest of Hora on Folegandros

     

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    Vathi, the main city on Samos island

    Overlooking Vathi’s main street from the rooftop at Samos City Hotel