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Posts Tagged ‘Greek Islands’

  1. Delos, a haven for single mothers

    December 18, 2011 by host

    Mykonos,Greece,Pillars

    Leto was the daughter of the Titans Phoebe and Coeus. One day,  through no fault of her own, she caught the eye of the randiest of all randy gods and the most dangerous lover to mortal maidens — Zeus.  When Zeus discovered Leto was pregnant, the supreme ruler of all the Olympian gods was so afraid of his wife Hera, he abandoned Leto and hurried home, pretending nothing had happened. I guess he figured his thunderbolt was no match for his wife’s wrath. Hera’s  reputation for exacting revenge on her rivals was so fearsome, there wasn’t a single country or island in the ancient world that would accept Leto on its shores.

    Mykonos,Greece,-Windmill-and-House

    Eventually Leto found herself washed up on a desolate bit of land in the middle of the Cyclades. The island  was without foundation, tossed this way and that by the winds and the sea, but when Leto asked for refuge, it welcomed her gladly. When Leto stepped upon the barren rock, four pillars rose from the bottom of the sea and firmly anchored it forever. This island is called Delos, and, no kidding, you can get there from Mykonos.

    Leto gave birth to the Olympian twins, Artemis and Apollo, on Delos. Apollo has been called “the most Greek” of all Greek gods; the god of light, in whom there is no darkness at all (except when there is); and the god of truth. No false word ever falls from his lips. Artemis was the Lady of Wild Things, huntsman-in-chief to the gods, and protectress of dewy youth. One can only hope that Leto felt herself redeemed by her remarkably successful and inspiring children, and by the welcoming arms of Delos.

    Unfortunately, all my photos of Delos were lost in my move from Belgium to DC, so I’ve used photos from Mykonos for this post.

    Mykonos,Greece, Two windmills

    Today the sacred island of Delos is prized as one of Greece’s major archeological sites and considered to be the most illuminated spot in Greece. The island is abandoned, so overnight stays are not permitted, but boats for Delos leave six times daily from Mykonos Hora. With nary a tree for shade, make sure to follow the advice in this post to ensure an enjoyable visit. It’s also a good idea to pick up a guidebook to aid you through the ancient site and to familiarize yourself with it’s fascinating history.

    Mykonos,Greece,Three-Windmills

    My last visit to Delos was in 2003. I went up the highest summit on the island, Mt. Kythnos, and waited for my sister, who was still making her way up from the Sacred Harbor, to join me. I stood there enjoying the silence and the cooling salt spray of the north wind, looking out over the shrines and sanctuaries to foreign gods — Samothracian, Syrian, Egyptian — and following the Terrace of the Lions to the Sacred Lake, birthplace of the Olympian twins. In that moment,  I felt myself enfolded in beauty and was certain that anything that might be wrong in the world would certainly be made right again.

    I suppose that’s how everyone feels on Delos.

    © 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  2. Mykonos for Melancholy

    December 11, 2011 by host

     

    Mykonos-Greece-Church-Square

    Dear friends in cubicles,

    It’s that time of year again — the beginning of December when all turns damp and gray and the sun confines itself to a guest appearance every now and then. During winter most people struggle with a blue mood, but I think it must be especially difficult for you. I remember the time I spent in cubicle confinement — the gray days spent gazing at gray screens, surrounded by three gray walls. Perhaps your cage is larger than mine was — like an office for instance, or even a whole floor in an an office building — but a cage be a cage, even when we’re paid to sit in it.

    I’ve just returned from a month in Los Angeles, and already I need an escape. I think a stroll down the blue and white streets of Mykonos would do us both a world of good.

    Grab your sunglasses, the sun just loves to reflect off all that white…

    Mykonos-Greece-view-boat

     

    Mykonos,Greece,White Church

    Mykonos,Island, Greece, Windmill, House

    Mykonos,Greece, Little Venice

    Mykonos,Greece, island, church

    © 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  3. My trip to Greece in 253 seconds

    October 26, 2010 by host

    Too many dunks in sea water and my video recorder finally gave up. I pieced together what I could into the video above.

    I’d like to get one of those handy little HD flip cams for next year but they’re not waterproof, and that’s the funnest part of filming in Greece.

    © 2010 – 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  4. Olympos

    October 18, 2010 by host

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Village

    The Greek guidebooks say that nothing can prepare you for your first glimpse of Olympos.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Village-Donkey

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Village-Street-Church

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Windmill

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Village-Woman

    This is absolutely true.

    Olympos rests under the clouds, 716m up Mt. Profitas Ilias in the far north of Karpathos.  This isolation led to some interesting developments.  In the past, Olympos was referred to as “Women’s Village”  because most of the men left to seek their fortunes elsewhere or to fight in various wars.  The women stayed behind and kept the economy going by tilling every scrap of land that didn’t have a house sitting on it, and working the 75 mills that still dot the village in various states of disrepair.

    Today, women still keep the economy going. They make up 65% of the population — most are over the age of 60 —  and seem to have a monopoly on village enterprises.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Woman

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Old-Woman

    However, all has not been lost to the commercialism of the market. I ran across this woman working hard, under a hot sun, baking the loaves of bread that Olympos is famous for in an outdoor communal oven:

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Old-Woman-baking-Bread

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Old-Woman-Bread-Loaves

    Olympos was so isolated, there are still traces of old Dorian Greek in the village dialect.

    The preponderance of women led to a matrilineal society. A women’s land and wealth were passed down to her eldest daughter, rather than son, as well as her surname. Being a second-born daughter, this still would have left me in the dust, but it’s a cool development for such a remote corner of the Balkans.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Mountain

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-White-Street

    I have a couple regrets related to Olympos:

    First, I regret listening to the people in the travel agency in Pigadia when they told me not to rent a car and drive to the village. They seemed to think the road was a bit too dangerous for my smooth asphalt mindset. I know they had my best interests in mind, but this meant the only way to get to Olympos was by a bus crammed with package tour groups who were shuffled through the village like innocent Euro-carrying sheep. We were nothing but vessels for currency to the enterprising, mustachioed old ladies of Olympos, god love them.

    To add insult to injury, I noticed that many people had made the treacherous drive in rental vehicles and lived to tell about it.

    Second, I wish I had booked a room in Olympos. Like most secretive places, the village hides it’s true self when outsiders are around, it’s only after the consumer hordes have been shuffled back onto the tour bus that the village shows it’s heart.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Village-Flower-pots

    The village streets are too narrow for vehicles, so everything has to be carried in by man or donkey. I saw men in their sixties in enviable physical shape, working on roofs and building additions to homes.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Villager

    Don’t forget your role in keeping the economy of Olympos going. You will be expected to buy and eat and drink, and it won’t take much convincing to do so. You will be told that the linens, tablecloths, scarves, etc… are handmade. They might be…by a young woman in China or Bangledesh.

    The women of Olympos pass their handmade goods down to their daughters, which is just as it should be. My mother left me a dowry of various embroideries and linens and I know the amount of work that’s involved. To recoup the actual costs of making the linens and laces by hand would mark up the cost by several hundred dollar, too prohibitive for most tourists.

    At most, the women of Olympos add a crochet border to a tablecloth, or a pearl border to a scarf. No matter though, they try to keep the illusion going to please the tourists. I was impressed by their entrepreneurial spirit too much to let it bother me. Also, by this time, I’d given up the ghost on trying to find the true meaning of authentic.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Woman-selling-Linens

    The villagers are extremely friendly. In my conversations with them, I learned that Baltimore is the destination of choice for people seeking their fortune abroad. Baltimore! Can you image leaving this for Baltimore?

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Square

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-Church

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-building

    To each his own, however. One of the old woman of Olympos sighed as she told me of her husband’s decision to move the family back to Olympos after more than a decade in America. “I wish I could have stayed in Baltimore. I’m so tired of village mentality, ” she said wistfully, as she crocheted a pink pearl border to a bright blue head scarf.

    Olympos-Greece-Greek-Islands-Karpathos-old-woman-walking

    © 2010 – 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  5. Poseidon’s Cave

    September 29, 2010 by host

    It’s been sweltering hot since I returned to DC.  Temperature was in the 90′s all week and yesterday reached 100° (38°C)!  Go figure; I was in Los Angeles for a couple of weeks in the beginning of September and it was gloomy the entire time, with the temp barely reaching above 67° most days.  But enough talk of weather, I sound like an old man.  I wanted to tell you about one of the coolest things I saw on the island of Karpathos.

    It all started with a woman named Yoti (my transliteration of her name), who works at a restaurant on the way to the beaches of Karpathos.  I can’t remember the name of the restaurant, but it had a children’s theme…Tweety maybe?  I seem to remember a lot of bright colors and cartoon characters.  This is a lesson on why I shouldn’t ever post too long after the fact.  Every sunrise makes me a virgin.  I barely have a history.  I’m like that guy in the movie Memento who had to tattoo clues all over his body so that he could remember them from one day to the next.   Feel free to tell me all of your secrets because I won’t remember them long enough to gossip about you to anyone else.

    Anyway, Yoti and I got to talking and she’s one of the coolest people you could hope to meet on Karpathos.  She has a plethora of info on the endangered Mediterranean monk seal and on the island in general.  She was filling me in on the history of the island when she mentioned that ions ago, when Karpathos was still under the Aegean, it was Poseidon’s island — his crib, his stomping grounds, his ancestral home.  ”You can see his cave not far from here”, she told me.  ”It’s the burial site of Poseidon’s family.”  This I had to see.  Wouldn’t you? Who could resist the burial site of a sea-dwelling, trident-waving, bad-ass ancient god?  None of my guidebooks even made mention of it.  She gave me rudimentary directions and I set off.

    The site isn’t far from the main town of Pigadia, but, should you choose to visit, you’ll probably need to stop for directions along the way: “Down the road about 600m then you’ll see an arrow on the left pointing up”.

    As I approached the general location of the site, I saw two women — tourists — pointing their cameras in the direction of a cave in the hillside — presumably Poseidon’s cave — but this didn’t seem quite right to me.  I hadn’t come across any arrows yet, so I continued down the road until I came to this:

    Poseidon's-Cave-Karpathos-Greece-Greek-Islands-steps

    Do you see the arrow?  Yeah, I just barely saw it myself.  The steps disappeared about half way up, but the scramble to the caves wasn’t too bad:

    Poseidon's-Cave-Karpathos-Greece-Greek-Islands-entrance

    I loved it.  Everything about it, really, but I haven’t been able to find any information on what the site actually is.  Like, what are these cubicles?:

    Poseidon's-Cave-Karpathos-Greece-Greek-Islands-cubicles-crypts

    I can see why it’s a considered a burial site, because the cubicles do look like burial tombs, but who knows?  The coolest thing though, and evidence of it’s link to Poseidon, is this:

    Poseidon's-Cave-Karpathos-Greece-Greek-Islands-seashells

    Both caves are imbedded with sea shells and other gifts from the sea. The caves are made out of them. It’s like they just rose from the sea yesterday.  I tried to get a picture of the cave structure, with it’s shells and sand, but it was really dark in there and the photo above can’t really do it justice.

    After seeing me photograph the site, the two tourists began laughing uproariously at themselves, realizing they had been photographing the wrong cave. Please note that the map below is just an approximation, as I didn’t have a GPS with me.

    © 2010 – 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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