Saturday, September 4

The Southern Ionian Islands

Greece was not quite what I had imagined.  Glossy tourist brochures had seduced me into thinking that clusters of whgoing-to-greece-santoriniite-washed houses with cerulean rooftops would be typical of the island villages, and although this is the case on some of the islands in the Aegean (Santorini, at right) the architecture is quite different elsewhere. 

Although I like to think I don’t have preconceived  notions about the places I travel to for the first time, this is mostly due to not having done any homework.  Unlike the serious travelers who do their research in advance (and probably get a lot more out of their experience), I am happy to make my discoveries as I go.    

But although I had to slightly readjust my vision of Greece, or at least this southern Ionian part of the country. there was much to be appreciated.     

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  Leaving the port of Lefkas, we passed through a channel that had originally been dug under the reign and direction of Cleopatra.  The story goes that a major skirmish was fought over Lefkas and that when Cleopatra’s troops went down in defeat, their commander abandoned them to run off with his lover, the Queen herself.  The worse we had to cope with was wondering whether we would beat this big motor yacht through the narrow channel opening (marked by red and green buoys).

 

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First night on board the Maya was spent anchored in a quiet bay, sleeping on a narrow, sloping platform to the left of the hatch absolutely not designed for the purpose.  Impossible to roll over without involving MFB.  By early morning the sheets were clammy with humidity  but waking up to the exquisite sound of Greek Orthodox plainsong drifting across the water was worth all the discomfort.   

 

 

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Depending on which side of an island you’re looking at , the landscape is either dry and rocky, or green, but always mountainous.  The last major earthquake to strike the area, in 1953, caused extensive damage, completely levelling many villages. 

 

 

The Dutch are well represented here – most of the sailboats we encountered were flying the colours of Holland, including us.  Jos, our friend and skipper, is a big Dutch guy with a bigger personality, with a talent for getting himself into – and out of – sticky  situations that would fell most ordinary mortals.    IMG_3915 

See that little dinghy near the bow of the boat?  Well, the outboard motor quit with 4 of us sitting in it the night before and just my luck to be sitting too close to Jos’ right elbow as he yanked the starter cord.  I have always promised myself that I would get myself a straighter, smaller nose if ever it needed to be repaired, and thought for a few star-crossed moments that my opportunity had arrived. 

Next morning we sailed to the port of Sami and Jos, never one to wait around for anyone else, decided he’ll haul the motor onto the quay to do a little fixing.  What he neglected to consider is that when you’re in a moveable object and you lean one way, your  moveable object goes the other way.  By the time anyone realized what was happening, Jos was in 25 feet of water and going down, stubbornly clinging to his motor.  MFB mounted a rescue, nearly landing in the drink himself, but Jos and motor were both saved, dried out, and made functional again.  Mythos beer is the celebration drink of choice. 

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Sailors get snarky about their parking spots.  We had been told off at an earlier port for having inserted the Maya into a space considered much too tight by the boaters on either side, who launched an energetic volley of Italian at us amid much throwing about of arms.  Our skipper tried to placate them but they were having none of it, and a few minutes later, a man on a scooter pulled up on the quay.  He was clearly an official of some sort, with a serious-looking badge on his nicely-pressed blue IMG_3835shirt, so naturally we invited him on board.  Under the glare of the neighbouring Italians, we adopted our most ingratiating behaviour until a closer examination of the badge revealed that it said not ‘Greek Port Authority’ but ‘Family Restaurant Tomorrow’.   Not a word was said about our moorage, and our expansive relief resulted in a reservation for four at 8. 

Next day it was our turn to be shamelessly hypocritical, raising objections as the  sailboat (above left) manoeuvred between us and the sleek yacht in the background.  To no avail. 

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There were, nevertheless, advantages to having Italians as neighbours: the language is a delight to hear, and the men….well, there’s a lot to be said for their sense of style.  Sometimes a girl just has to sit back and enjoy the view.   Greek men, I’m sorry to say, are not as pleasing to look at. 

 

 

 

 

 

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On the way to Nydri, a piece of hardware at the top of the mast gave way, and once we were in port, a repair operation was mounted.  MFB, volunteering his lesser size and greater knowledge, was hoisted up the mast, secured by two ropes and three nervous crew.    After it was all over, he admitted that his only previous experience – as a thirteen-year-old – had resulted in his being dropped on his head during the descent. 

  

 

 

 

 

 

The food was always good.  I love tzatsiski, saganaki (fried cheese), stuffed vine leaves, and feta.  Eating out is cheap and portions are very generous.  The four of us shared appetizers and two main courses, and with wine and coffee, our total bill was usually under 50 Euros.  All the ports we visited had restaurants lining the waterfront, and while the views weren’t always as good as the one below, the ambiance was always lively.  

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Although there has been much in the news recently about the sagging Greek economy, it’s evident that Greece has always been a poor relative to the more prosperous EU members like France.  Abandoned construction projects are a commIMG_3879on sight, as is the neglect of lamppost alignment.  The government has  sent forth an army of tax inspectors to ensure that shopkeepers and restaurateurs issue receipts to their clientele.  The income tax coffers are now filling up nicely, thanks to a 1700 Euro fine that discourages businesses from operating ‘under the table’.

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Daughter Anne arrived midway through the week, fresh from the other side of Greece (the part with the white villages and blue roofs) and quickly dubbed the Maya the ‘ESL Boat’.  With English native to only two of the five crew, there was a lot of ‘what did you say?’s” 

 

 

Miscommunication is never a good thing, and especially in winds like this one (below).  The sails of the Maya were so taut that we couldn’t reef them in to reduce our tilt.  Two of us loved it, two were slightly apprehensive, and one went below deck to stick her head under a pillow. 

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This beauty easily won the prize for Most Elegant Boat. 

 

 

 

A few random Greek scenes.  An early-morning fisherman.  An old lady filling up a wine barrel with sea water.  I managed to understand that she wanted to use it for drinking water, but I couldn’t figure out what she was going to use for a desalination system.  MFB explained later that she was simply using sea-water to expand the dried-out wood, thereby tightening the metal rings around the cask, at which point it would be refilled with fresh water.  Ah.  I wish my brain worked like his.   

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On the last day together we climbed a big hill to a resort hotel and spent the afternoon recuperating in front of this view.  There are worse ways to kill time. 

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A last tranquil evening in the port of Spartochori.  But wait, how did we miss the news about the end-of-summer party on Zulu Beach?             

I can’t remember why sound carries better over water than land, but I can confirm that it does.  At 3AM, I lowered the gangplank and took myself over to Zulu Beach to ask the party-goers to turn down the volume.  Let me put it this way: that music could have kicked waterboarding out of its spot as the CIA torture of choice.  I’m open to a lot of different kinds of stuff – Turkish pop, marching bands, Russian male choirs,  bagpipes, Gavin Bryars and the occasional heavy metal – but never have I heard anything that so strongly suggested the pain of having nails drilled into one’s head.  The supremely unco-operative Greek fella in charge of the sound system grudgingly promised to tone it down, but it took him an hour to find thIMG_4209e right button.  

Early next morning we walked up to the village to have breakfast in a Greek pizza joint specializing in omelettes.  With an distant island that might  have been Ithaca in the background, we watched an early-bird sailor head out to sea.  This part of the world isn’t known for its strong winds, and it’s more common to see sailboats under power than sail.   

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A little bit later, it was our turn to lift anchor and head back to Lefkas and the dry-land part of our Greek holiday.  Even though I wasn’t looking where I was going, we got there in one piece.

 

More later! 

 

28 conversations:

  1. Oh you lucky woman - with the man you love sailing through the Ionian Isles. True splendor on the seas! Thanks for sharing these great photos that document a bit of your travels. Simply wonderful!

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  2. I congratulate you on having the sense of adventure and the patience to make such a trip. Really. For some reason I feel very strongly about keeping my feet on dry land. I've done the occasional bay tour in numerous water-adjacent locations but the idea of getting out in the middle of big water on a glorified raft gives me the heebie jeebies. So, you rock, Matey!

    The stories about the space hogs and the acoustically egotistical that you encounter along the way only point out how crowded the seas have become, along with the wilderness camping areas. Going to a national park is like going to Jellystone nowadays!

    Welcome back and felicitations on a lovely family/friend vacation on the high seas. I hope to follow in your wake by car, I want to do a Shirley Valentine pilgrimage but take along my own private Jules!

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  3. Wow, what a great trip. And the pictures are superb. I really like the idea of fried cheese, too. It sounds like you had a great time.

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  4. I'm floating around now, buoyed by your travels, feeling breathless and excited and enriched from every word you wrote. When Jos and the engine started going down, I got a bit of a lump in my throat--but, of course, your Belgian saved the day. In fact, most of the references to your man bring to mind my man, and so I feel certain they'll get along fine one day when we meet. HaHA to that idea, eh?

    Glorious travels, Deb. Can you even believe the life you live?

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  5. Golly, going from Glacier to Greece in the space of a few short months, you are just galivanting around gloriously, giving us great views of places we might not easily see otherwise... an ode to your travels in G major !

    And I seriously admire your MFB for getting himself hoisted up to the top of that mast, there's no way you'd get me up there !

    Looks like you had a fabulous trip, though I hope the sleeping quarters got better, not nice to try to sleep on a slope...

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  6. Thanks for sharing some lovely moments. I still carry dramamine tablets in my purse, just in case we end up on a yacht. It used to happen frequently when we lived by The Med. Sigh.

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  7. I've been waiting with eager anticipation to hear about your trip - and was not disappointed!
    You don't mention which islands you went to so I was struggling to work out where you were until you mentioned the earthquake - Kefalonia right? I hope you read Captain Corelli's Mandolin while you were there as it really brings the history of that Island to life.
    So - do you recommend sailing? I've never sailed and would be a bit scared of it - the mechanics, finding berths etc.

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  8. It's good to hear the realities of cruising around the Greek Isles. My ex-brother-in-law lived on a boat for years, and I thought I would not be able to do such a thing, it was so cramped in the cabin. And he was a big fellow! But what a beautiful trip.

    I "sailed" (on a ship-tanker-thing) from Brindisi to Athens in 1975, and we marveled at the inefficiencies on the Italian end and the efficiencies on the Greek end. I wonder if that was a fluke.

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  9. Wonderful and so enviable.
    In spite of being populated by Greek men the islands are a magical world and to be sailing in such tranquil
    seas can only be bliss.

    May your luck never run out.

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  10. Am I lucky, Bonnie?? Yes, yes I am, but I made some good choices too!! ;)


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    Ms. Pliers, you have my sympathy for your antipathy to water. I admit that I have experienced a little nervousness on the one occasion that land was nowhere in sight (not on this trip) but otherwise I am quite at home on the sea. My stomach isn't always, though.

    The thing about the noisemakers was that they were Greeks and probably locals, and I was very conscious that I was an interloper in their land. I wouldn't have much appreciated some tourist telling me to pipe down in my own back yard.

    I think you'd do more than one-up the original Shirley. That's an adventure I'd love to see you do!

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    Fran, really, if you'd give it half a chance, fried cheese might just replace ice cream and chocolate in your affections.

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    Jocelyn, no I can't. These adventures come about in such an ordinary way, and the fact that most of them are initiated with a ride in a car makes them seem kinda ordinary sometimes. But yeah, I pinch myself a lot.
    We're going to have that meet-up!!

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    Owen, I am agog with admiration at your alliteration - and that's as far as I'm willing to go considering the hour.
    Like I keep saying to people, these are road trips, right? You know what it's like to be able to drive to three different countries in one day! Thanks for coming along - I'll be catching up with you soon.

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    ER, that made me laugh. There are some who might consider your admission a bit prententious - but you never know when the opportunity might arise! I find myself being a bit apologetic about the fact that we have friends with a boat. And it's NOT a yacht!

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    BB, yup you got it. It was indeed Keffalonia, and also Lefkas and a smaller one that I forget the name of. Nowadays you have to have a sailing licence to operate a boat just about anywhere in the EU, except for France. I would not have wanted to do what we did without somebody experienced on board, and even with two relatively seasoned sailors, we had our moments. Mooring can be tricky, and the last one we did as a team was pretty disfunctional - so much so that my daughter (who knows nothing about sailing) pronounced that particular experience 'terrible'.

    I loved CC's Mandolin, and might re-read it now that I've been there.

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    Ruth, I couldn't do the romantic thing and go around the world on a boat. We have some friends who spent 7 years doing that and I just marvel that they are still sane, and still together. After a few days I really miss having headroom and my comfy bed!

    I think the Greek part is not flukey - they seemed to know what they were doing, although after two weeks in Greece, Italy began to look more civilized.

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    Friko, I take it that I haven't missed much by not having any personal experience with Greek men. You'll have to tell me about that one day...

    I just make the right decisions - nothing to do with luck! (Touch wood)

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  11. I have always wanted to go to Greece--limited number of blue-roofed sparkling white houses notwithstanding. Despite your best efforts, you have done nothing to change my mind. I laugh at "Family Restaurant Tomorrow" and love the elderly woman soaking her cask with salt water so that it would hold fresh. Those are the details that make a trip. Thanks so much for sharing them! (And glad that your skipper and your Belgian are all right after their adventures in water and up mast)

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  12. I'm paying attention to everything you have written, Deborah, because one day Astrid and I want to take a holiday in Greece. How and where is yet to be decided! It does always sound so idyllic, doesn't it. When we get to that point in time, we will make sure we ask you any questions we might have. :) So glad you are having this experience of a lifetime, I assume.

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  13. Sounds like an absolutely magical voyage and adventure. Can't wait to hear more..

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  14. Ahoy, matey!

    This looks so freakin' fabulous, even though I'm mildly terrified at the thought of spending even an hour on a boat that is subject to tilting this way and that and is vulnerable to capricious winds.

    I'm guessing that you were the one below with her head under the pillow during said winds. Yeah, that would be me as well. Only I would be screaming my bloody head off! Drowned out by the pillow, of course. Oops, I forgot, drowned is not a word one wants to hear or think about when traveling by boat.

    Yeah, those Mediterranean countries like to start their parties about 11:00 p.m. and go on until the wee hours. I've heard tales from the hubby about the ones in Benicarlo, Spain.

    There's a reason why all the big cruise lines have Greek sailors as captains...they know their business!

    Awesome travelogue, kiddo!

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  15. Deb, what struck me the most was you getting hit in the schnozzle.
    Youch! Being hit in the nose for me turns me into a crying puddle for some reason-it seems like an achilles heel for me.
    Suggestion: stop wishing for an excuse to have your nose done--the universe will keep trying to give events to complete your wish.
    I found your post very real- the ups and downs of traveling, of life that happen to us all. You didn't try to sugar coat it. That said it sounded like it had some glorious moments.

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  16. I'm so jealous of your trip! But, not so jealous of the view of the short shorts. Thanks for the laugh!

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  17. There's no other way of saying this: your photos are stupendous! Many thanks. Even if Greece wasn't as you imagined it to be, still, your pictures convey so much beauty.

    Greetings from London.

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  18. ds, should someone offer you a ticket to Greece, I suggest you take it immediately. The topography alone is worth the trip and I discovered that the islands are the least of it!

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    Ginnie, it was certainly a first for me. Even MFB, who had the advantage of having access to all these European delights all his life, had not been there before. I would definitely go back again!

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    Marcie, there's magic everywhere you go, if you're open to it, right?

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    Dear Susie, well, well, another little nugget of info about you. This is where we're not totally compatible, I'm sorry to say. It WASN'T me below deck - but the skipper's wife, who gets extremely anxious when the angle of mast tilt goes beyond 5 degrees! Tho' amazingly enough she never gets seasick, which has been my problem a few times.

    We're making plans to do it again next year, but in a chartered boat. Guess you're not interested...


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    Hey Maggie! It's a joke, really, a remnant of my childhood dislike of my profile that I'm over. Mostly! Glad you appreciated my take on Greece - there's more to come.

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    Ms. Serena, welcome!! I really thought there would be more comments about those shorts, which looked a lot like expensive Italian underwear to me. At least he had the physique to wear them...

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    Cuban, thank you, thank you. My technique is the time-honoured one of taking 100 times as many photos as I should, in the hope that one or two will turn out. I have occasionally been taken to task for living through my camera lens instead of just enjoying the scenery first-hand.

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  19. de magnifiques photos qui attestent de vacances inoubliables. J'aime particulièrement le premier cliché .

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  20. It occurred to me the other day as I was reading your post . . . that reading about your life, a woman I've never met, but I feel like I know. It's as if you are pleasant and interesting new acquaintance. I look forward to new posts to read about what you have been up to and also more, your writing about thoughts that are close to your heart.

    Your holiday sounds amazing. Out on a sailboat in Greece. Enjoying the sunshine. How civilized is that? You have kept summer going for me a while longer. It's already starting to get chilly and rainy.The start of school always signals the rain and clouds to come rolling in. Enjoy you holiday!

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  21. Oh SO beautiful! What a wonderful tour guide you are!!!!!

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  22. This is a lovely account of your vacation, and some great photographs. Thank you.
    Has your reading list included "Prospero's Cell" and "Reflections of a Marine Venus" - both by Lawrence Durrell? These 2 travelogue/autobiographies give a view of the Aegean and the Greek Islands - dare I say it - before the trippers took got there!

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  23. You are indeed a wonderful travel guide. I also love your photos.

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  24. What a lovely trip and your photos are stunning. I have been in many ships but not a small ship like that - that sounds more like an adventure than my trips. When I was in Greece last it was November so there were not many tourists and it was not too warm. It was great though because I was alone and had a great time - the food is indeed fabulous. I did buy some wool in Rhodes and knit almost 1/2 shawl. On my flight to Paris I took the knitting and worked on it - then forgot it on the plane! I still had half of the yarn left so I bought some more in France and made stripes. To this day I have this long shawl scarf, dark and light grey stripes. Actually I take it with me on trips and use it on my shoulders or as a pillow. I have it here while on this trip to Savannah.

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  25. I want to go on vacation with youuuuuuuu. What an incredible adventure. I have thoroughly enjoyed this sail through the Greek islands.

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  26. Somehow I almost missed this incredible post! Wow, what a nice vacation. Being on a sailboat is my idea of getting away. I had the good fortune to sail through the Hawaiian islands many years ago on a small sailboat. If it were not for life intruding, I would still be on it. Thanks for all of the pictures. Greece is on my bucket list. Can't wait to hear more.

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  27. [url=http://seexi.net]Не понимаю,что это со мной [/url]
    Помогите советом, очень нужна поддержка. Мне 26 лет, замужем. Так вот, случилась у меня неделю назад задержка. Ну особо я не припаривалась, поскольку до этого принимала Диане-35 и решила, что это как-то связано с отменой...Тем больше, тест с самого начала показал одну полоску всего. А сегодня решила сделать еще один, для самоуспокоения...А он лестный!!! Вроде и новость не из самых плохих, какие бывают, и благоверный рад.... А мне как-то не по себе...просто до слез почему-то(((( Учусь в ВУЗе заочно (получаю второе воспитание), не работаю. Как сейчас я буду учиться: все экзамены сдают, а я с пузом или же хуже - рожаю. Искала работу - сейчас никто не поймет...Вроде надо как-то веселиться и готовиться к материнству, а ничего этого не хочется. Как себя настроить на неплохое? Как успокоиться?

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  28. Deborah, started with part III then worked backwards. I never made it to Greece in my back packing travels and, ever since the movie "40 Carats" (remember that?) I've wanted to visit. Your article and photographs have intensified that desire.

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