Greece, 30.Sep.2025, Tuesday

Today was a day mostly away from history and culture. We went out on a catamaran to see the gorgeous Greek water, a particular wish of Eli C’s.

First, however, Rick and I got up in time to see the sunrise from the Venetian harbor of Chania. 

A man and his coffee cup 🙂

Eli W decided to stay back from the boat trip, he’s not such a swimmer and he really wanted to explore the town on his own. He said he had a really nice day exploring the old town and found a pair of linen pants that suited the hot weather. 

Eli C, Kaziah, Rick and I went, meeting up with 4 other people and it was just a treat of a day.

Below is our catamaran from the top of Fort Gramvousa – I’ll write about that in a bit. Our boat felt quite sizable when we were on it, but next to the ferry pulling in and unloading a ton of people, we look tiny. Rick and I climbed up, but Kaz and Eli wanted all the swim time possible. The water is wonderful with so many different hues of blue. 

Our first stop was the Balos lagoon, whoops, I forgot to get any pictures. But Kaziah did. Here’s Eli reveling in the warm turquoise water.

We swam to the lagoon from the boat and played a bit around the boat, had lunch on the boat which was great and then continued to Gramvousa Island. Ok that island did have some fun history to add to our day of leisure.

The Gramvousa Island fort defended Venetian trade routes and was also a strategic base in the event of a new Ottoman-Venetian war for Crete.  Greeks fled the Ottomans on the mainland to Gramvousa and Gramvousa then became a hive of piratical activity that greatly affected Turkish-Egyptian and European shipping in the region. During that period the population of Gramvousa became organised and they built a school and a church. The church was called Panagia i Kleftrina and was dedicated to the wives of the pirates. Only pirates were allowed to enter. The pirates did have a code they lived by – they only stole food and cargo/money, but never killed anyone and always left the boat to the sailors/passengers. 

In ancient times the island was known as Korykos, which means leather bag. The island was renamed “Gramvousa” in honour of Vousa, the wife of a pirate chief and the only inhabitant of the island to evade capture when the pirates were forcibly removed in 1828 by British and French ships after Greece gained independence and had naval support from Britain and France. 

Currently there’s a caretaker who lives there with his wife and 2 kids (not an extravagant life) because he likes the isolation. Tons of people get off the ferries during the season, but then free! 

We went out to dinner that night at a place Valentini had suggested for “authentic Greek” that Kaziah directed us to. Unfortunately, we’re not authentic Greeks so it wasn’t a successful meal except for a couple of amazing appetizers, but cats were coming around and I wanted to give them Rick’s fish. It didn’t have sauce and would have been benign. To the family’s dismay, I took a chunk and dropped it to the cat looking up at me with pleading eyes. We were sitting on the porch next to the sidewalk, so we were outside. Then there were 2 more cats. We had worried about that. I then read online that many people took their left overs and gave them to the stray cats that were everywhere. The family wouldn’t let me do it. Not sure why. 

The next day, we asked our guide about this situation. She said yes, people give food right in the restaurants and take their left overs for stray animals. We saw signs in the old city of Chania near restaurants saying please don’t feed the cats, we give them the food at the end of the night. I didn’t see a single cat that didn’t look well fed and they looked healthy too. 

When I looked online to see what it said about Greece and cat culture, it supported this idea that they’re cared for and appreciated. “In Greek culture, the regard for cats is a mix of ancient respect for their utility and independence and a modern appreciation for them as a beloved and ubiquitous part of the landscape. Cats have served as pest control, symbols of luck and resilience, and companions cherished by locals and tourists alike.”

It was a treat of a day – again! 

Note on corruption – wow, completely consistent, these people do not have any regard or trust in their government. Cristos who drove us to and fro the catamaran said that these current protests for the rail accident are small, but continuing. He’s friends with the lawyer who represents the parents of the victims.  He’s seen crowds of a million in Athens and 10,000 in Chania protesting this accident and the government coverup. Legally and politically, once you’re in the system you can’t be touched. So even if they knew directly whose pocket has the money that was supposed to fix and update the trains and the signals – they couldn’t touch them. But they’re continuing to try.

Greece, 28.Sep.2025, Sunday

We got to sleep in a bit today. Surprisingly, everyone was still up and at breakfast by 7:30, with Eli W being the first one up!

We decided to meet and walk towards the Agora, going through the Plaka area, the old city with shops, coffee shops, restaurants. I led the way, repeating my walk from a couple of days ago. 

We started down through a street completely clogged with a Race for the Cure run. A 5 K that had 1000’s of people streaming up from the metro to join the start in the park. How totally fun to be able to see the gathering start from above before we left for our walk. I hope they raised a ton of money!

Hard to imagine now, with 4.5 million people and modern streets and incredible history, but 200 years ago when Athens started to rebuild after the Ottoman Empire was ousted, there were only 10,000-12,000 residents. Europe had helped Greece oust the Ottoman Empire and put a king, King Otto, from Germany in place. He rebuilt the city, making Athens the capital of Greece.

We walked along narrow streets, ending up in the wonderful neighborhood of Anofiotika. This cool neighborhood was built into the hillside below the Acropolis. In the 1840s expert masons, stone-workers, and builders from the Cycladic island Anafi signed on to construct a royal palace for the new King Otto and to help excavate archaeological sites around the Acropolis. A law at the time stated that if you erected a building between sunset and sunrise, the property was yours. So working at night, using the traditional Cycladic building methods they had grown up with, these builders fashioned their homes right below the monument they were excavating by day. The new locals called their neighborhood Anafiotika, which means “Little Anafi”.  This little neighborhood is just wonderful, tiny lanes, tiny sidewalks, a wonder to walk through.

We then walked down through the Plaka neighborhood, just below and curving around Anafiotika. There were shops, restaurants, houses on a sleepy Sunday morning with people going to church and visiting family. Rick, Eli W and I continued onto the Agora to listen to Rick Steve’s tour (for me again, always learning more). Rick wanted to see where Aristotle taught – yep, here in the Agora!

We then walked back, circling the Acropolis as I had done the other day, but MUCH more efficiently, getting back to the hotel in about 30 minutes. We did see Socrates’ Prison. Turned out this was a name given to the space, I don’t know that Socrates was ever here, but the Greeks hid the treasures from the Acropolis here when the Nazis invaded, cementing up the wall in front of the caves. And it worked! Saving many treasures. I thought I had photos of Rick in front, but nope, don’t know what happened. Here’s the plaque and a photo. 

Back at the hotel, we rested our feet and then walked out again with Valentina – a guide taking us on a food tour of the Plaka. Oh my goodness, so good and so much fun! She was full of stories and enthusiasm about food and Greece and Greece’s history. 

And did I take photos? Hmm, not many. Valentina took a bunch of photos and is sending to me, I along with the names of where we went, what we ate, etc. 

This was a stop, Ergon, for 3 kinds of cheese, 2 kinds of meat. All of them were originating from Italy. The Greek creators lived in Italy, learned a specific item, then came back to Greece and made it Greek. Sheep and goat milk instead of cow, spices added to the meats specific to Greece, etc. 

The family who started this restaurant/store was a couple with two young boys who had a market stall. When they were ready to sell, the brothers decided they wanted to grow the business. Their parents were already known for selling the most pure cheese products, meat products, vegetables, etc. So the the brothers decided to stay with this theme and traveled the country looking for small farmers, entrepreneurs specializing in the BEST feta, the BEST ham, the BEST mushrooms, etc. They then enlarged the space and started serving a small cafe as well as the store. They grew, started a second store, then built this restaurant store, decorated by the most famous Greek street artist. 

In the background, they were also quietly doing work with their producers, teaching them how to market, set a logo, disseminate their products etc. Helping many in Greece get the word out about their unique products. They did not advertise anything about this foundation sideline, but work got out. And their fame and name grew. 

Our next stop was for Greek coffee. The cafe off the Maria Callas museum, and it was wonderful. Turns out in order to make real Greek coffee, it has to be heated over hot sand cooking in a copper pan until bubbles rise in the small cup and once the grounds in the bubbles are skimmed off and it’s almost at a full boil, it’s turned off. You can add a bit of sugar, but NO milk product. That would be horrifying. 

This tradition came from the Arabic traders who brought the beans to Greece. Evidently (according to myth/fact) one of the nomadic traders wanted to have coffee during the day, not just in the evening when they had time to cook it. They only carried copper pots and he realized between the metal and the heat of the sun, he could bring water and coffee grounds hot enough to make a great coffee. Obviously, not a lot of cows traveled with the camels. A final note was that it was to be sipped, not tossed back. No, no – there’s mud at the bottom! Rick said it was amazing coffee.

We did make one church stop – the little one that I’d seen before next to the giant cathedral, built in the 1000’s, maintained and we got to see inside. It’s tiny, but simple and wonderful. The family rolled their eyes that I managed to get in a church viewing even on a food tour. But just one!

We moved way too fast for Eli C – he loves all the items, would have been very happy to have way more time in the stores. But, hopefully, when we come back through after Meteora, we can go back and get some products. Like halva (sesame paste, so pure, incredibly good), honey, oil, spices. He’s going to need another suitcase 🙂

We had eaten our way until 5:30 and we came back to the hotel and that was it for the evening. Eli C went out for one more souvlaki, but the rest of us were ready for a chill evening. However – there was a big event going on outside our hotel and I watched it build from 5:30 until it ended around 9:30.

We’d gone by the parliament building and had seen the flowers, candles and a tent set up outside the building. We learned that this was an ongoing protest about a train accident from 2 years ago and this week, one of the fathers of the one of the young people killed had started a hunger strike protest. 

It was kind of bizarre to see the soldiers marching in front of the tomb of the unknown soldiers in the midst of this sad protest. But they continued their march. We had seen them marching in front of the president’s house yesterday and had noted the kilts, the pompoms and the piece of black material hanging down from the hats. And tap shoes? The steps were incredibly precise, I’ll include a video. I knew that the kilts had 400 pleats to recognize the 400 years of Turkish rule that was overthrown, starting in 1827, fully recognized and borders drawn by the European countries in 1932. But the pompoms and black piece of fabric? Valentina told us that every piece of the uniform and the march itself were symbols of the war of independence. 

The slow loud march of the tap shoes was because that was part of the guerrilla strategy against the bigger forces of the Turks – making them think there were more soldiers coming their way than there were. The black material indicates the mothers’ tears for all who died. The pompoms were part of what people wore on their shoes in the days of revolution. They weren’t allowed to carry weapons, so they fashioned pompoms as “decoration” but in fact they were designed to hide daggers. Here’s a video of the march in the midst of the protest.

Back to the protest: I went online to get specifics on the protests – they’ve been ongoing for 2 years since the accident – and have grown huge again. Today, with the father of one of the university students who died having started his hunger strike and the people in the city for the race, there was a huge protest on the steps of the parliament building. When I searched online, the first article that popped up was from NPR from February and it’s now September and the protests are still going strong.

https://www.npr.org/2025/02/27/g-s1-50918/greece-train-crash-tempi-protests

It was sad and impressive and I very much hope they get answers and accountability. Valentina said they had the money to do the necessary repairs that the train unions had been advocating for, but the money went into someone’s pocket. She also said the families of the students who died have become a strong network with a lot of public support. 

I watched throughout the evening, listening to the songs, trying to get google translate to decipher the speakers’ messages – didn’t work except for brief random sentences. 

Then, vacationers that we are, Eli W, Rick and I also watched the second episode of this season’s Great British Baking Show. 

Greece, 27.Sep.2025, Saturday

The family made it in last night by 10, very tired, staggering, but happy to be here. 

We had a wonderful breakfast to start our day. They have a great buffet here, looking at the Acropolis and Parthenon and then we met our driver for the tour at 8:30. The morning was perfect weather wise. We met our guide at the Acropolis. Turns out there were 7 ocean liners in today, rarely happens, plus it’s international museum weekend all across Europe, so it was free entry, and this negated the tickets that had already been arranged. Babis – our guide – got in line at 7 this morning with 40 people already ahead of him and it still took him 1.5 hours. He was so nice about it. 

So there were a lot of people and it didn’t even matter. Babis was a great guide, so easy, knowledgeable, it was a treat exploring with him. Eli W was able to ask all the questions he had related to his prior knowledge, very fun to see and hear. I’m not going to write about the history – biggest impact was the astonishing fact that there’s anything standing at all given the ways in which the building has been damaged, but it is completely impressive despite Lord Elgin stealing an enormous amount and putting it in the British Museum. 

We went to the Acropolis Museum next which is truly a feat of design, mimicking to the exact footage of the Parthenon on the top floor. They have put the original pieces in the same place on the pedestals on top that they were on the actual building. They put in white all the pieces the Elgin stole and left blank wherever a piece was completely destroyed or missing and can’t even be approximated. 

Babis had another group, had to run another gauntlet of tickets and people so we offered to let him go after the museum instead of doing the rest of the city – we’d already run over time. He recommended a restaurant in the Plakas area and we got dropped off there for lunch. It was so cool to be sitting outside in Athens with the family. 

We walked back to the hotel, everyone took naps (I read and wrote this) and then we walked around the National Garden, just two blocks from the hotel. Eli C is continually enthralled with the trees – and some of them are huge!

We ended the day with a meal that sent Eli C into ecstasy – it was incredible, the same restaurant here in the hotel that had so surprised me on my first night. They made a table for 5 on the balcony so he and Kaziah were able to watch the sunset behind the acropolis and have incredible food – the rest of us saw it too, by turning to look. Beautiful!

Greece, 26.Sep.2025, Friday

I know I’ll probably repeat some of today with the family, but needed to do some walking so took my earbuds and phone and walked a couple of Rick Steves tours. They’re so good!

When we were here 8 years ago for my sister’s and stepmother’s birthdays, I didn’t do either of the walks I did today and they were great. Ended up walking about 9 miles which was more than I expected, but I saw a lot!

One fact that stood out today was that there was a big schism in Christianity. A note from AI: The Schism between the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches occurred in 1054 with the event known as the East-West Schism. This formal break in communion was the result of centuries of growing tensions, political and cultural differences, and theological disagreements between the Western and Eastern branches of Christianity. The formal split was marked by the mutual excommunication of the Pope of Rome and the Patriarch of Constantinople. 

I never thought about it and why the Orthodoxy practices are so different. The churches are so elaborate and gorgeous. Evidently, practitioners are supposed to stand, thus the many things to look at, but very few chairs for only older practitioners. 

Anyway, I looked at the first walk, Athens City and it started 350 feet from the front door of the hotel. Clearly meant to be. Between 2500 years of history (he does know how to pack it in), the cool perfect morning weather and the interesting sights, I had a wonderful morning. 

At the end of the biggest pedestrian shopping mall is this gem. The Church of Kapnikarea, built in the 11th and 12th centuries. I love these kinds of juxtapositions. 

The next stop was the big cathedral, built in 1842. The only reason I’m including this is because the archbishop here in WWII was incredible. He was a rare Christian leader who spoke out against the Nazi’s and protected the Jews as much as he could. They threatened to put in front of a firing squad and he joked they should hang him instead. After the war, he was the caretaker prime minister. Pretty amazing. The statue of him was erected by Athens’ Jewish community as a show of thanks. 

I then continued with the tour around Athens, winding up through a wonderfully tiny neighborhood in the back of the Acropolis that I wondered if I’d find again. Can’t wait to be there with the family. 

I came back to the hotel, to cool off, and get a hat and drop the over shirt – it was getting hot. My plan was to do the tour of the Agora, the ancient home of democracy. I was telling one of the bellmen my plan and he told me to go to this neighborhood in the back (different back) of the Acropolis for lunch. Off the beaten track. Cool, I’ll do that. 

We’ll, the Agora was great, though the entry was not marked and was all the way on the other side from the Rick Steves directions. But I did find it, following a French couple who were also wondering if they’d ever find their way in. 

Ach, just looked at my photos, really impossible to convey the enormity of this open-air plaza where people actually voted and help their senators accountable. So many cool places, here’s a view of the Acropolis from the Agora. They used to march in a parade from here all the way up once a year, a great spectacle taking a newly woven robe to Athena in the Parthenon. 

After I finished the tour, I decided to try to find this neighborhood to the right and back of this view of the Acropolis where Georgia told me to go. I was watching my phone’s battery and using GPS as sparingly as I could. And I walked. And walked. 

I ended up in great neighborhoods, saw parents waiting to pick up their kids and then a market that was only locals and went for blocks. I was definitely the only tourist in the midst so just took one snap. I then continued with the tour around Athens, winding up through a wonderfully tiny neighborhood in the back of the Acropolis that I wondered if I’d find again. Can’t wait to be there with the family.

I then finally gave up on finding these small plate restaurants that he said were great and started trying to find my way back. At one point, I was in the midst of land with no people in sight and I had no idea where I was. This was wide open in the midst of Athens! On my map it said I would pass Socrates’ prison – I wanted to see that. I didn’t see that. 

I did see this burial spot of Thucydides – amazing to know this name and his history and here he was!

Then I suddenly hit a beautiful cobble wide walkway, ok, I must be getting closer to something I’ll recognize.

Whew, ok I recognize something (the Acropolis)and think I can find my way back if my phone runs out. 

Yay, so happy to eventually make my way back to the hotel. I realized I did an entire circumnavigation of the Acropolis adding in many different areas. Loved getting a real sense of the space and how the neighborhoods work. 

Greece, 25.Sep.2025, Thursday

I wanted to explore with the family, so went on Viatours to find something that would be a day excursion and found a boat trip that went to three islands. It looked like a sailing boat from the ad, but nope, it motored, but it had these crazy big cushions that every one sat on for and aft and we just motored along. The weather was perfect, I had a good spot with a fair amount of sun protection (it’s hot!). I read two parts of two different books, chatted with a few passengers and had a very chill day. 

This was a sister boat that went out at the same time. See how it looks like there would be sails?

We had three stops, I walked out and back at the first island, Agistri. I had thought I’d rent a bike, but it really was just the shoreline and then I would have been riding up into hot and arid hills, that didn’t really call. But I had a decent walk and the water was beautiful. 

This is coming into the island, so pretty, with the classic blue and white church at the center. 

The second island, Metopi, was just a stop for a swim. I did jump in, I’d brought mask and snorkel, but there weren’t any fish. However, the water was a perfect temp, I was really hot after walking on the previous island and it felt great. This island was a small rock and protected (though I don’t know what was there to be protected, so dry!), so we just were in the water for maybe 30 min.

The last island was Aegina, known for pistachio production. They had all kinds of pistachio products, but way too early in the trip to buy anything and I’m not wild about pistachios anyway so didn’t try any (“they’re so fresh!”). However, it did have a totally cool temple and monastery. Two other women and I shared a taxi for a set fare and he got us up to both places and back to the boat in time. 

Even though it was just a tiny island, evidently Aegina was a serious maritime trading site. The Temple of Aphaia was the precursor to the Parthenon. Just unbelievable to see this temple at the very top of the island with views everywhere. You couldn’t help but  think about who did the work, ach, but it was truly beautiful, built between 500 and 490 BC.

The nymph Aphaia was thought of as the daughter of Zeus and was only worshipped here. So curious how these things evolve. 

We did a quick hit and run to the monastery, truly beautiful and huge. It looked so well maintained and had an amazing balcony with balustrades all the way around which caught the breezes and was so cool. Even a monk with full robes would be comfortable!

This was the Chrysoleontissa Monastery. (Copied from internet) According to the local tradition, Panagia Chryssoleontissa was originally built in the coastal village of Leonti, which was, however, very vulnerable to pirate incursions. After being raided and laid waste no less than three times, it was decided in the early 17th century that it should be transferred to a secure location away from the sea.

Legend has it that, for three consecutive mornings, when the builders returned to the construction site, their tools, left there since the previous night, had disappeared. Instead, they found them at the exact place where the monastery stands today. So, the monks decided that this should be the chosen place.

In its present form, the complex is square and includes a crenelated tower built in 1601, and the primary church (called the katholikon), which was erected later on, in 1808. Situated in the center of the courtyard, the convent church is dedicated to the Dormition of the Mother of God, Saint Dionysios, and Saint Charalambos.

Built to protect the monks from the pirates, it is 20 meters high and has three storeys. With its characteristically high walls, turrets, battlements, and narrow windows, it looks more like a fortress than a monastery. The place also features a huge garden and six chapels.

Having played an important role in the 1821 Greek War of Independence, in terms of both spiritual and financial support, this is also a place of great historical significance.

Up to 1935, it functioned as a male monastery. Since then, it has been a convent, housing about 10 nuns. Don’t ask me how 10 nuns can keep it up. 

I guess this pathway led up to the chapels and the housing. Just gorgeous.