Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Treasures of the Aegean Day 9, (June 11) - Santorini

Santorini is the most famous, most photographed  of the Greek Isles.  So much so that we pretty much knew what to expect.  We were not disappointed.  The scenery is obviously beautiful and there is a photo op everywhere you go.  We have amazing pictures from Santorini - but I guarantee you at least 95% of them were photographed in the same spot by thousands of other tourists,  just like us.  In one day.




There is nothing to speak of on the sea level part of the island.  You have to go UP.  Everything was built along the ridge of the volcano which formed the caldera that Santorini surrounds in a crescent..


There are two methods of ascent to the town of Fira,  cable car or donkey.  (The donkeys are just as likely to be mules.)

I recommend the cable car and this is why.

Experiences with donkey/mules going up and down that steep hill:


The mule (or donkey, or both)  concessions are owned by independent mule owner/operators, I think.  Some are good, some not.  In our group only 2 decided to risk the donkey because we had heard some horror stories about donkeys out of control, rubbing you up against a wall or into other people.

Our two brave people went up by donkey and had a very pleasant experience.  The animals were well-behaved and the owner supervised them well on the ascent.  They loved it, and I sort of wish we'd done it.  Bob would have been up for it but it was still an awfully steep hill.  My acrophobia  kicks in unless I am sitting, safe and secure, and sitting on a donkey doesn't qualify.  So I stuck with something more my speed.


  







Our hotel manager on the ship had an experience of the horror story variety.   She was basically put on the back of this mule and told "Go Up."  The group she was in started up and spread out immediately.  The animals weren't tied together, even though we saw another group tethered single file on our way in.  Her mule kept trying to crush her against the stone wall, or push her into other people.  It was horrendous and she was scared to death.  So much so that she walked down rather than ride those things.  She couldn't wait in the long line for the cable car for an hour because she was due back at the ship.  So she walked down.  Walking down a steep hill is very hard on your legs, particularly your knees and quads.  She said by the time she got back to the ship her legs were trembling so much she could barely walk.  But she's tough.  And young.  They recover quickly. 

If you decide to take the donkey ride, let the buyer beware.

And then there are the crowds.

Santorini has too many damn tourists.  It is the only drawback to the island.  It is so crowded because of the huge cruise ships that pull into the harbor for a few hours.   Katia called them "The Barbarians."  The Splendor of the Seas arrived around 8 AM, with its invading army.

They were less irksome in the morning because Katia got us up that cable car to the town of Fira before the big cruise ship passengers starting arriving in droves.  They had to tender in, whereas we in our small ship of 50 passengers max. were docked in a prime location, very near the cable car.
We walked through the small town Fira, gawking at the lovely vistas.  We stopped to visit a museum of Fira's archaeological heritage.  They've dug up some amazing ancient arts and crafts.


Primitive oven



Restored Fresco on the wall of the Museum

The museum was quite interesting.  There is also a big dig going on in Akrotiri, on the southern tip of the island.  That will be our last stop.  From Fira, we boarded a bus and drove along the spine of the island to the town of Oia.  Oia is where those famous pictures came from.  We did a quick walking tour then were left on our own for a hour or so to get our pictures, sit and have coffee or even a gelato.  It was such a beautiful place to just sit and people watch, I relaxed with a cappuccino while Bob went in search of the perfect picture.

Next we went back to Fira to drop off those of us not interested in going on the the dig at Akrotiri.  That was me and a couple of other old people.  After seeing Bob's pictures, I wish I had gone with them.









 I went back into Fira and that's when my mood started going downhill.  First, the downhill route we took to get to the bus now involved going back uphill.  The whole town of Fira is on a hill.  I went to the top of the hill, searching for a pack of cigarettes and couldn't find a tobacco kiosk anywhere!  I was directed partway back down the hill.  I still couldn't find it.  I'd say I walked around in 90 degree heat for at least 30 minutes just trying to find a pack of Marlboros.

Mission accomplished, I looked around for a place to eat.  I found a cute little place not on the main drag and had a wonderful lunch of moussaka.  I didn't think I liked eggplant, but in this dish it was delicious!

I finished lunch around one and started back up the hill to the cable car.  It was at this point that I ran up against the Barbarian hordes, going back to their ship.  As I pushed past the throng of people, I noticed they seemed to be in a line.  5 and 6 across, very unorganized, so I asked someone if this was the line for the cable car, and when he said yes I just kind of slid in the line behind him.  Yes, I cut into the line about halfway into it.  I stood in that line, in the hot sun,  moving forward at a snails pace.  By the time I got to the cable car I'd been in line for an hour. I was hot and tired and miserable.  My patience level had reached critical mass.

Descending in the cable car, I saw our small ship docked about 50 yards from the cable car.  As I exited I could barely put one foot in front of the other.  I staggered to the ship, and saw the line to get out to the Splendor of the Seas.  Those poor people, I thought.  Having just come out of the same awful line for the cable car, they now had to wait for a tender (lifeboat) to take them out to the ship.  Meanwhile, I ordered a pina colada and went to my private balcony to relax and enjoy the view.














Here is a tip to avoid long line to get back down the cable car.

To avoid standing in the sun for an hour or so amidst hordes of other tourists, ask one of them when is the last tender to the ship.  Then relax in one of the many cafes with astonishing views, or maybe find an out of the way garden restaurant that's a bit quieter, and wait until a little before the last tender leaves.  The Barbarians will have cleared out and you can ride down whenever you're ready.

If you can manage to visit in the late afternoon, the cruise ship crowds will be gone.  The afternoon light is spectacular, much more so that the morning light.





Friday, July 4, 2014

Treasures of the Aegean - Day 6, June 8 - A Lesson in Greek Orthodox Iconography

The day was a travel day, as we traveled back to Athens.  In the morning we made a stop at a workshop that makes religious (Greek Orthodox) icons.   I wasn't the least bit interested at the time and I had actually considered staying in the bus to nap.  But it was too hot, so I joined the group inside the workshop.  In what was another startling discovery, I found the demonstration fascinating.

We weren't allowed to take pictures of the process.  I don't know why.  We saw how they make the backing for the icon by processing paper and different woods, how the paint was laid on in layers and we saw an artist painting one.  He paints inside a mold-like pattern.  The faces of the icons are pre-determined, and they all have the same face.  The rules were quite strict.  For instance, notice in the picture below how all the faces are the same.  Icons are not meant to be realistic. .

   

And Jesus does not have the face of a baby.  He's more of a man-boy in a small body.



I have put together a short video of the workshop.  It's less than 2 minutes long, but it's got music: Just click on:


GREEK ORTHODOX ICONOGRAPHY


Thursday, June 26, 2014

Treasures of the Aegean - Day 5 (June 7) - Meteora, Greece

Our trip brochure had mentioned visiting the Monasteries at Meteora, somewhere in North Central Greece, but it pretty much escaped my notice.  I'd never heard of it and monasteries were not a subject of huge interest for me.  I had expected to be a little bored,  but fortunately I kept an open mind - I was in for a great surprise.   Meteora was amazing!  The beauty of the place was like nothing I have ever seen before.  The very fact that these monasteries were built atop these sheer cliffs centuries ago really boggles the mind.   Katia said "Meteora is the epitome of Greek Orthodox religion and Byzantine Art."


Here is one of those "boring" little monasteries!  Monastery of The Holy Trinity.



From Wikipedia, my go-to source: The Metéora (GreekΜετέωρα is one of the largest and most important complexes of Eastern Orthodox monasteries in Greece, second only to Mount Athos.[1] The six monasteries are built on natural sandstone rock pillars, at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessalynear the Pineios river and Pindus Mountains, in central Greece. The nearest town is Kalambaka. The Metéora is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List
Basket of supplies being hauled up
The basket  arriving at the top of the cliff
Byzantine Fresco restored
 This is why I love to travel.   I see things, learn things and experience things that I never would have if I never left the comfort zone of my America!   I have literally made so many discoveries, especially as I venture further outside my cultural comfort zone.    It is always an exhilarating experience, in part because it is so foreign to me, insulated as I have been in America.

We had to climb from the bottom to the top to get to the Monastery of the Holy Trinity.  Of course, I was beginning to get used to it.  The climbing, that is. After the Parthenon and Delphi, I just expected it.

Climb up to the Holy Trinity Monastery

St Stephens' was much easier to reach, and on much more level ground.   We walked around the gardens, which were beautiful!  Then we capped off the day with lunch on our own.  We chose the home-cookin' restaurant Katia recommended and were glad we did.  They run their guests through the kitchen where there are several hot main dishes simmering away on the big stove, as well as vegetables and potatoes.


DELICIOUS LUNCH

Pretty little town of Kalambaka

Little Meteora, that I wasn't even interested in seeing, turned out to be one of my two favorite stops on the whole trip!

We had another treat in store, as this was the night of the Home Hosted Dinner with a Greek family in the nearby village.  The Home Hosted Lunches and Dinners are always among the best memories of any trip with Grand Circle that I've been on.  That, and the outstanding caliber of its Program Directors.  Grand Circle PDs are the best!  Katia made a Learning & Discover folder for us, complete with nice plastic sleeves.  We had a print-out for every island and town we visited, and I just finished organizing it and studying it.  I didn't have the time (or energy) to read it before we went, but now that I've seen what we were talking about, the information are so much more meaningful to me.  I think she must have been a teacher before she was a PD Extraordinaire.



Friday, June 20, 2014

Adventures in Air Travel Hell - part 2, London to Denver/Denver Arrival

Good morning fellow jet lagged insomniacs.  I have the final chapter of our yearly Adventures in Air Travel Hell novella.

Posted from my iPhone around 9 PM (MDT on the 18th;  6 AM on the 19th in Istanbul:  We had been up 25 hrs so far.

We are sitting on the Tarmac in Colorado Springs. Denver had weather so we were diverted here. But they won't let us off the plane. We're going back to Denver. We have now missed the last shuttle from DIA to cos. How to get home? Rent a car? Letting us off here, even without luggage, would be preferable. We have been up for +24 hrs now. What a cluster f***!

We were taken unwillingly back to Denver.  I understand, of course, that we had no Official Paper Looker At-ter to examine the passports and drivers' licenses of the many of us on the plane who actually live here.  So back to Denver we went, landing at 11 PM, 3 hours late.  Passport Control/customs in Denver closed at 10, but a few hardy souls had been prevailed upon to stay and Look At the Papers.  Customs was essentially closed, but we did give that little declaration form to a lady on our way out of Passport Control.

I should give a special shout out to the folks at British Air, who dumped us in Denver without even the pretense of a customer service rep available to help us.  The crew couldn't leave fast enough - it's not their job anyway; their union says so - but the plane we came in on was due to return to London as soon as possible (it was also now 3 hours late).  They had to have gate personnel to get that flight boarded, so why couldn't someone have been called in to help those of us who were stranded?  Customer service has become an oxymoron, especially when it comes to the airlines.

Collected all of our luggage (which miraculously was all there!) and decided to rent a car.  There were none to be had, which we found out after riding all the way out to the Alamo lot.  No, that's not quite right.  Alamo had one mid-sized car available.  Unfortunately I stupidly let Bob go into the rental office instead of doing it myself.  I was chatting with a lady outside, both of us guarding our luggage while her husband went to get their previously reserved mini-van.  I looked into the office and from Bob's body language I could tell things weren't going well.  "I hope he knows this is not the time to go all Cheap Chico."
No, he did not know that.  He comes out empty handed, because they wanted $200 and that was a rip off.  In Bob's humble opinion.  I would have taken that car in a heartbeat, but I had stupidly sent Bob in . . . Never again will I send a tightwad in to do a pragmatist's job.

We took the Alamo bus back to the airport, and Bob went running to every other car rental bus out there.  Of course there were no other cars available, anywhere.   We noticed there are no rental counters at DIA, so I am guessing now everything has to be reserved in advance.  I tried to reserve on line at that point but it wouldn't take my date & time.

Plan B was to go to a hotel nearby on a hotel shuttle, then catch the COS shuttle in the AM.  We quickly heard from other stranded passengers that there were no hotel rooms available.  But a porter kindly directed us to the Chapel where he said we could sleep in more comfortable chairs or on a piece of floor.
While I waited in the chapel Bob went in search of any help he could find.  Several SUV owners turned entrepreneurs and offered their service to drive us to COS for the bargain price of $250.  Ya gotta love capitalism.

Bob found another guy needing a ride to the Springs, so they agreed to split the fair 3 ways.  Thus Bob & I arrived home around 2 AM, all for the cost of LESS than $200.  Bob must have been proud, but I was too tired to congratulate him.

Air Travel Hell - part 1, Istanbul to London

As I sit at the back of a tin can, arms pinned close to my body, knees actually a luxurious 4 inches from the non-reclined seat in front of me, I wonder once again why we accept this inhumane treatment from the airlines.  Are we cattle?  Would we accept this from any other of the “service” industries?  Why are the airlines the only industry in the word that doesn’t care about customer satisfaction?  So inconsequential is it to them that they add insult to injury by making us pay for this torture!  And pay and pay.  I’m waiting for them to charge for the toilets.

We had first class, business class and coach.  Now they have added “economy plus” for a mere $700 - $1400 more.  This buys you a little more leg room and the chance to be upgraded to business class.  I'm most sure but I think there are various class distinctions within Econ Plus.


This happened to us on our flight across the pond.  The only seats available when we booked the flight were “economy plus.”  Cost= $1400 for the two of us.  However, we were upgraded to club when we checked in.  This meant we got a bed!  A bed that lay flat!  With a pillow and a blanket!  I slept the entire way across from Denver to London.

No upgrade here on the return flight.  I tried to check in on-line but my booking reference number wouldn't work.  Probably because it was from 5 weeks before.  So anyway, we arrive at the airport in Istanbul and have to take what's available.  We did manage to snag 2 seats together, which is not longer a guarantee on British Air.

If you want to sit together, it may cost extra.  It says so right on their website.  Sure enough, there was a man trying to get another passenger to switch with him so he could sit with his wife and kids.  But the seat he was assigned was not as good as the stranger's seat next to his wife, so the stranger wouldn't give up his seat.  

In the world of Air Travel, it really is dog eat dog.


Saturday, June 7, 2014

Treasures of the Aegean - Day 4 (June 6) - Delphi to Kalambaka

5 hours on the bus!  Nice scenery, but 5 hours on the bus!  However, the arrival in Kalambaka made it all worthwhile!  Here is the view from our hotel balcony.


I'm feeling better.  Let the fun begin!

Treasures of the Aegean - Day 3 - (June 5) Delphi

The group sans me went back to Delphi to tour the ruins and consult the Oracle.  We were just there on the previous trip, so I elected to stay in the hotel and nurse my ailments.
Bob went to the site, but he was hard up for entertainment with me staying in bed all day.


View from our room
The Greek Sphinx

The Charioteer

View from Delphi

The Amphitheater


Temple of Apollo

Treasures of the Aegean - Day 2 -(June 4, 2014) On the Road to Delphi

Ever since we arrived in Athens 2 days ago I have been plagued with a runny nose.  Is it a cold or allergies?  I brought some drugs with me for allergies but had to go to the Apothecary for cold meds.  Then I got swimmers' ear from swimming in our Jacuzzi in our Bled hotel suite, and had to have our Tour Director go with me and translate.  I got antibiotic drops and a weird cone like thing you stick in your ear and set fire to.  It is supposed to draw up all the gunk in your ear.  It didn't work for me.

Thus, when we were going to Delphi I felt like crap.  We visited the Museum in the late afternoon after all the tourist busses had left and it was wonderful to be alone in the museum.  We checked into our hotel down the road in Arachova,

Our room had a beautiful view of the mountains.  The bus trip was also very scenic, so those are the posts for today.   I swore I was going to keep this blog up to date, but it is an impossible task.  We are so busy, by the time we finish dinner I'm too tired to even do email!  I manage to post a few pictures to FB but that's it.


Near Delphi

Lower Delphi

View from Delphi
Next, the view from our hotel in Arachova





Treasures of the Aegean - Day 1 - Athens (June 3, 2014)

Bob and I are now on another small ship cruise tour, this time in the Aegean.  That's a bit of a misnomer because the first 5 days are a land tour in Greece, so we're doing bus and hotels.  Then we get on the ship and visit the Greek Isles, winding up disembarking in Ephesus, Turkey and flying to Istanbul for a couple of days before we (finally) go home.




We flew in from Slovenia on the 2nd, while the rest of our tour group was coming in from the States. We had previously scheduled a Segway tour of Athens by Night, but we got the time wrong.  I thought it was at 8:30, so we walked to the Plaka, about 5 minutes away.  Our hotel, the Hotel Hera, was in an excellent location!  We found a nice restaurant near the Segway office, highly overpriced by delicious none the less.  About 10 minutes after we ordered (sea bass for me, veal for Bob, plus 2 very large beers), Bob walked over to the Segway office (1 block away) and found out the tour was at 8 and they were ready to go NOW.  What to do?  We agreed to pay for our meal, then come back and eat it after the Segway tour.  Not good.  Then Bob asked if we could reschedule for the next night, and we could so we did.

We were a group of two on the Segway tour.  We saw parts of Athens we hadn't seen before and in general had a rollicking good time.









Friday, May 16, 2014

Athens - Day One

Athens from the air

The Parthenon at night, viewed from our hotel
We arrived in the evening and only had time for dinner.  Tomorrow the vacation starts, as we get a tour of Athens, free time to explore further, and then we're off to the coast to embark our small ship, the Artemis.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Beautiful - Surprisingly Beautiful


EasternEurope to the Black Sea - Vidin, Bulgaria

I never dreamed I'd see Bulgaria, or that I would even want to.  As a child of the 60s, all I knew was it was part of the USSR, they were Communists and it was all controlled by the Russians.  We hated the Russians.  Turns out, so did the Bulgarians.  

Now they are free, but struggling with a poor economy and no real industry.  They are trying to develop tourism, since they are right on the Danube, and close to the Black Sea, but the area is not well known.   Our riverboat made two stops in Bulgaria, at Vidin and at Ruse.   In Vidin we visited a mosque, right across from an Eastern Orthodox church  The imam didn't speak English, but he did speak Italian.  Our Program Director, who is Romanian and speaks no Bulgarian, found an Italian guide who spoke English. Voila!   


Vidin

The translator and the Imam
The Imam was dressed in normal street clothes, which I found a bit surprising.  He looked so normal, and he sounded perfectly reasonable.  I think he must be representative of the "good" Muslims who don't want jihad.  He spoke of the declining numbers of people of faith, in general.  In Vidin, the Jews were gone, the Muslims were going and the Catholics were barely hanging on.
What's left of the Jewish Synagogue

After our visit at the Mosque, we walked down to the Baba Vida Fortress.  This fortress was begun in the 10th century (900-999 AD, ahem) and took 400 years to complete.  It was an important fortress on the Danube protecting northwestern Bulgaria from the Turks. Unfortunately, in the late 14th century the Turks won and for the next 500 years Bulgaria would be an occupied region within the Ottoman Empire.  They ruled Bulgaria for 500 years, leaving it a strange mixture of East and West.

Baba Vida Fortress on the Danube
The Ottoman influence kept Bulgaria from developing as a Christian European State.  On  the  other hand, a religious awakening of  Christians in the late 19th century broke the hold  of the Turks over the area and in 1908 Bulgaria  asserted its independence.




Here is the link if you didn't get it as the title:
https://plus.google.com/photos/+LindaHarward/albums/5981889022647814177