Greece – The road to Naxos

Crete was not made for sleeping! I was exhausted before, and the thin walls, early morning booming music and late nights were catching up. I had everything crossed for Naxos to provide some peace. If I could get there – the weather warnings were out in force, and not knowing what the ferries were like I didn’t know if I’d be going anywhere! However, after escaping to Rethymno the previous day (see Greece – A Cretan Introduction) the storms never arrived and, email in hand, I set off for the port (easily walkable from Iraklion town).
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A huge car ferry awaited me – a new itinerary according to our Airbnb host – which goes to Naxos via Santorini and Ios over about 4 hours. The seats were comfortable, the aircon cool and best of all, there was soya milk for tea! The first hour was really choppy, and my headphones couldn’t drown out the noise of people vomiting everywhere, but fortunately it did settle down. The first stop was Santorini and it was really cool to see the famous cadella and the hike up to the town which awaited me next week!

Arrival into Naxos is really cool with the temple of Apollo standing proudly on it’s own islet surrounded by sea which is the kind of blue that lets you know you’re on holiday. My guesthouse was slightly out of the town up along a cliff-edge dirt track in Grotta, which perches on the precipice overlooking the town and sea. It is beautiful. My room at Magic View was gorgeous with a shared terrace overlooking the sea, comfy bed, fridge and bathroom. Not bad for €20 a night. The host, Maria, couldn’t do enough for me including letting me have a late check out for free and lending me a little water heater for my morning tea. I spent the day wandering the gorgeous town, looking round the supermarkets (of which there are many) picking up some bits for brekkie – including soya milk and yoghurts – yay! I checked out the options for the next day including a daytrip to Delos and Mykonos for €50. I decided to book it as the good ol’ LP described an amazing world heritage site, even if it didn’t include lunch. I tried to find the travel agents where I had seen the trip and got completely lost! I found the cathedral, dead-end alleys and staircases that literally led nowhere, it was like the Labyrinth!
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I found it eventually, and celebrated with a lovely dinner of stuffed peppers and butterbeans whilst the burning red sun dipped in the sky. As pure coincidence, the seat I had chosen gave me the most amazing view of the sun through a tiny window of a church on the harbour! It just felt like I was meant to be there – a truly meaningful, breathtaking moment.

 

 

 

Day 2Daytripper – Delos and Mykonos

Day 3 began with a leisurely breakfast on the terrace whilst scouring the LP for the best way to spend my last day. And reportedly no trip to Naxos would be complete without an excursion to Filoti and Halki.  The bus was due at 11:30 from outside the port, so I wandered down and bought a ticket from the office on the opposite side of the road (you can’t purchase them on the bus). There was quite a group waiting, I hoped they weren’t all doing what I was doing.

The plan was to get the bus to Filoti, wander round the town and then walk down the slope to Halki and get the last bus at 4:30. The journey was epic! Amazing scenery, old remnants of churches dotted about, wild hairpin turns with sheer drops, all at 50 mph! We stopped along the way to pick up some folks. There’s a really great moment between the driver and the passenger; the passenger holds out their ticket as they board, and the driver rips it and keeps half. Its such a brief and yet established bond that requires both parties to uphold their part. I love the intimacy of it. The lady next to me was signing crosses at every sharp turn – I hoped this wasn’t based on previous experience!  She got off literally in the middle of nowhere with 3 large bags – where was she going?!? Another lady got on and started having a long conversation with the driver and handed him a packet which I thought were photos. I assumed they were related or something. But later I realised that he was delivering letters for her! Driver slash postman! Brilliant.

Filoti was pretty but small. The museum and church were both closed, and after walking 10 minutes in each direction and sampling a delicious orange juice I’d run out of things to do! I did have a lovely chat with an elderly chap called Zos who told me that Naxos doesn’t have tourists, it has family. How awesome is that?! I did find these though:

I felt lots of eyes on me, which may have been my short shorts. My shoulders were covered but I guess a fairly provincial town might have quite conservative views. I would dress respectfully if you visit. My bad. I also was aware of how the locals communicated – via horn! 1 beep for hello, 2 for how’s it going and 3 for see you later!

I started my ‘descent’ to Halki, all 2 kms down the main road with no pavement. Its pretty enough with its views of mountains and fields, but be warned the cars drive at any speed they want – usually break-neck! About halfway down I spotted a sign pointing towards a narrow lane that I thought translated as ‘Halki 15 minutes’. So I thought, why not? It took me past some very old dilapidated houses, and church and a farm, where I stopped to have lunch in the shade of an olive tree. As I carried on walking, the lane split in 2. The right was a dead end. And the left took me into a field full of sheep! I was a bit scared at first, til I remembered ‘oh right, they’re just sheep’. But the path just turned into gravel and I couldn’t see where it led. So I went back to the road. And was in Halki in 15 minutes! Coincidence??dsc_0629.jpg

Now the LP said that no trip to Naxos was complete without a trip to Halki. Well I hate to be a party pooper but mine wouldn’t have suffered without it! It was a very cute village with some lovely shops and restaurants, but it was tiny. I think its a great starting point for some walks, and I tried to follow a few paths, but being alone and climbing broken bridges and piles of nettles, I quickly admitted defeat. So I settled for some delicious traditional orange cake instead.

 

The bus home was rammed and had an extremely loud Canadian girl talking about all her adventures. To celebrate my time in Naxos I went back to the first restaurant with the setting sun and had a goodbye fish supper – but I couldn’t eat it as they were babies and all had heads on! So like the Pied Piper I delivered fish and squid to all the neighbourhood cats! Probably the best dinner they’d had in a while!

Naxos was a truly magical experience, so warm and homely. The people were all wonderfully welcoming. You could just enjoy getting lost there! Ferries run from Crete, Ios and Santorini 3-5 days a week and start at 18 euros. Accommodation and food were very reasonable. A daytrip to Delos and Mykonos is 50 euros and departs most days from the smaller harbour next to the ferry port. There is also a bus tour around the island for 25 euros. All available from any of the tour offices in the town and all offer similar prices. I recommend staying in Grotta as it is quieter and an easy 10 minute walk to the town. Naxos felt safe as a lone traveller. This definitely belongs on your ‘to do’ list.

Greece – A Cretan Introduction

DSC_03192 weeks of island hopping ahead, where better to start than Crete, with its prolific history and antiquated beauty? I knew nothing about Greece, having only stopped overnight in Athens en route to Cairo once in 2010. So I was hoping to explore, learn and eat everything I could in the time I had there. I admit I was a little nervous about backpacking alone (it has been a while) so I took a friend with me for the first bit to ease me in gently!

Arriving in Hania (Also Chania and Chani – this happens a lot in Greece) – easy, actually. After a slightly delayed – and slightly boozy flight it was simple to find the airport bus waiting right outside (buy your ticket at the little booth before boarding). Its roughly 30 minutes to the bus station, and with a bit of help from Google maps we arrived at our beach hotel, and most importantly, the beach! After the longest GoT winter at home the weather was gorgeously hot and not a cloud in the sky! We grabbed a couple of free sun loungers and promptly passed out, our pasty bodies soaking up the heat like hungry lizards. Hania seafront is a lovely little road (currently being re-tarmacked) dotted with the usual hotels, restaurants and little news agent-type shops that always hold some secret and fantastically foreign treasures. We found gin-in-a-tin which was a fab way to keep the party going until the sun slinked behind some lowly clouds and it was time to find some dinner.

We wandered up towards the pretty little harbour to a busy but sedate restaurant overlooking the water for a fabulous dinner of seafood and salmon (no veggie options here unfortunately) and were given a free dessert too! This, it turns out, is very common throughout Greece, and part of the laidback, rather drawn out experience of eating – there’s no rushing, you should expect to be sat for at least an hour and a half and will usuallybe given a dessert or a shot of raki (local grape-based aperitif that tastes like petrol) or both! I believe it is supposed to aid digestion rather than get you drunk, though I can’t say it did a lot for my stomach!

The next day we trekked back to the rather modern bus depot for our next stop of Iraklion (Heraklion, Iraklio) which is the ‘capitol’ of Crete. For €15 a comfortable coach took us along the winding, mountainous roads, stopping at undisclosed but apparently locally known bus stops along the way. Some of the places looked beautiful! Iraklion was busy with traffic and tourists compared with Hania, but it was reasonably easy to navigate (ish – there’s a few twists that throw you) and we found our Airbnb apartment on the coast road. We checked in and went exploring immediately which included lunch in the tourist area I would usually avoid. But I have to say my veggie risotto was delicious and it was genuinely delightful to sit in the shade of a huge tree and watch the world do its thing circling the Morosini fountain, which is the main hub. We meandered around in the sunshine stumbling across the usual old churches and relics of all European towns and culminating with a walk out to the fort with a melty ice cream!

For dinner we may have got a little bit tipsy and wandered into the buzzing hipster quarter of the town around Al Greco Park. Again no veggie options but I have to say the €7 moussaka was incredible! On our way home we stopped for water (and possibly more wine) and ended up having a hilarious drinking session with Vlad, a Russian shop owner who was clearly keen to make friends for the night. He had a little stash of raki and something made from bergamot which was delicious, and every person that entered was initiated into our private drinking club! Brilliant, random fun – if you’re ever there please go say hi from us and see what I wrote on the wall about Jesus! (it made sense at the time).

With sore heads we left the next day to explore Knossos, the Minoan capitol of Crete which houses the ruins of the legendary palace built in 7BC. Supposedly the palace was designed so that once you were inside you couldn’t get out!

dsc_0374-e1528458682269.jpgIt is also the basis of the myth of the Theseus and the minotaur. It was reconstructed – rightly or wrongly – by a Brit called Arthur Evans, and this allows you to get a real sense of the place which was eventually destroyed by earthquakes. It is definitely worth the 30min bus ride and the entrance fee – as is the archeology museum which you can buy for an extra euro. (The museum is in Iraklion town, don’t ask to visit at Knossos because they look at you like you’re crazy!). The restaurant there was surprisingly good value too, and no tourist day out would be complete without browsing the tat shops on the way back to the bus stop!

 

 

 

 

Our evening was spent at the not-as-trendy-as-it-looks Café Mar on the seafront, just west of the fort. Its a great place for sunset and the drinks were large and the food tasty. Although we were the only ones in the place drinking anything other than coffee! I know that the drinking culture in Greece is cavernously different from the UK’s obliteration ethos but still, it was Saturday night! So we took full advantage of the giant-sized sangrias and the veggie and vegan options which were not half bad. I recommend it for a chilled evening out away from the tourists.

The next day was filled with weather warnings arriving from the east, so we decided to try and outrun the storm by heading 1 hour west to Rethymno, a simply gorgeous place right on the Cretan sea with a tiny beach, sprawling waterfront and beautiful cobbled streets meandering behind the hipster cafes. Along the way through stunning surroundings of fluorescent pink and yellow flowers against stark grey rocks we kept seeing these clusters of coloured crates. They almost look like beehives or chests of drawers. We couldn’t work out what they were for – I’d love to find out!

Its hard to know where to start with Rethymno’s abundance of qualities: Sipping cocktails by the water’s edge, men fishing by the lighthouse, groups of lazy 20 somethings lounging on sofas drinking coffee, the ominously-looming old fort overlooking the town. Best of all for me – wandering round the old streets not knowing where you’ll end up or what you’ll discover next. Every corner seems to unleash more beauty than the last. A truly stunning part of Crete that deserves a visit. You have to go, you have to!

Crete is easy to get around, friendly and inviting. It was a great launch pad for a trip around the Cyclades, which is what I chose to do. Travel to and from Athens is possible, as well as the Dodecanese and daytrips to Santorini. If Greece isn’t in your top 10 then you’re gonna need a new list. It just gets better and better.

Next stop – Naxos!