Europe
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Lisbon
We did a walking tour of the old city of Lisbon, including the spectacular gate to the city built after the 1755 earthquake. I had seen a lot of the city the day before so took a bus to Sintra, a beautiful medieval town with a palace on top of a forested hill, when kings used to have their summer homes. On the way back to Lisbon, the bus stopped at Capo da Roca, the westermost point on the continent, on the Atlantic Ocean. Here the bus broke down so we waited a couple of hours in the sun for a new bus to come for us. We drove past…
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Lisbon
I finally flew in to the most western capital in Europe. It has a gorgeous setting, where the Tagus River meets the sea, on seven hills. The taxi driver dropped me at the corner of a cobbled street, pointing out my hotel a couple of blocks down, and the scent of warm garbage wafted through the heat (garbage is everywhere). The hotel’s location is perfect, there are outdoor restaurants for blocks on pedestrian walkways. There was a wine tasting at my hotel (“white” or “red” were the choices) that I attended, then strolled along the cobblestones until I found a place with a television outdoors. I had a shellfish and rice…
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Spain and Portugal
Air Canada how do you stay in business? My flight to Toronto left 90 minutes late, my flight to Frankfurt apparently left 90 minutes early so I guess it didn’t matter. No communication, no explanation, no apology, no customer service. Oh, except for the $10 meal voucher that covered half my meal. I ran into Kirsten Karwandy and son Mike here, he works for Air Canada poor thing so they are travelling standby, and will likely get on their way before I do. They were hoping to fly to Rome but are more likely to get to Paris first, so will take the train to Italy for a three week…
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Leaving Santorini
The next day I moved on to a hotel in Fira, the main town on the island. I have a beautiful little family run hotel with a pool, two blocks from the main square, for 40 euros a night. This was an amazing find, as you can spend $000s on hotels here, if you want a cave with a caldera view. There are many shops here, some very high end ones for the cave and cruise ships crowd, but also more mainstream ones. Two of my new friends from the group and I had dinner at a restaurant on the edge of the caldera to see the sunset again. Its…
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Santorini
We had to leave our beautiful little town the next day, by ferry then two buses to the major centre of Iraklion or Heraklion (many places have two or three different spellings, and thats just in English). Just outside is the biggest tourist draw in Crete, the Palace of Knossos. This is the partially reconstructed ruins of the advanced Minoan civilization, from a few thousand years ago. The improvements are controversial, since a hundred years ago an Englishman made these additions based more on his imagination than fact. That night after a three hour meal with raki and two desserts showing up unordered, a few of us ended up…
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Loutros
The next morning we were off by ferry to the tiny tourist town of Loutros. It can be reached only by boat, in a spectacular setting on the side of cliffs leading down to the ocean. There is one commercial street on the oceanside, the iconic white buildings with blue shutters. It exists only for tourists, and shuts down in the winter months when rains and cold weather settle in, but now it is hot in the day and still very warm at night. Tourist season is coming to an end but we have lots of company, including many Europeans who trek here along a mountainous route covering the south…
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Hania and Samaria Gorge
6 am docking at the town of Hania, where we did a walking tour around the harbour and commercial areas before we could check in to our hotel. The old town here has ruins left from Venetian and Turkish invaders. It`s apparently a late night party town also. While at breakfast, a loud, drunken and very good looking group of locals knocked over their table and left piles of broken glass, then drove off on motorcycles. And we had previously been told that the Greeks don’t really break plates when they party. We have noticed that a lot of the young men here are really well built. They don`t have…
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Napflio
The next day we moved on by bus to the former Greek capital of Nafplio, known as the prettiest town in Greece. Along the way we stopped to see the Corinthian Canal, built in 1870s, with no locks, just all at sea level. We also stopped at Epidavros where among the ruins is an ancient theatre seating 14,000, with acoustics so excellent that from the top we could hear a coin dropped in the centre, or a member of our group badly doing a Celine Dion imitation. On arrival in Napflio, a few of us climbed legendary 999 steep steps (actually a few less than that) to the fortress above…
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Delphi
The next day we set off by private bus, along winding mountainous roads, for the town of Delphi. This tiny town is built beside the famous ruins thought to be the navel of the world by the ancient Greeks, and known for the Oracle of Delphi. The oracle is actually a place, not a person, in the Temple of Apollo, where fault lines in this area of frequent earthquakes released a gas that was inhaled by a woman from the town, who then gave a prophetic answer to a question posed to her. The gas contains ethylene, which made her very perceptive, which I interpret to mean probably just got…
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Meteora
Moving on from Athens, we travelled six hours by train to Meteora in central Greece. Its name means in the sky, and is so named because of the 24 monasteries built on top of huge rock formations where they seem to be hanging. They were built six centuries ago for the monks to escape persecution, and until only a few decades ago all supplies and monks were hauled up with ropes, pulleys and nets. The ropes were only replaced when they snapped, since this was felt to be the way God intended, so some of the monks may not have made it all the way up. The scenery is fantastic. …