Athens, Naxos, Paros, Antiparos, and Kifisia the easy way.
September, 2023 we returned to Eleni's motherland with her sisters and their husbands.
Upon our arrival in Athens, cousin (once removed) Christos picked us up at the airport, dashing our plans to lug our luggage through the train system. That led to lunch with his mother, Pavlina & Taki, Margarita, and more kids. A nice change from the long flight! We then met up with the sisters, who had arrived the previous day, at the hotel. I believe shopping, drinking, and eating ensued.
The next day, Sean & I took the ferry to Naxos while everyone else flew. I don't know why the ferry cost more than the flight, but it was a nicer and more interesting trip. I sat with a couple from the UK and an UK expat Aussie (randomly assigned seating).
One dinner on Naxos featured fish stew for 2 (motto: a fish in every spoonful!)
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The trail up |
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The watcher of the cave |
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Inside the cave. The colors are from growths on the rocks, rather than human painting, I think. |
There were a lot more goats in the area, but only the one that hung out near the trail. |
The view from somewhere near our lodgings on Naxos |
Then we all got on the ferry for a short trip to the island Paros. |
The front of our Paros lodging |
Our first adventure (Eleni, Sean, me) on Paros was a "secret" cove 36.9771, 25.1739. It is a little pool that can only be accessed by swimming around the point and under an arch. Sean & I did that. Actually others jump off the arch, but we are too old for that level of adventure. It's worth several pictures:
and the nearby beach (Tripiti2) we didn't even swim from because we had to go to another beach (Tripiti1) and another taverna (Glyfa) for lunch.Sunday was a good day to tour the cathedral:
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The garden outside |
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The front |
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Inside |
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Saint Eleni, easily confused with our Eleni |
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Greek version of a "red tag." Perhaps Sandoval County could use these for our more rural homes? |
Another Eleni, Sean, and John adventure day started at the "butterfly" refuge. They are actually moths, but attractive ones: |
Up close. When they fly, their wings are red underneath. |
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Bunches! There were quite a lot of them around. |
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This unfortunate person bent over to look at a sign and a cat jumped onto her back for a nap. She patiently waited for it to take a little snooze. |
The refuge was also a bit of an arboretum. There are many types of trees, mostly fruit-bearing! A nice stop, even if it was not that "Greek."Then, a short ferry ride and onto the Antiparos Cave! This turned out to be quite the tourist destination, and for good reason. At the entrance, there is a cairn garden:
At 279 feet deep, the cave was spectacular:
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If you look closely, you will see the stairs! |
Then on to the southern tip of Antiparos to see rocks, swim, and eat: |
Too rocky to swim here |
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But this was nice. The most sheltered-from-wind beach of the trip. |
In Lefkes, we found a Greek fire truck, but no firefighters:
Then back to the mainland to stay in Kifisia, visit Zina's family, and more hiking for me. A long hike through suburbs and up the mountain got me to Davelis Cave: |
There is a little chapel at the front of the cave |
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Inside are two altars. This is the newer one. |
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The older altar, with fading icons |
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Nicholas, the patron saint of the cave |
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No cave is complete without a (dead) bat. There was a live one flying around for a moment, but too quick to photograph. |
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The view from the inside, out. |
Our last adventure day, just Eleni & John, walking around the old town: |
A Greek UPS driver. Scooters fit better than trucks. |
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The Greek equivalent of U52, near the Acopolis |
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An ancient tortoise near the Acropolis |
These are my highlights. Sorry if you expected food pictures. Check out others' posts and you will likely find more.