Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Delicious Dinner in Ditropos


Last night (Monday) we had a great dinner out in the country, at Mourtero (near Ditropos on the south side of the island), where our hosts from 2006 live in a kalivia they are doing up (we stayed in their house – called Cypress House - in Skopelos Town). Kalivias are cute little two-level goat farmers’ huts (OK, what’s a two-level goat farmer you ask?); the goatherd would have lived upstairs in the low-ceilinged single-room dwelling, while the goats would be safely locked up at night in the winter in the even-lower-ceilinged downstairs bit. (This paragraph is being sponsored by the hyphen).

These days they are being done up and freshly whitewashed (mostly by British people, by the look of it), improved with electricity and running water, stone verandahs, swimming pools and modern plumbing to bathroom and kitchen and being rented out in the summer. No goats downstairs. Surrounded by small parcels of land, these lovely little country houses have fruit trees, olive groves and peace and quiet away from the bustle of town.

Robert and his partner Stephen have done up one kalivia and rented it out and are now doing a second one next door and living in it as they renovate. We met two Australians who are in Cypress House this year and a woman visiting from Dorset, and had a splendid meal comprising mostly produce from the boys’ garden. We talked about the possibility of house exchanges and minding their rental business for them sometime if they need to return to the UK. One way or another, we reckon this won’t be our last trip to Skopelos.

The longest day




THE LONGEST DAY

One of the early things we learnt on Sunday was that it was Fathers’ Day in Europe. We heard the Sunday 7am long and loud church bells (we lost count at 40) then dozed again. Then there was a church service. Not that we had to attend physically because the good priests of Skopelos broadcast the beautifully sung service from nearby Christos Church (which is quite famous but quite small) through the loudspeaker, next to the bells which are almost in bed with us. What a lovely Greek touch, you don’t have to attend church, but it will attend you.

We phoned Frank, Marj’s father, and had the bonus of brother Chris being with him. It was 3 degrees in Canberra overnight.

One of the things we learnt was that Giorgos (pictured above with us) was heading out fishing at 5am on Sunday to procure Fathers’ Day dinner. He is Zoe’s father (see photo of three year old Zoe below), Jill’s husband and Gloria’s son-in –law. We were invited for a fabulous fish feast on Sunday night (see photo of fabulous fish above).

We procured cakes from the bakery for dessert.

Another of the things we learnt is that Sunday was summer solstice- the longest day. We learnt this from a woman on the beach who had been on the beach last week too. She is very loud, very opinionated, very large, very brown, very tattooed, very bikinied, and travels with a small considerably less loud, less opinionated, less large, less brown, less tattooed, less bikinied group of friends but perhaps very embarrassed friends. There would only be two hours of darkness on Sunday in Inverness, the lucky place that she calls home.

One of the things we really like about Greek beaches (or the ones we gravitate towards) is that it does not matter about nationality, age, size or shape. People of all nationalities, ages, sizes and shapes come, wear what they want to (and it’s often very minimalist and on a non-minimalist body), soak up the sun, and the beach generally emits a broad hum of pleasure. Usually there isn’t just one loud voice dominating a small beach but, rather, a harmonious buzz of enjoyment. It was a bit different on Sunday with a loud voice that managed to clear most of the beach by 3pm.

The beach is a natural amphitheatre. Her conversation, laced with eff-ing this and eff-offs swept over all of us and up the steep rocky walls of the small piratical cove we were sunning ourselves in. She is probably in her mid-forties. We learnt that she had a mobile phone deal when she arrived in Greece two weeks ago which provided 600 free texts. She has sent 300 so far. She is happy with her legs (“my best feature”) and her feet. A companion mentions her hands, and she is happy with them too.

However, she was not happy on Sunday. In fact she announced that she was very grumpy. The pale, quiet boyfriend (with her) was apparently not attentive enough. (He is busy playing English music from a portable device; drowning out the Greek music emanating from the nearby taverna.) As well as that, the water was too cold, the day was too hot, the stones were too sharp, and said boyfriend would not share a Greek platter with her at the beach taverna. (By the way, the stone archway featured above which is at the entrance to the taverna was on the Mamma Mia set up the hill and reconstructed here as a permanent feature)

Between moans, she works loudly on the remaining 300 texts, telling those at home what a great place Skopelos is and what a great holiday she is having and how she is saving to come back next year. The day on the beach was long enough for us. We exited at 3pm.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

IT’S NOT AS COLD AS BOURNMOUTH






The two photos above show Agnondas. As I lay on the beach there on Thursday with my eyes closed after swimming in the clear blue calm water on a warm, warm day a conversation floated my way. It was two rather strong female English voices.

Voice One (as she was entering the water): oohh….aahh….ooooohhhhh…...aaaaahhhhh….ooooooohhhhhhh…aaaaaaahhhhhhh…..

Voice Two (on land) : Come on, so how cold is it then?

Voice One: Well, it’s not as cold as Bournmouth.

I don’t know too much about Bournmouth water temperatures in summer or winter but I reckon Agnondas on Thursday would have been much warmer than Bournmouth!

Other conversations also float by. At about 5pm in the afternoon, words and conversations start rising up from the town below. It begins like an orchestra tuning with odd words from the houses to the left, then some from those on the right, then some from the middle group, and then some from behind. Sounds rise and fall from rows and rows of houses and alleyways below and above. The performance commences somewhat discordantly and then just like an orchestra it develops a beat and rhythm and life all of its own, and then a fusion of conversations which usually peak in our natural amphitheatre just before the evening bells start tolling loudly. We now know that the 6.15pm Wednesday bell is to celebrate being alive. It’s not a saint’s day or anything- just a rowdy reminder that we are lucky to be here. Our neighbour at the back Evangelia, a youthful seventy plus we surmise, is part of the Greek chorus- she has a circle of friends who sit on their steps in the early evening and chat and chat and chat. As part of our tenancy we were asked to water the geraniums and gardenias on our front balcony but mid-chorus the other evening Evangelia told me very forcefully (in Greek, with hand signs) to move them all to our little back verandah, which is sort of her front yard, where she will tend to them. We moved them and already she seems to have worked a plant miracle or two. (See two photos in the middle)

On Friday morning we headed to nearby Stafylos- Bas’ prints needed further drying so we let them have the morning to do that. Some photos at the top show the ‘through the toe’ Stafylos view and another view from the lunch taverna.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

TWO VASILIS, TWO SWIMS, A POTTED BASIL, A FISH AND A DUCK








While the bad parrot has heightened our awareness of omens, the ‘potted basil’ featured was a central positive omen yesterday as we boarded the Oceania to head to Alonyssos a protected marine park. Not only did we have a basil in the pot but two Vasilis on board, as our skipper, next to our Vasili in the photo above, was also Vasili.


When we arrived on Skopelos this time, Steven (who met us at the port and was part of the landlord team-with Robert- at Cypress House last time) invited us to join 4 friends on the charter so we did.

Check out http://www.aegeo-sailing.gr/ukaegeo1.htm

So we were at the port on Wednesday morning at about
10ish to join the expedition with one other visitor, and 5 other (now) locals who have relocated to Skopelos from different parts of the world and from amazing and varied careers. Our group included a nuclear scientist/project manager; a former professional flutist (now based half the year in Vienna and half the year In Skopelos restoring an olive grove); and a 30 something oil rig trouble shooter.

It was a near perfect day for sailing (we used some motor) and the water was perfect for swimming. It was so salty and buoyant, you didn't really have to move your arms or legs.

The pictures tell a story- blue, blue clear water; spectacular swimming bays; another taverna and another lunch. We ate the fish (skorpina) and did not eat the duck.





Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Time for a shot of the chief blogger

Just realised we haven't shown you a pic of Marj for a while, so here she is at the back steps of our house (that's Evangelia's place with the green shutters behind). We are just setting off for the day you have just read about...swimmers on, art gear in back pack, geranium watered (no, not this one - that's Evangelia's responsibility- we water the one on the front verandah).

Beautiful Bougainvillea everywhere

This one's out of sequence, although we have to go back through Skiathos in a week (sniff!) on our way home. What a place! Marj has been doing such a great job on the blogs while I've been earning us a living up at the studio (a little dream of mine, sorry!) that you haven't heard from me much lately. I found this one amongst M's pics and thought it needed posting. I'm just finishing up after another day of hard work in the studio, so it's time to have a shower in the two foot by two foot curtainless cubicle using the hose- with- no- head (a little Greek plumbing problem we have, if anything here could be called a problem when you're having a nice time in paradise) and then it's off to another taverna for dinner.
Watch out for Marj's next report...all about our big day out on a sailing boat tomorrow!

IT'S ALL ABOUT GREAT PLATES





There are great plates all around really. The top one is the taverna plate at the Glisteri taverna on the beach welcoming us for lunch; then there is a plate of the best Skopelos goat in Skopleos and a plate of the best Skopelos egglant in Skopelos . Then there are the great plates (ready for more printing) in the current Skopelos edition.

We've survived another day of a slowish start, studio drop, me to beach, him to plates, me to studio to collect him for lunch and afternoon beach and then back to the studio.

Last night I also survived the very friendly and glamorous Russian hairdresser who came to Skopelos 14 years ago for a holiday and stayed. Her son now also works in the salon. It opens for typically Greek business hours-6pm-10pm weekdays and all day Saturday. The scene is no appointments, you just turn up, join the queue and watch with interest as everybody, men, women, young and old 'get done'. It's a small salon and there are no magazines so everyone seems to take a keen interest in whatever is happening at the hands of the hairdresser. My needs were translated from English into Greek and Russian and had a little international sign language thrown in for good measure. My Wella colour card from Darwin (provided by my hairdresser) has translated into a slightly bolder red as it did 3 years ago.

The road works to the beach have continued with no obvious pattern but plenty of emotion between the road gang and with road users.