Thursday, September 15, 2011

taking care of "business" in the greek islands (folegandros)

"Are you conducting business?" our friendly hotel manager asked us as we huddled over the hotel's laptop and our ipad for an hour one morning.  "no", we replied, "just booking our ferry and hotel for the next island. "  after talking to her about the islands and our trip, we explained that had we stopped working for awhile to travel. initially, she was confused by this, then, nodding her head, said "ahhh, you were fired."   a good guess, i suppose, but no, not exactly.  in a way, i suppose planning the next leg of our journey qualifies as our business these days and, i think, why we'll look back at this as one of the high-water marks of our lives.  

Someone wrote that "Literature is made out of the misfortunes of others. A large number of travel books fail simply because of the monotonous good fortune of the authors." fortunately for us, unfortunately for the salience of any blog post, greece has been uneventful and blissful but, by no means, boring.

The nearest brush w/ drama came on our first day in Folegrandros as we walked through the peaceful town square.  A young man quickly walked by with a rifle slung over his shoulder. A few minutes later, enjoying our personal sunset happy hour on our hotel rooftop, gunshots rang out, then more a few seconds later.   This sporadic gunfire - some bursts lasting 15 seconds and no more than a few hundred meters away -  continued for some time.  This was slightly disconcerting - from our vantage point, we made good targets from anywhere in town.  We could also see that no one seemed to care.  Later, our waiter explained  it was a typical wedding celebration and no cause for alarm.  Based on the gunfire, which lasted well past 3am, the party was a success. 

Our other business here consists of:

* Choosing which of the ~8 beaches to go to (via bus or scooter).  Some require a hike. once we misread a sign, which meant a 2, rather than 1, hour hike.   That was a bit chafey but we chalked it up as a training exercise for our kiliminjaro hike in december.  The simplicity of the island is summed up nicely by the daily bus schedule.


matt - hard at work

*Choosing whereto have dinner among the charming tavernas serving local fare.  The food has been a highlight since we both love greek food dating back to college when cath worked as a waitress at a greek restaurant in philadelphia to help pay tuition; i ordered a lot of gyro platters delivered from the charlottesville institution, college inn.  Highlights here include the traditional Greek fare - spanokopita, moussaka, feta - and local specialities like rabbit, goat and seafood, featuring whatever-the-fisherman-caught-that-day.

octopus: it's what's for dinner

* Choosing our next  island - cath's mom and szymon are coming to visit for a week, which is surprising and wonderful news, but we'll need to find a place that's relatively close to athens, is peaceful and gives then a good taste of the islands. after considering naxos, we settled on milos. cath and i will hit naxos afterwards .  the search is complicated because some islands shut down towards the end of september.   our hotel in folegandros, for example, is closed for business on september 26th and won't reopen till april 2012.    

matt - pondering life's great mysteries



So this September, we'll pass days filled with sun, swimming in crystal clear waters, sometimes to rocks (i invented a new stroke - its a cross between a backstroke and breaststroke and, i must tell you, it's pretty awesome), reading (kindle for cath;  ipad for matt), happy hours and sunsets. rinse, repeat. 

My little sister, Heather (aka "miss mev") is an experienced and fearless world traveller who was an inspiration for our trip. she's never had much need for a nine to fiver (she once traveled alone through india and thailand for 9 months and leads independent tour groups to india) .  I remember her response when i was complaining (again) about my job. She smiled and said "my wish is for you to get fired" as she figured it would be the only way we'd have the freedom to do something like this.  Happily, we took the initiative and fired ourselves, temporarily anyway.     

1 comment:

QuiteLucid said...

You must go to Santorini! Best sunsets on the entire planet in Oia!