My flight home is booked to leave Athens at 5pm, so I have plenty of time to visit both the museum in Piraeus and then carry on to central Athens to see the new exhibits at the Acropolis. I check the weather forecast and apart from possible thunder and lightening, the wind speed is showing only 16 knots for Friday morning - a stiff breeze but nothing too vomit inducing. The hydrofoil should be able to skim the waves. So when I am awoken at 1am by the fir tree in the garden banging against the wall, I first assume it is something inside the house. It proves how dependant I am on my iPad these days that I first click on the weather icon to reassure myself that it is not windy before I get up and look outside to confirm that the weather app is lying about being updated on an hourly basis. I hardly get any more sleep as the anticipation of a bouncing around inside the hateful metal tube for 2 hours keeps me awake. By 6:50 I am on a suspiciously empty quay waiting for the 7:05 departure, trying to decide whether a
koulourakia for breakfast will settle or unsettle my stomach. A French lady and her young son turn up and it is obvious that the ferry has been cancelled but news has gone out in a mysterious Greek way that has missed out us two foreigners. Cecille has a flight at 3pm so we are at least going in the same direction. When public transport fails, the only way to get off the island is by sea-taxi to the mainland -
Metohi is only 15 minutes away and we will have to get a road taxi from there. That is the theory but the "practical" coast guard has banned the trip to
Metoxi because it is too rough and insists that boats can only travel to
Ermione further south (i.e. away from Athens) as long as they hug the coast and cross in the lee of islands; a 30 minute trip that puts the cost up from the usual 30 to 120 Euros. As a parsimonious sea sickness-sufferer, you can imagine how happy this news makes me. I make a pathetic attempt to bargain the price down, but with a flight to catch and only one sea taxi in the harbour, we all knew that we will be parting with 120 Euros now or considerably more at the airport to buy new flights. The trip across is just about bearable in a teeth gritting way. At one point Cecille and little Nicolas are sitting opposite me and seconds later they are rolling at my feet. They have been bounced off their seat. My white knuckles are evidence that I have a better grip. But we get there and find a taxi (another 200 Euros, this time I do bargain 20 E discount, just to make myself feel a bit better at parting with so much cash) and set off on the 3 hour trip to Athens. Three-year-old Nicholas keeps us entertained by playing a kind of French eye-spy but demands we answer in Greek, which makes me feel at home because my Greek lessons in Turkey are in Greek and French, but after an hour, as the road gets more winding, he goes suspiciously quiet and I am just thinking I should retrieve the plastic bags from my pocket but it's too late. After both boy and car are cleaned up we are on our way again through a torrential downpour. We arrive at the airport, considerably poorer with green-tinged, white faces and I decide that travelling is a much overrated activity and I should spend more time at home.
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A calm day in Hydra |
Good grief, what a nightmare journey! And Scots blood is curdling in my veins at the thought of the cost....
ReplyDeleteAll adds to the ailing economy
DeleteYou did warn us in your previous post, but I had to laugh anyway, sorry!
ReplyDeleteExcept for the cost of course, that's just eh, Greek?
It wouldn't happen in Mayfield , would it.
Delete. . there are two sayings from my days as a 'hairy-arsed' para that have stuck with me, come to mind - 'A third-class ride is better than a first-class walk any day' and 'If you can't take a joke you shouldn't have joined!'
ReplyDeletepoint taken.
DeletePoor you, though the good news is the Greek deficit has taken a big step forward to the black. Though that does involve paying taxes.....
ReplyDeleteTaxes and taxi fares
DeleteHello,
ReplyDeleteWell, theory and reality are often very different things, especially in our experience, when they are related to travelling. The best laid plans......
Your journey sounds to have been a nightmare. We can recall a seven hour crossing of the English Channel which had a similar effect on the nervous system. The shipping company offered free drinks in the restaurant......but there were no takers!
The Aegean can be just as cruel as the Channel.
DeleteBlimey! Remind me never to island hop in the winter!
ReplyDeleteIt happens in the summer too.
DeleteHuge sympathies to you; being a big sufferer from sea sickness, I can just imagine. I hope blue sky greeted you in Bodrum : )
ReplyDeleteLuckily it did.
DeleteEek. I remember when we used to go to Rhodes every 3 months for our visa in the days when you had to go from Marmaris. A 5am get up only to arrive in Marmaris and see not the sea cat but the ferry...to windy. Not sure the ferry should've gone either! :) A journey I'll never forget. :) See I'm smiling now, but it was abut 10 years ago. ;)
ReplyDeleteIt takes about 10 years to get over it.
DeleteWhat you needed was a campervan waiting at the quayside to pick you up and transport you off to Athens!! Do you know when you lost your sea-legs Annie - strange seeing as so much of your earlier years revolved around the sea. x
ReplyDeleteWhere were you? I have never had sea-legs, but when working I managed to combat my nausea, but the minute I'm a passenger, it comes back.
DeletePoor you, what a nightmare journey. These cruel gods obviously took a dislike to you, unlike the taxi drivers (sea and land) who must have laughed all the way to the bank.
ReplyDelete