| Greece |
|
The Greek islands are amongst the most
beautiful and interesting cruising areas in the world, packed with history. Go
island hopping and cruise to some of the breathtaking areas such as Crete,
Mykonos and Corfu.
Always starting from Athens, you can choose to cruise the Cyclades, the Sporades or the Saronic Gulf and Peloponnese. Hereinafter you can find some particulars and details of all these destinations.
Míkonos, a cosmopolitan mecca for tourists, is bright and breezy with fine sandy beaches by day, and alive with the nightclubs and bars by night. The islands of Delos and Paros are approximately 28 nm from Míkonos. Delos is rumored to be the birthplace of Apollo. The ancient ruins on this island have been compared to Pompei for their comprehensive picture of ancient life. Paros is a popular tourist island, and it is well worth a visit to the Katapoliani, considered the finest church in the Aegean. Íos is claimed to be the burial
place of Homer. Santorini is a giant volcano, with a crater that is six miles long by four miles wide. The white domed houses of the capital extend along the cliff top above the tiny harbour and present a remarkable sight from seaward. Sifnos is a hilly island, with popular beaches on the southeast coast, and the delightful medieval village of Kastro on the east side of the island. Sailing north from Athens on sun speckled seas, the Sporades waits to welcome you. They are a small group of islands with ribbons of golden sand along curving shores framed by green, scented pine hills. The clear waters are a delight for swimming and fishing. Skiatos, green and cosmopolitan with pine woods separated by the sea by strands of golden sand has been, thanks to his natural beauty and infrastructure, a favourite tourist destination for many years. Skopelos, all green, with his beautiful beaches and craggy shores, traditional towns, old churches and monasteries, is an ideal resort.
Aegina, one hour from Piraeus, has beautiful beaches and pitoresque taverns and is a site of great archeological importance. Nearby, Agistri, a tiny pine clad islet with wonderful waters and many bays. Poros, renowned for its lush vegetation, emerges opposite to Peloponnese, forming the narrow passage wo which it owes its name. Hydra, a great naval force of the past, stands beautifully proud and indomitable, a bare rock with imposing mansions of hewn stone and a rich cosmopolitan air. Close to Saronic Gulf is the Poloponnese towns and islands: Spetses, another significant nineteen century naval power; Naplion, marvellous with his cobbled streets, stone houses and Venetian piazza; the fortified islat of Burtzi, crowned by the tremendous castle of Palamidi. The Peloponnesian Coast continues southward to the wooded bay of Kyparissi and the pitoresque town of Gerakas. Further to the south stands the proud medieval city-fortress of Monemvasia, a steep rock emerging from the sea. Across the end of the Peloponnesian Coast lies Elafonissos, a small island with superb beaches, the small bay of Porto Kayo and, a few miles to the south, the beautiful island of Kythira, with its unsophisticated charming Mediterranean landscape.
Because
of their strategic and vulnerable position, these islands have been subjected
to an even greater catalogue of invasions and occupations than the rest of
Greece - Egyptians, the Knights of St John, Turks and Italians have all done
their bit as conquerors. Rhodes is the largest of the Dodecanese islands and
its town is the largest inhabited medieval settlement in Europe. The Avenue of
the Knights is lined with magnificent medieval buildings, the most impressive
of which is the Palace of the Grand Masters, restored, but never used, as a
holiday home for Mussolini. The imposing Acropolis of Lindos shares its rocky
outcrop with a Crusader castle above winding streets with whitewashed,
elaborately decorated houses. |




