Wednesday 25 July 2012

How the Beatles almost bought a Greek Island|Society|2012-07-25 - pappaspost.com

How the Beatles almost bought a Greek Island|Society|2012-07-25 - pappaspost.com

Where is Leslo??

Stormclouds gather for domestic tourism

Stormclouds gather for domestic tourism | Athens News

“There are several regions and small islands that are off the main routes and therefore inaccessible to foreign tourists. Given that Greeks account for only a quarter of tourists in the country annually, these areas face the threat of economic destruction because they rely exclusively on domestic travellers,” Drakopoulos told the Athens News.
This comment surprised me.  Foreign tourists in Greece are enterprising creatures, and quite capable of reaching regions and small islands off the main routes!

a 50 percent fall in hotel bookings by Greek holidaymakers

There is still the cost of transport, but I get the impression that many Greek holiday makers stay with family and friends in their ancestral islands, and don't stay in hotels.

Greece: Land of gods and luxury travel

ekathimerini.com | Greece: Land of gods and luxury travel

Monday 16 July 2012

Open-Air Cinemas: Breath of Night Life in Athens

Open-Air Cinemas: Breath of Night Life in Athens | Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece

Word Wise: It's all Greek to me

It's all Greek to me

On my first trip to Greece I went for a walk in the hills on the island of Paros. A Greek lady also walking in the hills said something that I heard as kalamari. I must have looked as puzzled as you would at a stranger in the hills saying "squid". Was she trying to sell me some squid? Kalamari is from kalamos (pen) - the squid has a long tapering internal shell. I later realised that she had been saying kalimera (good day). I was then more familiar with words for Greek food than with greetings. I find opposites very easy to confuse, particularly when there is nothing to grasp hold of to tell the words apart. When asked when I had arrived on an island, I said avrio (tomorrow). Of course I meant kthes (yesterday). Nai (yes) and ochee (no) are also easy to confuse, sounding like "nay" and "OK".

I used to listen to Greek language cassettes when packing to go to Greece - but now I more or less know by heart the lessons about food, drink, accommodation and travel. I need something different. And so I started looking at how English words with Greek origins could help me to understand more Greek. The problem I find in trying to read languages with a different alphabet is that the slightest variation in the basic script is SO difficult to decipher. I once went to an evening class in Greek run by an elderly Greek man with shaky hand writing who insisted in writing in lower case script in chalk on a blackboard. I would have struggled to understand upper case in clear script - but lower case in patchy and scratchy chalk was almost impossible to understand. Another problem is dictionaries - dictionaries are not easy to use when you do not know the position of some of the letters in the alphabet. I was once looking for a hotel, and found a "G" class hotel. I had read that "E" class hotels could be somewhat basic. What would a "G" class hotel be like? Then I remembered that gamma is the third letter of the Greek alphabet - I was looking at a "C" class hotel.

There are a lot of goats in Greece, and the tinkle of goat-bells is one of the many charming features of a walk in the hills. A tragedy is etymologically a "goat-song" - from the Greek tragos (goat) and oide (song, and the origin of the English ode). Rhapsody is from rhaptein (to stitch) and oide. The Greek rhapsoidos - the literal meaning is "song-stitcher" - was an itinerant minstrel who "stitched" together pieces of poetry.

I once got into conversation with a Greek chap on a ferry about a flower he called amaranth (not the sort of word you find in the average phrasebook!), an "everlasting" flower of the sort used in dried flower arrangements. The sort of flower that should do well in the dry Greek summers. Amarantos (unfading) is from marainein (wither). The prefix a or an means "without". Other words with the same prefix include apathy (from apathes, without feeling), atheism (from atheos, without God), anonymous (from onuma, without a name).


 

Museum is from mouseion (place of the Muses). In one of my favourite Greek museums (on the island of Naxos) there is a small stone figure, just a head and shoulders a few inches high) labelled in English acrolithic. The figure would originally have had a wooden trunk, and perhaps stone legs. Akros means tip or peak, and lithos stone. The figure had extremities made of stone. In Athens I usually stay at a hotel with a view of the Acropolis from the roof terrace. An acropolis is an elevated part of a polis or city. An acrobat (from bainein, to walk) walks on another extremity, the toes.

My camera works overtime in Greece. The Greek phos means "light" and graphos "writing". The word photograph was introduced into English in 1839 by the astronomer Sir John Herschel. Astronomy is from astron (star) and nemein (name or distribute). Panorama is from pan (all) and orama (view).


Epistrophe (return) is a useful Greek word for finding out about the return time of a bus or ferry. Strephein means to turn, and the prefix epi means on, near to, above, or in addition. Apostrophe is from the Greek phrase prosoidia apostrophos - the literal meaning is "accent of turning away", a mark showing where a letter has been omitted. The prefix apo means "away".

Now it is time to check the return bus times!

Thursday 12 July 2012

ekathimerini.com | Greece in crisis: a new travel destination

ekathimerini.com | Greece in crisis: a new travel destination

Greek grapes to celebrate

Greek grapes to celebrate

ekathimerini.com | Greece sends 105 athletes to the London Olympics

ekathimerini.com | Greece sends 105 athletes to the London Olympics

ekathimerini.com | Ferry worries are increasing

ekathimerini.com | Ferry worries are increasing

15 % fewer passengers and 25% fewer vehicles than last year.
"Coastal shipping sources say the market is pinning its few remaining hopes for a rebound on the 50 days left until the end of August, the period when traffic is expected to peak.
Otherwise, they warn, a great number of ships will be forced to remain permanently docked as of September or be sold abroad."
I was in Greece last July and some of the ferries I wanted to travel on were full.  This year there may be places.  Get on that ferry!

Wednesday 11 July 2012

1st Serifos Festival 2012 Βegins

1st Serifos Festival 2012 Βegins | Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece

"The festival basically aims at giving the Aegean island a cultural dimension next to its natural beauties, crystal seas and lovely beaches. Visitors and locals of the island will have the unique opportunity of experiencing a series of cultural events praising modern and traditional Greek music, rebetiko, shadow theatre, theatre performances and children’s literature."

Joanna Lumley's Greek Odyssey

Joanna Lumley inspired by love of people | Herald Sun

Food fight: Greek v Roman?

Food fight: Greek v Roman? | Herald Sun

Thursday 5 July 2012

Greece hopes tourism will rebound amid lingering crisis

Greece hopes tourism will rebound amid lingering crisis, 5 July 2012 Thursday 9:17

I was a teeny bit doubtful about going to Greece in May - June.  I wasn't expecting any problem in my island destinations - and there were no problems, just lots of friendly hugs and kisses!  If anything, I was made even more welcome than usual.

My lingering doubts were about Athens.  As it happened, as there were fewer tourists, I was able to get a seat on internal flights that would normally have been fully booked.  But I need not have worried, there was no trouble I recall hearing about in Athens whilst I was in Greece.

Reading about hotels closing in Athens because of the downturn in tourism, I'm hoping that my favourite hotels and tavernas will still be in business when I am next in Greece later this year.

Crete Islet Spinalonga to be Added on the List of World Heritage of Unesco

Crete Islet Spinalonga to be Added on the List of World Heritage of Unesco | Greece.GreekReporter.com Latest News from Greece

The true nature of Greece?

ekathimerini.com | The true nature of Greece?

Our chef suggests: Souped-up yogurt | Athens News

Our chef suggests: Souped-up yogurt | Athens News

Warming to the frozen yogurt culture | Athens News

Warming to the frozen yogurt culture | Athens News

I remember buying "yogice" at Rackhams department store in Birminghan in the early 1970s.  I don't remember haveing eaten yogurt before I came across yogice.

A century of kiosks | Athens News