As usual, I suggest
scanning through to edit the following blog for young readers. There are some minor references to drug use
around day three/four, but other than that it’s pretty tame I think.
Greece was one of the first countries where I didn’t really know what to
expect. I had a vague idea of what to
see, what it was famous for etc. but in terms of the feel of the place I was
coming up blank. Greece’s recent
appearances in the news hadn’t been positive, so I was concerned I would find
myself in a country slowly falling apart under the weight of its own financial
woes, with public services difficult to impossible to manage.
I needn’t have worried.
DAY ONE
As usual we start where we left off, and this time we left off with me
feeling mightily relieved to have managed to make it onto a boat heading for
Patras, the Greek port that I needed to get to on my way to Athens.
As I mentioned before, it was a cargo ferry that happened to offer
passage to tourists as well. The
majority of the passengers were grizzly Greek truck drivers, and they stayed up
for a little while before heading to their company-bought cabin room. Being the cheapskate that I am, I had just
paid for deck passage, which was almost completely covered by my rail pass (I
still had to pay port dues and a fuel surcharge). Deck passage allowed me to sit on the deck
for the entire overnight voyage.
Fortunately the deck was quite a pleasant area, with a bar, restaurant,
lounge and baggage area. There were also
some airplane-style seats, though it was my impression that you had to book
these in advance.
I spent the first few hours sitting in the corner worried that I would
go into the wrong place or use something that my cheapskate deck passage ticket
didn’t cover. After a while it became
pretty apparent that the staff didn’t give a toss what you did, so I dumped my
bags and went to the restaurant.
An Australian girl and American guy who I had seen getting on the boat
were already at the restaurant, so after collecting my food (oriental
meatballs… though they weren’t ball-shaped) I went to join them. Only they were already having a conversation,
and as I approached and awkwardly stood behind the American guy, the Aussie
girl glanced at me. I got ready to make
my introduction in the gap in conversation that was sure to follow, but she
just continued.
I kind of stood there for a moment, knowing I had been pretty clear
about my intentions to join them, but also recognizing that I had been
snubbed. Sensing that the opportunity
was lost, I sat at the table beside theirs, back to them, and eavesdropped on
their conversation. I had assumed that
they were a couple of some kind, and therefore wanted to be left alone, but a
few minutes of listening in told me they had only recently met one another
themselves.
As they began discussing their intentions to go and have a nap, I saw a
final chance and got up, stood by their table and introduced myself.
The girl’s name was Athena, and the guy was Peter. They were on their way to Athens as well –
Athena had been planning to visit for a while, and Peter had met her at their previous
hostel in Rome and been persuaded to join.
After only a short conversation the topic of how to reach Athens came
up. I told them that I was going to be
taking the replacement bus service, since the train line from Patras was being
repaired or renovated or something. Then
Athena dropped the bombshell.
She had heard on the grapevine that the Greek public transport union had
organized a strike for the next five days.
I knew about the ferries, but ALL public transport? This changed things. I was a little dubious, as I didn’t think
even the Greeks would initiate such a wide-spread and inconvenient strike
without some kind of announcement, but I had to recognize the possibility that
Athena was well-informed and that my journey in Greece would be even more
stressful and challenging than the one in Italy.
I had some time to mull over this, though, since the ferry would not
reach Patras until 1:30pm the next day.
We went and stole a few of the airline seats in order to sleep (no-one
seemed to care, so I have to conclude that we weren’t breaking any rules by
doing this). I managed to catch some
shut-eye serenaded by some Greek film that was playing on the room’s TV about
an American kid who is kidnapped by some kind of Greek crime syndicate and has
to overcome cultural boundaries to become some kind of leader for them. Or something.
It was in Greek, so didn’t make a lot of sense, though I know it was
called The Greek Godfather.
At around 6am we had a brief stopover at Igoumenitsa. They made it very clear that we had arrived
there, with numerous announcements over the PA system and ferry staff walking
around ensuring that everyone who needed to get off did so. This would have been very handy had I
actually wanted to get off, but as it was I wanted to get some sleep. For a good half hour period, though, sleep
was basically an impossible prospect.
It wasn’t long before the sun was up after that, so I left the airplane
seats, had a quick breakfast from the restaurant and went outside to watch the
scenery. The water was beautiful, and on
either side of the boat great mountains rose up. In order to reach Patras, the ferry had to
travel along a stretch of sea that was bordered on the north and south by
Greece, so it was a pretty good view.
I had taken advantage of the time on the ferry to have a bit of R&R
and had been putting out of my mind the prospect of travel to Athens. As the boat pulled into port, though, my lack
of preparation hit me, particularly when I got off the boat and realized the
port was, in fact, nowhere near the actual city of Patras. Hell, I could barely work out how to get out
of the port area (Athena and Peter went in one direction toward a car exit, but
I noticed a building and went there instead).
In the end I saw a bus and walked to it, as did everyone else, assuming
that it had to go into the city since… where else would it go?
Not only did it go to the city, it went to the main bus station. Large signs proclaimed that buses to Athens
would leave every fifteen minutes. Perfect! Only the bus I needed was the one organized
by the train company, not the bus company.
And it was supposed to leave every two hours. I couldn’t work out which buses fell under my
pass, so approached the information booth to find out.
Upon seeing my pass, the lady at the info desk pointed at a blue bus and
told me that it was the one I was after.
I thanked her and checked the bus.
It was the bus back to the port.
She had thought I wanted the bus for the ferry. Bugger.
The bus station was a small, grubby building filled to the brim with
people, particularly young soldiers for some reason. A chaotic scrum led to the ticket desk. The buses would pull up right beside the
building, three at a time, so people kind of just spilled out all over the road
with no clear indication of which bus was going where.
Also, everything was written in Greek.
Most languages you can get by.
Greek is not one of those. Place
names are vaguely recognizable if you’re lucky and you already know what it’s
supposed to look like. Good luck buying
a ticket when you don’t even know how to pronounce the words displayed.
By this point we had kind of concluded that the bus on our pass probably
left from the train station, seeing as it was a replacement service for the out-of-service
train line. Not really wanting to have
to go through the hassle of finding the train station, we just bought the
earliest ticket to Athens that we could find (fortunately all the ticket
sellers spoke basic English, far superior to our Greek).
Other than the quite spectacular scenery, with mountains on one side and
ocean on the other (unsurprisingly reminiscent of Greek mythology) the bus ride
was fairly unexceptional. I kept falling
asleep and, since I had no idea how long the bus was supposed to take, I would
wake up and think we weren’t even close.
Peering out the window at one point I assumed we must be in the Corinth
area. Then I saw a sign announcing our
entry to Athens.
It wasn’t quite as I expected. It
was actually quite spacious – we were still driving along what appeared to be a
motorway. The street was lined mostly
with industrial buildings, so it felt a bit like the outskirts of Brisbane or
any Australian city for that matter.
It didn’t take long before it was revealed that we were, in fact, on the
outskirts of the city. Unfortunately this
was revealed by the fact that we arrived at the bus station, which was
basically a shed on the side of the road.
The hotel that Dad had booked for us (I did mention that Dad was
visiting for the weekend, right?) was on Syntagma Square, which was in the same
basic direction as Athena and Peter needed to go. I wandered vaguely towards something that
looked like an information desk, which unfortunately took me right up to the
taxi rank.
“You need a taxi?”
“Oh… not really. I’m just trying
to work out where I am.” Stupid thing to
say.
“Where you trying to go?”
“Syntagma Square.”
“Oh, ok. About seven kilometres
away.”
SEVEN KILOMETRES???
“You could catch bus, then other bus, maybe two euro, take about thirty,
forty minutes. Taxi, most it will cost
is ten euro.”
I was very aware that it was starting to get dark at that point. Catching buses at night is hard enough when
you know where you’re going, but being in a new city, trying to figure out the
correct stop when you can’t even sound out the letters on the signs – well,
let’s just say that for the first time on this trip I was seriously considering
just taking the taxi.
I went back to the others and filled them in. They agreed that, between us, ten euro was
not a bad price to ensure we made it safely before nightfall.
We headed back to the taxi driver, who waved us to the front of the
queue. At the front of the queue, the
lead cabbie said, “Syntagma Square? For
three, twenty euro.” We called bull,
saying the other guy had said ten euro.
“For three? Twenty.”
Seeing as a taxi service that increases in price as the number of
passengers increases kind of defeats the purpose, we went over to the bus
stop. The list of stops for each bus was
written in Greek, but luckily the guy at the counter could speak some
English. For 1,40 euro each he gave us a
ticket for the bus and metro we would need to take. He explained that the last stop of the bus
would get us to a metro station, from which we could easily get to Syntagma
Square.
On the bus, Athena was trying to figure something out.
“I was told it wasn’t safe to go on a particular square, especially at
night. I’m not sure, maybe it wasn’t
Syntagma. I think it started with ‘O’.”
The bus stopped on a narrow little street that looked pretty much the
same as every other narrow little street.
Everyone got off. The engines
turned off. Looked as though this was
the end of the line.
We got out and had a look up the street.
Then a look down the street. Then
a look around the street. No metro
station. Balls.
We approached the driver. He
couldn’t speak English, but I suspect ‘metro’ is universal, particularly when
accompanied by a ‘vvvhwwwooooosh’ noise and a wriggling hand motion. He directed us up the street and left, so we
went that way.
The metro station appeared about two blocks down – Omonia Square.
“Oh, that’s the name of the square I was told to avoid,” Athena
said. It’s probably worth mentioning
that it was most definitely night time by this point.
We made a quick dash to the metro station and I made sure not to look
too much like a tourist by dawdling around the metro map, but then realized the
backpack probably gave it away and ended up studying it carefully for a minute. Syntagma Square was two stops away.
Athena and Peter parted ways with me at this point, as they were better
served by reaching a different metro station.
I promised to join them later on and headed directly for the metro.
The Athens metro is actually very good.
Having said that, it’s small. I’m
pretty sure it was built specifically for the 2004 Olympics and is still slowly
expanding. Probably even slower
now.
I only went about two stops. The
metro works on a kind of honour system – unlike other metros where you have to
insert a ticket to be allowed in, in Athens they trust you to validate a ticket
at the entrance to the metro. Not
wanting to contribute further to Greece’s economic decline, I did the
honourable thing (plus I’d already validated my ticket on the bus anyway).
Arriving at Syntagma Square (something like two stops – I later
discovered it was about a five minute walk away) I went into seek-my-hotel
mode. I have become used to hostels
being extremely difficult to find, often just a door in an alleyway with the
only indication being a small business card on the doorbell. Walking out of the metro I was greeted by a
gigantic sign that took up half the skyscraper in front of me that stated, in
big clear letters: HOTEL ARETHUSA.
Well, that was easy.
I was pretty tired by this point, so basically went straight to
bed. Oh, that’s a lie, I washed my
underpants. Soon the room was nicely
decorated with my soggy undies. THEN I
went to sleep.
Wait, no, then I was hungry (hadn’t eaten all day), so decided to go out
and find something Greek. And by
‘something Greek’ I of course mean GYROS!
I kind of walked down a couple of streets, not wanting to go far, when I
found a little place that had a lot of locals inside and advertised gyros. So in I went.
Unfortunately I took one look at the menu and went… oh bugger. All Greek.
But hell, that just means it’s authentic, right? So I went up to the counter. Or I would have done if there hadn’t been two
counters, one in front of the spinning meaty chunks and one at the cash
register. Everyone seemed to be paying
first, so I went to the register counter.
“Is this where you order?”
The guy said something, which may have been in English. I asked him if he spoke English, and, in
keeping with the trend, he indicated a basic knowledge of the language.
I wasn’t sure what they had, since the menu wasn’t particularly helpful
on that account, but I was pretty sure they had gyros, since the Greek for
gyros is gyros (rather helpful that – though note that I’m fairly certain the
‘g’ is pronounced like a ‘y’).
“Lamb gyros?”
He didn’t seem to understand my order, which was admittedly mumbled
rather incoherently and phrased more as a question than an order. He just started listing the menu. Unfortunately, lamb wasn’t on it, but pork
was, so I got a pork gyros.
“Two euro twenty.”
Awesome. I paid and he told me to
wait at the other counter for my order.
So I did.
One of the ladies behind the counter spoke to me in Greek. I smiled and shook my head. “Sorry!
English.”
“Bah!” she waved an arm and walked off.
There was one other guy behind this counter, and he now came up to me
and spoke in Greek. I kind of stood
there, a little unsure how to approach this, when the customer beside me
offered his assistance. I took it
gladly. It turned out I was being asked
to repeat my order (had I known the menu a bit better, I could probably have
said I had ordered something more expensive, since there was clearly no
communication between kitchen and register).
Long story short I ended up with a pork gyros with everything. It was delicious. THEN I went to bed.
At around 2am my phone started ringing.
I have it on good authority that before this, there was a great deal of
knocking on the hotel door, but I was pretty deeply asleep. Anyway, there was a brief period of me kind
of lying there going, “I wish that arsehole would turn his alarm off – some of
us are trying to sleep.” Then I realized
I was the only arsehole in the room.
Then I realized that Dad was still to arrive. So I picked up my phone and let him into the
room.
It wasn’t long before I was unconscious again.
DAY TWO
ARISE, screamed Helios, driving his chariot through the sky. So I did.
Dad was already up. After a quick
Skype attempt to Australia that kind of failed partly due to poor internet in
the hotel and partly due to the fact that Mum and Katrina weren’t actually home
we went down to breakfast. A hot
breakfast. After a month of stale
cereal, jam and yoghurt (and a lot of coffee…) you wouldn’t believe how nice it
was to have soggy bacon, greying eggs and unusually gritty chipolata things in
a somewhat lukewarm state!
After eating probably way too much, but also much less than most of the
Greek guests, we went out to find some ancient Greek ruins – specifically the
Acropolis!
Dad had downloaded some walking directions, so we headed off down the
street, aware that it could potentially be some distance from the hotel, and
might not be that easy to- Oh wait, no, there it is, just around the corner.
Yes indeed, walking down the street we rounded a corner and were stunned
to see a very dramatic Acropolis on top of a very dramatic hill rising very
dramatically into a dramatic blue sky.
We took a few dramatic photos (the first of many) and dramatically continued
on. See, despite the fact that we could
see the Acropolis just ahead of us, we couldn’t actually get there directly
because there were buildings in the way.
On our way around the buildings we accidentally stumbled across some
more ruins, this time Hadrian’s Library.
We weren’t quite jaded enough at this point to turn our noses up at
something as recent as Roman ruins, and as the site sold a combined ticket that
included the Acropolis we thought: “Eh, might as well.” So we did.
An adult ticket to the Acropolis plus six other ancient sites around
Athens (most worth seeing) is twelve euro, for international students the cost
is six euro, and for EU students the cost is nothing. That’s right, if you have a student card and
an EU passport (or an identity card issued by an EU university… or you just lie
to the ticket salesperson about where you attend university) you don’t pay
anything to see any of Athens’ famous ruins.
I didn’t feel like taking advantage of a floundering economy, and Dad
was paying anyway (hehehe…) so I let the salesperson know I was
Australian. We were given a sleeve of
tearable tickets that could be used for any site, with the exception of one,
which was specifically for the Acropolis.
I don’t know what to say about Hadrian’s Library. Let’s be honest, if I detail every single
ruin we saw we’ll be here all day. It
was a decent start to the weekend, but there was something better around each
corner.
One thing we did notice was the presence of a very lazy and probably
quite well-fed dog just hanging around on the ruins. Actually, I’m pretty sure there were two
dogs. There were definitely two at the
next site we visited, which happened to be just around the corner: the Roman
Agora (thank goodness we got the Roman stuff out of the way early!)
Ok, they were nice, but the Acropolis was kind of just sitting up there
on the hill, tantalizing us with its dramatic…ness. We thought it was about time we stopped
getting dramatic photos from below and started getting them up close.
After a couple more dramatic photos (they are not an easy thing to give
up with any speed) we followed a sign that said ‘Acropolis’ and came to a dead
end. Backtracking, we discovered a
staircase that kind of looked as though it was part of a café, filled with seats
and tables, but actually also served as the main thoroughfare taking you up to
the Acropolis. Or, at least, taking you
to the road that lead to the main thoroughfare taking you up to the Acropolis.
After sacrificing a few dramatic photos (there was a big rock that just
screamed ‘climb me for a great view of the city’) we got to the Acropolis. As we approached the entrance gate, a
motorcade overtook us. It kind of looked
like something related to the Olympics – they had the rings on the side of the
main car, anyway. A bunch of
important-looking people got out and kind of bummed about in the entrance. Unfortunately, this is the kind of story
strand that kind of goes nowhere, since we ended up having to go back down to
the ticket office to get a fast entrance ticket since we had bought the ticket
at another site, and by the time we got back up they were gone.
I’m not entirely sure what the point of getting the fast entry tickets
was, as it would have been faster just to walk straight in. Whatever.
The Acropolis is pretty cool, and is still dramatic up close. Reading some of the informative signs, I was
rather amused by the amount of restoration work going on that was made
necessary by previous restoration work.
Unfortunately, a lot of the impact of seeing such an ancient site is
lost when the ancient site is surrounded by scaffolding, though I’m sure what
they are doing is very necessary.
The view was great, and it was a clear day so you could see Athens
stretching out towards the sea, the mountains, and the horizon. The whole city was white as far as the eye
could see – actually, Athens is probably the brightest city I have been to so
far. It was also hot.
We kind of had a vague idea that we would head towards the Ancient Agora
at this point, but we were sidetracked by the Theatre of Dionysus, which was
just at the bottom of the Acropolis hill.
The ticket collector didn’t collect our ticket for the theatre for some
reason, so we sneakily got in for free.
Unfortunately, our detour had taken us to the other side of the hill
from the Ancient Agora. On our way back
around we thought it was high time we had some lunch, seeing as it was about
2pm. Returning to the little staircase
of cafes we had walked up previously (which turned out to be in a district
called Plaka), we had the kind of lunch that I had been missing for nigh-on one
month. Dad had a look at the menu,
decided he wanted a bit of everything (who was I to argue?) so we ended up with
Greek Salad, fried cheese, meatballs, souvlaki, fried potatoes (for some reason
this is what the Greeks call chips) and Mythos beer. Oh yeah, and olives and bread. It was a pretty comprehensive lunch, all
things considered, and while Dad tended to think we could have done without the
chips, and he was probably right, I left the table feeling very satisfied.
The restaurant seemed to have a cat that owned the place, going from
lying in the sun to cooling off in the shade of the restaurant. Every now and again a staff member would give
it an affectionate kick, but that didn’t seem to discourage it.
We kind of took our time with lunch (well, we needed to) so it was close
to 3:30pm by the time we stumbled out of our seats to go and find the Ancient
Agora. And find it we did! But it had closed. At 3pm.
This was my first experience of one of the most irritating aspects of
Athens – ALL the attractions close at 3pm.
After that you’re basically left to just bum around or go eat or drink
something (the restaurants don’t close, of course). What with the enormous amount of food we had
just guzzled down, neither of us was really up for more, so we opted for the
bumming around. From the Acropolis we
had seen another hill (well, two actually, but we were closer to this one) with
what appeared to be an impressive monument on the top. So we went to have a look.
The walk was actually very nice – Athens has a great deal of green
space, and this hill was kind of like a park or garden of some kind. There were olive trees, too! Unfortunately the monument itself, while certainly
impressive, was a little more two-dimensional than it had appeared. Somehow it had gone from looking like a
building from a distance to looking like a big arch up close. Well, at least it was close to 2000 years
old.
The route back to the hotel took us along an enormous pedestrian (I say
pedestrian, though you’d still see the occasional car) street lined with
outdoor café spaces. It was very busy,
and for good reason – the view of the Acropolis was spectacular from that
angle.
Well, we walked through a kind of market thing and eventually reached
Monastiriki, where I noticed a sign advertising the famed Athens Flea
Market! Well… unfortunately a quick
glance down the street revealed that the Athens Flea Market is just a bunch of
chain stores selling shoes and jeans. We
could definitely give that a miss.
A bit of R&R at the hotel got us ready for going out once more. Dad had decided that he wanted to return to
Plaka that evening, as we had been promised by some of the street hecklers that
there would be live music from 9pm.
Well, 9pm is a bit late (even after Spain I haven’t gotten used to that)
so we definitely needed the brief rest in between. 9pm sharp, though, we headed out.
All along the way, waiters waited outside their restaurants, trying to
entice us inside. Dad had a rule – any
place that spelled ‘taverna’ with a ‘v’ (the Greek uses a ‘b’ instead) would
not receive our custom. Dad made the
mistake of telling one of the hecklers, “Maybe later,” which came back to haunt
us briefly.
When we got to the staircase again, we started to consider the
restaurants a little more seriously.
Well, the first one, at least, since the heckler for this one was really
quite good. In all fairness, he didn’t
lie or cheat to get us into the place – he just saw we were looking, told us,
“Very good food,” and half-dragged us in through the door. Once you’re in, there’s no going back (unless
you’re the group of American twenty-somethings who arrived a little after us,
sat down for about a minute and suddenly marched out, much to the confusion of
pretty much everyone).
Anyway, Dad wanted live music, and asked the door guy if there would be
any. He informed us that, yes, indeed,
there would be. At 10:30pm. He saw we were a bit concerned by this (and
also wary of being duped as tourists) so he basically just told us we should
eat slowly and wait for all the locals who had reserved tables for that night
to arrive.
He wasn’t lying about the reservations – the place slowly filled up
while we were sitting there, sucking on our drinks.
Ah. The drinks. Dad was smart. He got a beer. I was dumb.
I went, “Hey, raki’s on the menu!
I’ve heard of that, it’s supposed to be a proper Greek spirit!”
Urgh.
UUUEEEEURUUUGUGUGGEHHRHEEHHHEUUEUHEUHEUEHG!
When I ordered it the guy was like, “Raki? In a glass?”
Not taking the hint, I nodded. He
brought out a small, thin glass with about fifty milliliters of a clear liquid
at the bottom. He also brought a small
metal bucket.
No, it’s not what you think. The
bucket was filled with ice and came with a set of ice tongs. I dropped a couple of cubes in, wondering why
they’d given me so much ice (the bucket was full). One sip revealed the answer. It tasted like I would imagine rubbing
alcohol to taste. Not quite as bad as
tequila (what is?) but definitely in the vicinity of whiskey in the
things-you-should-not-order-if-you-value-your-tastebuds hierarchy.
The next hour basically consisted of me constantly packing ice into the
glass, waiting for it to melt, and then packing more in to try and get rid of
the godawful taste of the drink I had ordered.
Once the mix was about 95% water, 5% raki, it started to taste a bit
like liquid vegemite.
By the time I had finished my drink (I definitely took my time) the band
was starting to set up. We decided this
was a good time to order mains (neither of us was prepared for a binge like the
lunchtime one, so declined to have any starters, though some free nibbles
including grilled octopus had been brought out with our drinks).
About thirty minutes after this, we managed to get the attention of the
waiter. The Greeks are very friendly,
and the waiters are all eager to serve, but they certainly don’t push you. It’s basically up to you to indicate when you
are ready. We made eye contact a few
times, but this clearly wasn’t enough.
In a way, it’s nice not to be rushed into making a decision and getting
out of the place to make way for more customers. On the other hand… food.
It turned out that the thing I wanted (not sure what it was, but I bet
it was meaty and delicious) was not actually available that day, as it was in
the specials list. Well, I could deal
with that. The waiter listed the
specials for the day. I understood,
“Today we have…” but after that it kind of turned into a blur. I just nodded and said, “Yeah, I’ll have that
then.”
“Which one?”
“Which one? Uh… the first one.”
The waiter nodded and left.
“What did you order?” Dad asked.
I shrugged. First the raki, now
some mystery dish – I was really playing Russian Roulette with the meal that
night.
It turned out I had ordered some kind of chicken and cabbage and cheese
(I think) stew thing. It tasted pretty
good, actually.
The music started a little before we got our food, and was, to our
untrained ears, very Greek sounding. I’d
seen a walnut pie listed in the desserts menu, and, assuming they had just
translated ‘baklava’ poorly, wanted to give it a shot. They didn’t have any, so I had chocolate pie
instead. It was more of a chocolate
fondue cake, actually, and was very tasty (but definitely did not beat the one
in Lyon).
By this point it was pretty late – around 11:30pm. Though the party’s just getting started at
that time in Athens. We left yawning,
feeling quite satisfied, and foolishly headed back to the hotel the same way we
had come.
Back past the restaurant hecklers.
Well, the guy that Dad had said, “Maybe later,” to was still there, even
though it was two-and-a-half hours later.
And he eagerly approached us, saying, “Maybe now.” I think I noted a hint of sarcasm in his
tone.
“Oh, you’ve eaten already then?
Maybe tomorrow.”
Ha.
DAY THREE
As Dad was leaving the next day, we needed to basically do all those
little things that we hadn’t been able to fit in the previous day. We wanted to start with a small breakfast of
a pastry and a frappe. The pastry being
baklava. Unfortunately everywhere seemed
to be closed. We saw some people heading
home after their night out. It was 9am.
We ended up having breakfast at the hotel again. After saying I only needed a small breakfast
after all the food from yesterday, I made sure to cut myself down to only two
courses. Big courses, of course.
We made our way fairly lethargically to the Ancient Agora, which was the
one site that we felt we really, really had to see of the ones left on our
ticket. The main reason we wanted to see
it was for the temple that we had noticed from a distance, a temple that looked
extremely well preserved.
For some reason entry was free that day, so once again we got into a
site without using a ticket (we ended up with quite a few left over). It was like the Greeks didn’t want to give us
an opportunity to support their economy (though in all fairness we had already
paid for entry).
The Agora was big, and we made sure to read every single placard in the
place, though I can’t remember any of the information on any of the placards
anymore. The temple we had seen was
actually one of the most complete ruins I saw in my whole time in Athens. The reason for this? It spent some time being used as a Christian
place of worship.
I was pretty keen for a frappe, as this is a truly authentic part of
Greek culture (no, really!) The idea is
to order one and just sit somewhere nice for a long time, sipping away and
chatting with friends. A Greek frappe is
made with instant coffee, ice and water, with the option of including milk and
sugar, which we went with. They do
something to froth it up so it has a nice thick foam on top. It’s quite refreshing, and it was nice
sitting in the big café space (the one we had passed by the previous day) and
marveling at the Acropolis, watching the lady next to us continually lose
control of her dog and perving on the young couple opposite me who were
snuggling on one of the café lounges.
We spent about an hour there, just sipping away at our drinks, but still
somehow managed to leave before any of the locals who had arrived before us
(and ordered exactly what we had ordered).
The café culture seems to be good and strong in Athens.
We had some more ancient sites to see, though! Up we got on our way to the Temple of
Olympian Zeus. Which was closed, because
it was 3pm by the time we reached it.
There was a fairly nice garden next to the site, though, so we ended up
wandering through there instead.
Dad planned to head back to the airport around 4pm, and so we just had
enough time for a gyros at the place I had first visited (which turned out to
have an English menu after all – thanks for letting me know, guys) before
picking our bags back up from the hotel and saying our goodbyes.
In a move that has my budget (and stomach) singing praises to the
highest heavens, Dad is planning to join me again in Budapest, which’ll be
about a week away by the time I actually finish this blog entry.
But it was off to City Circus, the hostel that I had promised Athena and
Peter I would meet them at, that I now headed.
It was much, much easier to find the hostel having been in Athens for
some time already, though it was in a part of the city that was just outside
the area I was most familiar with (that area being the area around the
Acropolis).
Checked into the hostel, I met Alex, a Brit who was about eight and a
half months into his round-the-world trip.
He had recently been in Egypt, which he said was fine apart from the violent
insurrection going on outside his hotel room.
He got some good video of it, though, so at least he can keep the
memories.
After a brief chat we got a new roommate. The very, very first thing the large,
middle-aged woman said to us upon entering the room was, “Either of you got any
skunk?”
Both of us replied in the negative.
“What, do neither of you smoke then?”
Nope.
“Why not?”
Alex must have felt as though this question actually deserved an answer,
because he gave one, explaining he had given it up some time ago when he gave
up smoking. I didn’t really feel the
need to explain why I didn’t partake in the regular usage of illegal, addictive
narcotics, though one of the reasons was so I didn’t end up becoming a grotty
old person who went into hostels and introduced myself by looking to score.
Eventually I found out her name was Emily, that she was bipolar (I bet
the marijuana did wonders for that) and lived off the disability benefits she
received from the British government while squatting somewhere in Kent. I mean, I’m not one to judge, but… No,
actually, I think you can make up your own judgment from the provided
information.
So Emily went off to score some skunk (feel for her – she hadn’t had any
in almost a DAY!) and Alex and I quickly left the room, partly in order to
avoid her when she got back, but also in order to hang out with two guys from
Perth, Dave and Justin. We all went out
for a bite to eat. The hostel was in a
kind of youth/underground culture area, so there were some neat little
places. We found ourselves looking at
one place before being dragged in by the owner.
It turned out that the place didn’t have an English menu, which made us
fairly confident in our choice, so we had to go by what the waitress said was
available. I had a spinach pie and it
was pretty good.
We were all kind of tired by this point (well, except for Dave, who
ended up going out that night – not sure how he managed it) so off we went to
bed.
Emily found her way back to the room once we were already in bed and
kind of clambered around for a bit, then left again. Huh.
DAY FOUR
Breakfast was actually really good at this hostel – they had a list of
where all the different products came from (some guy’s mum made the yoghurt,
the olives were from Crete, or was that the honey?) and I kind of just kept
getting up for more.
If you remember, on the day Dad and I had scaled the Acropolis, we had
spotted two hills, one in either direction.
We had scaled one to discover a Triumphant Arch from the Romans, and it
was now time for me to scale the other, bigger one. In the afternoon I planned to visit the
National Archaeology Museum, which only opened from 1pm on Mondays for some
reason.
Alex also planned to scale the hill, but he was going to go to the
Museum of Cycladic Art first, so there wasn’t really an opportunity to go
together. Emily showed up and revealed
that she had successfully found some skunk (“I asked the guy, and he said to
head down the shady street behind the hostel where there were a bunch of Arab/Indian
guys” – her words – “and he told me not to pay more than five euro for a
matchbox, but I ended up paying ten because that’s a pretty damn good price” –
she proceeded to show us the matchbox full of weed, which was hidden in her
tobacco pouch. I had to take her word on
the price angle, since she was the expert having grown it for many years. Did I mention that?)
Well, she seemed much more relaxed now, though was no less irritating,
with a rather unusual habit of just butting into conversations with a
completely irrelevant comment. She also
had a really weird laugh where she would throw her head back, make absolutely
no noise, and her whole body would kind of shudder, mouth open to provide a
stunning view of her rotting tonsils.
And she would just randomly do this whenever, even if nothing funny
happened. Probably because she was high.
Anyway, this is starting to turn into a blog about bashing on Emily,
which could probably go on and on all day, but it’s starting to feel mean, and
she is, to be honest, a very easy target.
So let’s move on!
I didn’t get lost trying to find the hill (it being the tallest thing in
Athens helped on that account) so speedily found myself at the top, where I saw
a bunch of cats. And a café. And a little church with an old woman wearing
a headscarf sweeping, which is exactly the sort of thing I want to see around a
tiny church on the top of a hill. The
view was unfortunately not great because for some reason I had decided to scale
the hill on the one smoggy day I experienced my whole time in Athens. I think the strong winds the day before had
something to do with that.
At a distance I could make out the first modern Olympics stadium, and
decided that it was high time I saw something that wasn’t two thousand years
old, so I went and had a look. On the
way I (quite accidentally) passed parliament and the national palace, at which
there were numerous military personnel and police, with a police van looking
ready to start a raid. Apparently there
was no raid – there is always a police van there for some reason.
I also got to see the Greek National Guard, who guard the palace. If you thought the British ones were silly
looking… My God, these guys had pompoms on their shoes. And the way they had to walk… it was like
watching a crane. They would raise one
knee, then swing their lower leg out straight and bring it back so the foot was
against the other knee, then swing forward and take a step. It was the Ministry of Silly Walks before
Monty Python ever existed.
I saw the Olympic stadium, nodded a bit with the appropriate amount of
awe, and headed for the Archaeology Museum.
The National Archaeology Museum is interesting mainly for one key
exhibit – the Mycenaean Treasure.
Basically, this is a treasure discovered inside a burial site in the
Peloponnese within the ancient, mythical city of Mycenae. Mycenae is where King Agamemnon supposedly
ruled. To give you an idea, this was
ancient by the time Homer was writing about it; we’re talking 3000 years
old. The treasure basically consists of
a lot of golden death masks (hence Homer’s description “Mycenae rich in gold”)
and bracelets and things.
The museum also contains an impressive collection of Greek statues,
which are displayed in such a way as to kind of reveal ancient Greek history,
starting with Neolithic times and taking us through to the Roman conquest. All the bits of ancient Greece started
fitting together, and I realized that, actually, ancient Greek history was not
quite as homogeneous as I had come to believe (when most of Greek mythology is
based on civilisations that existed 1000 years before the ancient Greeks… well,
that’s bloody old).
They also had a pretty good Egyptian section, though I only got a brief
idea of how Egyptian history fit together (I had a similar impression of
ancient Egypt as I had of ancient Greece in that it was one homogeneous period
– wrong!) Maybe a trip to Egypt is in
order… though maybe I’ll wait a bit.
The museum was closing early for some kind of concert, so I left and
returned to the hostel. After a bit of
time just kind of bumming around in my room, Alex arrived.
“Please don’t leave me with her again,” was the first thing he said.
Yes, he had spent the entire day dragging Emily around. They had gone up the same hill I had, and
Emily had apparently complained about how tough the hill was to climb the whole
way (let’s put it this way – the climb up is an easy, paved slope).
We planned to head out with Dave and Justin again that night, so went up
to meet them on the roof (oh yeah, the hostel had a rooftop with a view of the
Acropolis) and also met some Taiwanese girls.
Dave had been conned that day, meeting a guy in the street who asked for
the time, then invited him to his bar.
At the bar a hot Greek girl had joined him and ordered a drink. Of course the girl was a plant from the bar
who disappeared once the bill arrived, which turned out to be somewhere around
30 euro. Dave refused to pay, tossed
something like five euro at them and ran out.
Talking about scams, Alex had some of his own to contribute. He’d known of one New Zealand girl in
Thailand or Vietnam or similar who had been conned into somehow becoming
involved in a card game and forcefully persuaded to go to an ATM to take as
much money out as she could to continue playing. She’d lost something like $13,000, which to
give you an idea is considerably more than my budget for this entire trip,
including airfares.
The saddest one, though, was in India.
It wasn’t nearly as much money, but it was a bit of an emotional
con. A friend of Alex’s had been in
India and had been guided around by a local.
Over the course of the four days he was there, he got to know this guy,
and very, very slowly a sad story about how the Indian man had used to be a
shoe repairman, but his repair kit had been stolen and now he couldn’t support
his family. Well, the guy, before he was
to head out of India, offered to buy the guy a new repair kit.
“I know just the place!” the man beamed.
By throwing numbers out and confusing the exchange rate, the guy ended
up being duped for around $350. The next
day he saw the same man targeting a new tourist.
Emily joined us a little later and we all went out to the cool bar part
of town for some food.
We had gyros. What else were we
going to have?
There was a short, embarrassing period during ordering where Emily
struggled to say “souvlaki” and asked what it was, and asked one of the
Taiwanese girls to order for her even though the waiter spoke perfect English,
but we got the food eventually and it was delish.
The only thing of note that occurred during dinner was a lady came and
tried to sell flowers to the girls. She
was fairly forceful, smilingly sticking the unwanted flowers into the collars
of Emily and one of the Taiwanese girls.
Emily contemplated the flower for a while before, surprisingly tactfully
I thought, handing it back and advising the woman to sell the flowers and make
some money for herself. Then she went
and bought some tissues off the next little salesperson (a seven year old girl)
that came up to us. I got the feeling
she had quite a bit of empathy for these supposed street urchins, but it’s
difficult to feel sorry for them when they’re dressed better than you (this
girl certainly didn’t have a massive tear in her jeans, I’ll tell you that).
Dave had an addiction for some kind of vanilla pastry coated in melted
chocolate from a particular store, so we headed there next. He promised we’d love it. I got a nice big tray of it, and it was
good. Very, very filling though.
DAY FIVE
My final day in Athens got off to a fairly lethargic start. I packed, had breakfast and checked out. My train out of Athens to a city in the north
called Thessaloniki was to leave at 23:55 that evening, so I left my bags in
the hostel in order to avoid having to drag the around the entire day. I have to admit to being a little nervous
about this train trip – it was an overnighter, but not a sleeper (that is, it
didn’t contain beds). I had assumed it
would be practically empty, but found a website that suggested that the train
would be full of “vagrants, illegal immigrants, soldiers and other seedy
characters.” Not exactly comforting for
a trip that would be taken from midnight until six in the morning.
Anyway, that was for later. There
were still two ancient sites I hadn’t seen yet, and I didn’t want to leave
Athens having missed them. The first was
actually a great deal more interesting than it had any right to be – an ancient
graveyard dating back to 3000BC or thereabouts that also happened to double as
the ancient gate into Athens AND an old pottery site. There were also a few tortoises, two large
and one tiny. Only one of the big ones
left its shell to perform for me, and I got a good 15-20 minutes entertainment
watching it slooooooowly plod from one end of a five metre strip of grass to
the other. I was a fan.
The other site that was a total necessity was the Temple of Olympian
Zeus, which I had technically seen from the outside but wanted to get through
the fence a bit. It used to be an
immense set of columns – a lot of columns – but only eight or so are still
around. One of them had collapsed a few
decades ago in a massive storm. Even the
collapsed column was impressive, if decidedly… well… collapsed.
I went back to the park, saw a pile of turtles in a pond (they were all
sitting on each others’ heads) and found the dirtiest toilet I had seen the
whole time I had been in Greece.
I still had about ten hours to kill, so I went back to the hostel and
tried to work on this blog entry. Unfortunately it was not long before Emily
returned from her day. I was in a bit of
a focused, selfish mood, so I responded to all her comments with rather terse,
short statements. She didn’t get the
hint for around three hours, at which point I was too tired to keep writing.
I’d hoped to see Alex at the hostel again, but he didn’t show, having
spent the day at the Archaeology Museum.
I left at about 9:30pm to head for the train station, planning to grab
something to eat on the way. I passed
the pastry shop from the day before and bought some more of that pastry. I mean, I hadn’t actually thought it was that
good, but somehow I was craving it.
Being basically fat rolled up in dough and soaked in sugary fat, it was
exceptionally rich and filling.
I still thought I ought to pick up something savoury, so went to grab a
gyros from a place outside the Monastiriki metro station, from which I would
catch the metro to Larissa train station.
I spotted a gyros place and headed for it, but was intercepted by a
woman selling flowers. Well… selling
might not be the right word for it. She
kind of shoved a flower into my jacket and said, “Free for you, you are sexy
young man.” She was probably in her
twenties, so I would have taken this as a compliment if it hadn’t immediately
made me think that she was a prostitute (take note ladies, if you call me a
sexy young man and give me a flower, I’m going to assume you want me to pay you
for sex). So I shoved past her, pushing
the flower away, and headed into the metro station (“Free for you, free for
you!” followed me the whole way).
As I was buying a ticket for the metro, a lady approached me
nervously. She was selling tissues for
0,50 euro, as well as a sob story about having lost her job. When I declined, she looked extremely
embarrassed, waving her hands and repeating, “Sorry, sorry!” I kind of felt sorry for her – she was
clearly new to the game and was probably in legitimate (recent) strife. However, I am firm with regard to beggars,
and my policy is that a) there are some who take advantage of the goodwill of
others and fake it, and b) providing small amounts of money to individuals
doesn’t solve the problem, and really just gives the local government an excuse
not to enact some kind of decent social policy.
I did feel sorry for her though.
The metro was as simple as it had been on day one, and I soon found
myself at Larissa station. Which is
basically just a small, dirty building with a few train tracks next to it. The Greek train company is not doing so hot,
as I think I mentioned previously, so a lot of services have been cut.
For the first time in my European train experience, other than on the
fast train in Spain, tickets were checked BEFORE arriving on the platform. This was kind of fortunate, as all the
information I had seen previously had suggested I did not need a reservation
for this train. Turned out I did, which
the (very friendly) ticket inspector indicated to me in the best English he
could manage (I didn’t learn one word of Greek the whole time I was
there). The reservation was free anyway,
so that hardly mattered.
The train journey was much nicer than I had expected. Far from the train being filled with
vagrants, I was accompanied in my cabin by three middle-aged, plump, wrinkly
Greek men, all of whom sat in an amusing, serious row opposite me. Unfortunately there is really no comfortable
way of sitting in one of those tiny, cramped carriages for six and a half hours
with four other people between midnight and six thirty (the train was late)
while trying to sleep. I was also
feeling a bit weird – dehydrated and hungry, probably because I hadn’t eaten or
drunk enough that day.
Some background information is required for the next part of the
story. See, I was trying to make my way
to Bulgaria, the city of Plovdiv specifically.
Unfortunately, due to the Greek railway’s financial problems, all
international trains had been canned.
This meant no train to get me to Bulgaria. No worries, though! There was a bus, and I was informed by the eurail
website that the buses were organized by the railway company in tandem with a
Bulgarian coach company, and that there was a ticket office somewhere in the
Thessaloniki train station. I had
one-and-a-half hours to find it, buy a ticket and get on the bus.
Well. If you’ve been following my
journey from the beginning you’ll know that things have a habit of not going to
plan on most of my train journeys (so far on two thirds of my transit periods
something has gone wrong). I searched
all over the train station. No ticket
office for buses. The information desk
was closed, so I went and lined up at the train ticket desk and asked the guy
there where the desk for international buses was.
“There are no international buses here.
Only the trains.”
Well, that didn’t help. I walked
outside the train station and saw a gigantic sign saying “International buses
to Bulgaria!” on the other side of the road.
Oh, thank God, that must be it.
I got over and the office was closed.
Seeing as the one I was looking for was supposed to be open from 6am,
and it was now 7am, it was clearly not the correct office. I walked down the street, hoping for
something else, but there was nothing else.
I went back across the street to a bus station directly beside the train
station. Maybe, I reasoned, the bus
station will have the correct place, and it is considered part of the train
station.
I went and asked the guy at the ticket desk.
“No buses here. In the train
station.”
“I asked in the train station, but they said it wasn’t in there.”
“I don’t know about tickets, I only know the buses, they come and they
go.”
“Where do they go from?”
“Where do they go from?”
“Some go from the train station, some from the other side of the
street.”
I thanked him and went for one last wander. Worst came to worst, if I knew where the
buses would be I could try and buy a ticket on the bus itself. At this point, I happily noticed that the
ticket office on the other side of the road had a light on now. I went across and discovered that, while I
had been wandering around, panicking, the office had opened. I bought a ticket for the next bus (which
ended up being cheaper and leaving at the same time anyway) and got on. It wasn’t the one I had planned to catch, but
it was good enough.
So off the bus headed towards Bulgaria, which is as good a time as any
to state the fact that this story is
TO BE CONTINUED
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