Bathed in Greek Sunshine, Kalogria

Dave the motorhome is in Greece! For our first night’s acclimatisation to the warmth, we’ve nipped south from the new port of Patras for 40 minutes into a car park by the sea (complete with no camping sign and four other motorhomes, N38.15615 E21.36778). All along the sea-bound horizon are the outlines of mountainous Greek islands and mainland. The sun’s bouncing from the sea and making it hard to see the screen and type this out, it’s marvellous.

My feet in the sun!

My feet in the sun!

The ferry journey from Italy last night was as close to perfect as it gets. We ventured from our little corner of the open car deck to wave goodbye to Italy from the passenger decks above us, encountering the only slight hiccup, our magnetic cards weren’t encoded to allow us back in. A company-issued red-tunic sporting fellow called Christopherosus (we think) at reception rather formally but energetically ensured this was quickly sorted, accompanying us back to the car deck to test the cards. When he heard we had a dog with us, he explained there is a sand-filled tray area on our deck for him to do his business. We didn’t explain that while our dog has some cat-like tendencies (licking his paws clean, being afraid of cats), using a litter tray wasn’t one of them.

This little boat harried the ferry as it left the dock until a chap jumped from ferry to boat, and then it peeled off, weird.

This little boat harried the ferry as it left the dock until a chap jumped from ferry to boat, and then it peeled off, weird.

Parked in front of us on the deck were Barry, Frances and their two children, also camping on board in their caravan. After they’d eaten upstairs, Ju invited them round for a drink, so we got to quiz them about their 20 years of experience living in Greece. Among their anecdotes were stories of folks standing counting wads of notes in the street outside cash machines (they consider the country exceptionally safe), people who used to run their own little shops recently having to turn back to agriculture or working in a supermarket (yep, the recession’s biting hard) and an insight into the Greek mindset. Barry told me there is a wee Greek story which goes something like this: a Greek man is jealous of his neighbour’s prize goat. One day a saint appears and offers the man to fulfil a wish. The man, gleeful, asks that his neighbour’s goat die. It seems Greek folks would rather see their neighbours fail than they themselves be successful.

The ferry's Greek flag. I read somewhere the colours are inherited from those of the Bayern (Bavarian) flag of southern Germany as those guys, along with almost every invading race ever, owned some part of Greece for a while.

The ferry’s Greek flag. I read somewhere the colours are inherited from those of the Bayern (Bavarian) flag of southern Germany as those guys, along with almost every invading race ever, owned some part of Greece for a while.

Barry and family were on their way back home to Greece, they’ve decided to split their time between the two countries for the time being, home-schooling the kids. They take 2 or 3 weeks to make the journey each way, so get to see a huge chunk of Europe while they’re ‘commuting’. It was fascinating to chat with them, and we now know how to pronounce ‘thankyou’ in Greek!

Camping on Board worked perfectly for us. It meant we could sleep in our own bed, didn’t have to put Charlie in kennels or pay €50 for him to go in a cabin, we could eat our own grub (if not cook, as using gas isn’t allowed and we have no electric hotplate) and once the morning came we could look out of the window at an incredible sea-scape. Despite being woken at 5am by the ship docking at Igoumenitsa and almost all the lorries piling off, and a patch of rolling sea which had Dave’s suspension creaking like a sea organ, come 8am we were both well rested. To top it off, we indulged in a long old hot power shower apiece and our leisure battery is charged to the max from the on-board power. Obviously, we’d recommend Camping on Board to anyone from the experience we had – it’s available on Italy-Greece routes from 1 April to 31 October.

Camping on Board: Awesome.

Camping on Board: Awesome.

With an almost empty deck, Charlie got to play ball, being whistled over and stroked by a couple of the sailors. One of the few remaining vehicles was a Greek-registered van, it’s back doors were left open during the voyage and half the contents of boxes of small brown, quietly chattering birds were stacked up along the wall. They’d each got water available and looked in good health, to me at least. The deck smelled of bird, even though it was open to the fresh sea air.

As we hoofed the ball about Ju looked up to see half the passengers on the boat idly watching us from the boat-width windows above.

As we hoofed the ball about Ju looked up to see half the passengers on the boat idly watching us from the boat-width windows above.

Come 1pm (bang on time), the ferry docked, we unhooked ourselves from the power and drove off. No formalities, straight out from the new Patras port and into a huge expanse of Greek concrete, fortunately with fellow travellers to follow out the dock.

Greek boat at Patras. Wish us luck with the Greek alphabet folks.

Greek boat at Patras. Wish us luck with the Greek alphabet folks.

Prior to this we’d discovered while trying to work out which floating island was which that our European TomTom maps don’t include Greece. Ju, the navigator, is thus reduced back to the good old paper map, 1:700,000 and we soon sussed about 80% of the places on the signs aren’t on the map. Barry had suggested that as long as we head right, not towards Athens, we’d be good to go. After a wander along the coastal road eye-balling and smiling at one-handed on-the-phone helmet-less moped riders and the cost of diesel (€1:30 a litre at the cheapest place) we found the national road and cruised off. When I say ‘cruised off’ it was a bit more white knuckled-off, as the single carriageway route had been extended into a four-lane road by everyone using the hard shoulder. When in Rome; we cruised the hard shoulder too, the experience of driving in Tunisia and Italy has prepared us reasonably well, we hope.

Patras is at the north end of the Peloponnese, a peninsula which has been effectively an island since 1893 when the Corinth Canal chopped the land mass from the rest of mainland Greece, but no-one treats it as one. Although we’ve both been to the Greek Islands on package tours, this is our first time as independent tourists, and our first time on the mainland. What do we think of it so far? Smashing. Ju navigated us here past a moped-riding shepherd, a wayward tortoise in the road, a few dead dogs, a lego-load of low quality port town development and another parking spot up the coast. We initially thought we were in the right place until we climbed a high dune at one end of the beach to spot all the camper-vanners here, took a walk to reccy this spot, and shifted over for some company. The beach here isn’t snorkelable, but is quite beautiful and another wonder that we can stay here and enjoy it for free.

DSC09960

DSC00019

DSC00018

DSC00017

DSC00010

DSC09974

DSC09987

The map’s out now for some planning, but first time for another dog walk on the beach as the sun sets behind an unknown Greek hill in the distant sea (possibly Kefalonia).

Cheers, Jay

9 replies
  1. the731report says:

    fantastic guys…we stayed in that spot for 5 days of swimming and fishing. we where only just talking about that beach today and ‘the one that got away’ big fish. it only gets better from here and actually think this is the more ho hum section of Peloponnese. will you follow the coast or go inland?

    Reply
    • Jason says:

      Hi Guys

      It is a lovely place, might stop here again tomorrow and sort out a plan of what to see and where to go – watch this space!

      Charlie found a big dead fish on the beach, might have been the one that got away!

      Ju x

      Reply
  2. EuropeByCamper says:

    Been looking forward to this part of the trip for a while now and you’ve upped your game on the pictures (or perhaps it’s just the sun!!) :)

    Let us know how you find any of our / PeeJay’s Wild Camping locations and if you think Greece is more expensive than Italy (it was when we left!). Greek Salad, Feta, Olives, Greek (Turkish) Coffee…. We had a cracking 10 weeks – enjoy!

    A&S

    Reply
    • Jason says:

      Hi Adam

      Satnav won’t let us navigate to places without her maps, so going to load your & peejays stopovers into her and vaguely head towards them using the paper map. They’ll show on her screen once we’re close so can be guided in that way. That’s if we can’t get the phone gps hooked up to the laptop and autoroute! All far too techie for me so Jay is on the case.

      First stopover is great, might stop a couple of days and plan a bit – for a change!

      Hope shows are going well for you and the snow beats a hasty retreat before the next one.

      Ju x

      Reply
  3. Ali, Joyce & Ozzie says:

    Damn, €209 to get to Greece & camp on board, that’s very tempting. We got the same weather here, been bathed in sunshine for a good week or more, but the wind’s been blowing strong, good for drying bedsheets! Still here in M’ di Ragusa but thinking of moving on Sunday up the coast to Siracusa.
    Been getting into that bbc drama series Luther, I grabbed off you, great stuff, now gotta get the next series. Inspector Montalbano hasn’t made an appearance at his house yet near the lighthouse at Punta Seca much to our disapointment.

    Keep on Rollin’

    A, J, & O

    Reply
    • Jason says:

      I was surprised how cheap it was compared to the crossing to Sicily! Have you sent the wind over here? It’s blowing a good sand storm at the moment, we’ve moved to face into it, so Dave is hot and rocking right now!

      We were in Siracusa for New Year, had a lovely time, we parked on the island in the car park on the left near to the bridge. A large food van is in the car park too, and when it’s open the place is heaving (the car park and the food wagon), we had a takeaway from it, it was lovely.

      We watched a couple of Montalbano’s but didn’t really get into it, other than for the scenery and saying ‘oooh we’ve been there’. Working our way through Luther too at the mo, already saw second series on TV when we were at home, which prompted us to get the first one.

      Keep in touch, we might yet see you on a Greek beach!

      Ju x

      Reply
  4. Paul Gilbert says:

    The little boat would probably be picking the pilot up. The pilot guides the big boats in and out of tricky ports. Enjoy Greece.

    Reply
  5. Tracey says:

    You have to use a local Pilot for certain boats for insurance reasons. They are required in our local harbour in St Helier Jersey

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.