Santorini: Red Beach and Kamari Beach
Final day in Santorini! I’m both happy and sad, but put off the latter in favor of the former with another exploration day. I head to Red beach by bus, and am greeted by towering red volcanic formations looming over a relatively secluded beach. I spend a while sunbathing, finishing my book and exploring, before deciding it is much to hot to stay here longer. Unlike Perissa, Red Beach lacks cafes and other respite from the sun, save the beach umbrellas. I take the bus back in to Fira and transfer to another out to Kamari beach.
Kamari is similar to Perissa, with restaurants, bars and clubs dotting the boardwalk. But all I want is a pizza. Ever since seeing the boys’ pizza last night, I’ve been craving pizza. And out of the five billion places to dine at in Kamari, most of which are overly eager to dish out grub to tourists, I pick the one place whose kitchen is closed. All I have in my belly is a jam-spread piece of bread ingested circa 10AM, a plain crepe from noon and two sodas, one of them diet. And here I am about to imbibe an enormous daiquiri. There goes my sobriety.
The upside is that I found pool bar. There are a few of them, actually. Of course, I pick the biggest, most welcoming pool on this popular strip. When I taste my daiquiri (who knew there were so many i’s in that word?), I’m reminded of one of those barrel-shaped fruit drinks I drank as a kid. You know, the kind that you identify by color rather actual taste. “Red’s my favorite flavor!” I detect no alcohol. I’m hoping that’s because it’s well made, but I have a feeling that isn’t the case.
After my drink, I enjoyed the pool. It’s glorious and I knew then and there that I was in paradise. I even scored some peanuts to stave off the hunger after my swim.
I leave the pool still wet from my dip and notice that after nearly 3 weeks of sunshine, I finally have a sunburn. A nice little Coppertone girl burn radiated from where my bikini bottoms hit my lower back. I think of how awesome this will feel when backpacking tomorrow.
I finally wrap up my day with pizza at a little place on the beach called Irini’s Café, owned by a grandmotherly Greek woman. I board the bus and make it back to Oia in time to pack up and say my goodbyes to the crew.
Working at the bookstore was both difficult and incredibly rewarding. I made some new friends and was given the time and space to explore the island and myself. Living in such cramped quarters with so many people is difficult, and I realized that I could probably not do it for a much longer period than that I spent there. Atlantis Books is its own little microcosm, divorced from reality in many good ways and many challenging ones. I hope I make it back there some day. And if any of you go to Santorini, please patronize this place. Knowledge is a wonderful thing to which to have access, both at home and abroad.
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| [08.06.17] Santorini: Red Beach and Kamari Beach |
Santorini: Last Day at Work
Since I planned to take my final day on the island (tomorrow) off, this was officially my last working day. I wanted to make it count, and made a long list of items to accomplish. The first of which was organizing the Greek section. In Greek. This required that I teach myself the Greek alphabet, which is what I did as I went along. I was so proud when I placed the last book and dusted off the pretty display. Now, I can pronounce most Greek words. Alph, beta, gamma … ta da! I also varnished some shelves Pauline built in the bathroom and made signs for the Greek section and some special sections we created, including one dedicated to “dirty” books. Oh, nothing too dirty. We’re talking Lady Chatterly’s Lover type dirty.
That evening, we partook of an amazing dinner on the terrace cooked by two of Pauline’s friends from France. The reason I had to depart in two days time was because Pauline organized a film festival to take place that upcoming weekend. The films, all made using Super 8 cameras, would be projected outside on walls around town. An influx of people was on its way for the event, and by the time I asked about working at the store, it was full for that weekend. I would have loved to stay through the fest, but it would have required me to move to a hostel. Given that I was leaving for Israel so soon, I decided to move on and explore another island instead.
Her friends were in for the festival, and staying with Maria. After dining, Anna and I joined Quinn and Tim at the local pizzeria for a big draught and to catch the Austria-Germany soccer match. Anna is from Austria, so she was disappointed when her team lost by one.
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| [08.06.16] Santorini: Monday |
Santorini: Father’s Day
I spent much of the day around the shop, so it was pretty uneventful. Only news was that Craig, one of the founders of the shop, arrived. Rather than drone one once again, I’ll give you, reader, a break for today.
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| [08.06.15] Santorini: (Sunday) |
Santorini: Santorini Mou
Another scorcher in Oia. The skies here never seemed to cloud, with the exception of one ten minute rain “storm” – no more than a few drops.
I can’t believe I haven’t spoken of Oia yet! Oia (pronounced “ee-ah”) is a small town on the northern tip of Santorini (Thira to the Greeks). The worn marble stone streets of Oia wind between whitewashed stone dwellings – the ones you see in every calendar featuring the Greek islands. The dwellings, painted white to reflect the sun and keep the insides cool, are accented with blue paint, the most plentiful pigment in the island, perfectly mirroring the gorgeous contrast between fluffy clouds and blue skies. However, clouds are an anomaly in Oia, know for its transcendental sunsets. Built high into the cliffs of the caldera, watching the sunset in Oia is like having box seats to the best show on earth. And it’s free everyday!
In the 1950s, a massive earthquake destroyed much of the town. Rebuilding required special permits, including restrictions on changing much of the town’s design. Home and business owners were required to present pictures of the structures pre-earthquake and build to similar specifications. This reconstruction is ongoing even today, and is mainly responsible for the pristine condition of much of Oia’s architecture.
After spending the morning in the bookstore, Sophie and I hit another beach, Katharos. More of a typical beach than Ammoundi, with black sand and pebbles rolling underfoot, Katharos still requires a difficult trek. I’m happy to restrict future beach trips to the southern beaches know for their fine sand and accessibility.
That evening, we wandered to another bookstore-friend’s home, Maria. I say wandered because in actuality we get lost. A French ex-pat, Maria is a bookstore fixture. She spent decades in India before Santorini home. She also has many, many cats. When we finally arrived, bouncing and rough-housing kittens tumbled at our feet.
With Maria in tow, we went to dinner at Santorini Mou (“my Santorini”), a local taverna with live music and a raucous atmosphere. After some issues ordering due to the large group (we had picked up two New Yorkers along the way), we spent the night stuffing ourselves with moussaka, tsaziki, eggplant dip, pita, kebabs, spaghetti, salad and wine. Tim took up with the band and we even got our own serenade. Well, Quinn was the actual recipient, as the song was dedicated to encouraging him to follow his dream to buy a sailboat.
Sophie and Anna, tired, went home, while Pauline, Quinn, Tim and I stayed for one last drink. We made it back to town and decided the evening couldn’t possibly be over, and bounded down to the castle. There, Tim furiously bowed his violin like a madman while the three of us performed some poor man’s version of modern dance. It was weird and wonderful. I left before the other, playing Pied Piper to all the town’s homeless canines, who came out of the woodwork to follow me and my leftovers back to the shop.
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| [08.06.13] Santorini: Day 4 |
Santorini: Surprise Wedding
Anna arrived early this morning. Anna is the reason I am here in the first place. I was introduced to Pauline through Anna, who formerly dated one of Sean’s best friends. I haven’t seen her in years as she has been in Paris teaching and getting her Master’s degree. We spent the morning catching up and doing odds and ends around the shop.
I took some time in the afternoon to indulge myself in window-shopping for expensive jewelry. Santorini, particularly Oia, is know for its dazzling gold and gemstones, especially aquamarine and amethyst. I weaved in and out of countless shops, trying on ring after ring. I lust after big, chunky rings (hey, everybody has their weaknesses). Most were out of my newly-unemployed price range, though they were so wonderful to admire on my fingers. Many of the rings were rough cut with brushed gold, perfect to dress up or dress down depending on the occasion. I picked out a few I would “think about” and spent the rest of the time enjoying the view of the caldera, a catastrophic event’s gift to all who visit the island.
Santorini as it is now known resulted from a huge volcanic explosion that occurred in 1647 BC. A huge pocket of hot air and lava formed under the island, pushing it up out of the sea tens of thousands of years ago. Eventually, this dome could no longer take the pressure and burst, sending the island crumbling into the sea. What is left is the circular outline of the island’s perimeter, with the middle –- the caldera — filled in with water, like a big bowl. Santorini’s caldera is the world’s largest.
Archaeological evidence suggests that Santorini might even be the home of the legendary lost continent of Atlantis, and that the explosion wipe out the great civilization. It is also thought to be responsible for the destruction of the Minoan civilization on Crete, as a huge and unforeseen tsunami crashed down there as a result of the Santorini eruption.
This beautiful setting inspires many people to choose Santorini as their wedding or honeymoon destination. Everyone is a couple here, and I felt naked for lack of a wedding band.
A few days before, a flamboyant friend-of-the-bookstore came in to ask if Tim would play his violin at a wedding she was organizing. It would be small, just the bride and the groom, and she wanted it to be special. He agreed. We knew the wedding was tonight, and as the sun set, Sophie, Pauline and I heard Tim’s violin coming closer to the bookshop. We looked down from the terrace and saw that he had led the wedding party to our front door!
The couple came in the store and popped some champagne while the photographer captured the moment. Talk about PR! We toasted the newlyweds and I realized that I had just added a fourth wedding to my Worldwide Wedding Tour.
We wiled a quiet night catching up with one another and enjoying time in the bookstore. The store at night is always full of friends and festivity. Staying open late, we sat around telling stories and reading, inviting customers to join if they so desired.
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| [08.06.12] Santorini: Day 3 |
Santorini: Day 2 (Wednesday)
I decide to tackle non-fiction today. The section is a mess and needs a major overhaul. Google comes to the rescue by providing ready-to-use categorizations, but now it’s up to my judgment about what books fit where. Not surprisingly, this takez me hours. What constitutes anthropology vs. sociology vs. urban studies vs. cultural criticism? For students of these topics, the delineations might seem easy. But when you have the books in a huge pile in front of you, trust me, it’s anything but easy.
Having conquered non-fiction, I decide to hit the beach for the first time since being here. I bound down the 250-odd steps to Ammoundi, a port and small beach, only to realize I forgot my beach towel. There is no way I’m going back now, so I brave it with just my scarf. The “beach” isn’t very impressive; it’s more of a watering hole with a place to sit and dry off. The scarf is useless.
After a short stint in the sun, I decide the afternoon would be much better spent sipping beer and eating seafood at one of the waterfront tavernas known for their ocean pulls. I plop down at the most friendly looking restaurant, and order up a beer and grilled octopus. Famished, I devour the bread they give me and ask for more, knowing that a good base is needed for my large beer. The octopus is amazing, grill over hot coals in the sunshine and doused with lemon and olive oil. Once I’m stuffed, tipsy and ready to leave, the waiters, who have taken a liking to me because I keep cracking jokes and am alone, bring me out two Santorini specialties on the house: deep friend tomato croquettes and eggplant salad marinated in vinegar and olil. I can barely fit another bite in my stomach after stuffing down nearly a whole loaf of bread, but not one to be ungrateful, I munch it up. It’s so good!
In the blazing afternoon sun and puffed out with food and beer, I decide that, No, kind sir, I do not need that donkey ride up the hundreds of steps back to Oia. I’m in perfectly good shape to do it myself. You can probably imagine how this went, but in case you were wondering, it involved lots of huffing, puffing, cursing, sweating and exaggerated movements. I called Sean and I had to hang up on him because all he heard was “Ahaaaa, ahaaa, ahaaaa.” Future visitors, take my advice: The donkey ride is SO worth the €5.
That night, I met Quinn and John the poet. Quinn hails from Chico, California, works in software and is one of the first people involved in the bookstore. John is a kind soul whose knowledge is inspiring and who is a walking dictionary for even the most obscure words. Along with Tim, Pauline and Sophie, this was our happy little family, sharing laughter, stories and a drink or several.
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| [08.06.11] Santorini Day 2 |
Santorini: Day 1 (Tuesday)
Feeling a bit better, I greeted the morning and my first day working and living at Atlantis Books, a cooperative bookstore begun by a few people from England, the US and Cyprus. While on a trip to Santorini, in the blue-and-white village of Oia, two friends were inspired to open an English language bookstore as a haven for writers and readers from around the globe. Based on the Parisian “Shakespeare & Company” model, where people work at the store in return for full room and board, sleeping in the stacks and eating communal meals, they loaded up a van named “Danny” and drove it from the UK to Santorini, found a location and got some funding and local angels to help them acclimate, built the shelves and beds from found and donated timber, and opened their doors in 2004. Since then, the store has moved from its original location near the castle (more like a fortress) on the edge of Oia; the owner wanted to “upgrade.”
Since then, a revolving cast of characters has maintained the store, with the core crew managing. I learned of this special place from my friend Pauline, who has discovered it though one of her (and Sean’s) friends. When I realized some of my trip would have to be spent without Sean, I couldn’t think of a better place to be – a place where I could finally rediscover and reinvest in my love of writing that had slowly slipped away as I became more entrenched and involved in my career path in marketing and communications. Sure, that takes writing, too, but in a much different manner than creative, reflective writing.
The bookstore itself is beautiful, a circular cellar lined with handmade wooden shelves swollen with tomes new and old. Fiction and Greek is in the front room; nonfiction and foreign languages rest in the back, along with the beds. Build into and around the shelves are a number of surprisingly comfortable makeshift beds, some of which are covered with display books during working hours (10AM to midnight, every day). One bed is even hidden behind the main stacks in the front room. My own bed, dangerously narrow, lay above the French section and cozied up to a number of dust-covered Egyptian hand-bound blank journals. I hit my left eye socket on this small shelf one night when quickly sitting up in bed. This marks the second time this trip I narrowly escaped a black eye. While my eye may have been spared a nasty black-n-blue, my legs were not so lucky. Crawling into and out of loft beds and onto and off of tall tables, using bookshelves as your stepladder, easily polka-dotted my legs with bruises.
The rest of the bookstore features a small kitchen (which I avoided since I’m not the best cook), a back room with another bed, a bathroom and a terrace from which you can watch the fiery sun extinguish in the Aegean every night.
I was under the impression that we would be taking specific shifts to manage and work on the bookstore. Once again, I had forgotten that the world doesn’t play by the same structured rules as the US. The bookstore needed a lot of attention – reshelving, alphabetizing, cleaning, etc – to prep for the busiest season in July and August. Therefore, I spent my first day perched on a tall table, alphabetizing the poetry and short story sections. Surprisingly, I immensely enjoyed this, as authors long filed in the dusty drawers of my mind popped back to life.
Tired of singing the alphabet song, I took off to watch that legendary Oia sunset from the Western part of town. I’ll save the description of Oia for another day, but the sunset was spectacular, tempered only by the overflowing mess of tourists also marveling at the spectacle. Apparently, everyone claps when it finally dips downward, an event I didn’t witness since I preferred to beat the crowds back through the narrow streets.
That night, Tim popped into town. Tim is from England. While most people pack a camera and a guidebook on their travels, Tim totes a violin. We lingered at the shop and closed up a bit early, very tired from a long day of organizing books.
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| [08.06.10] Santorini Day 1 |
From Chios to Santorini
I wiled the morning wandering the small streets of Chios Town, something we didn’t do much of when previously here. I even ate my first gyro – shaved pork wrapped in a fluffy Greek pita with lettuce, tomato, yogurt, onions and French fries (yeah, the last ingredient is a bit odd). I then parked my butt at a café with free WiFi and spent not less than 4 hours there. I wasn’t hungry – that gyro was big! – so I kept ordering drinks, moving from water to frappé to beer. The frappé was so caffeinated I actually feared for my life and considered telling someone I was on the verge of a heart attack, dash off my last will and calling my folks to tell them I loved them. With enough waiting and water, I thankfully deflated.
Because taking ferries would require a few days and overnights to get from Chios to Santorini, I opted to fly. The flght from Chios to Athens was a breeze, and I wanted to hug the Olympic Airlines flight crew for the service. A half hour flight and we even got snacks and beverages! I’m glad I didn’t; things changed at the Athens airport.
I had a three-hour layover and my cold was in full bloom. People on the plane moved away from me in fear of catching a bug on their retirement trip, despite my better efforts to hide the illness. I went looking for a pharmacy in the airport, but I was already behind security and no one understood me enough to let me out to get medicine. They kept telling me the Halls sold in the news shops is “medicine.” I don’t know how they do it in Greece, but that’s certainly not anything that would relieve me of the sinus duress I was enduring. So I plopped down and worked hard on this blog, just hoping I’d be in Santorini and bed soon.
Not so, kind reader. For reasons untold, Olympic decided to combine the Santorini and Mykonos flights, making it “free seating” (read: stampede) and refusing to tell Santorini-bound passengers when we would be arriving. It wasn’t until after arriving in Mykonos and waiting until taking off from there that they told us when we’d get in, about an hour and a half behind schedule. Now, I’m used to delayed flights. It’s expected in the US. But to add an entire other destination and refuse to tell us when we were getting in? Ridiculous.
I rolled into the bookstore at midnight, caught up with Pauline, a Parisian friend who I know from NYC, and her friend Sophie, a New Yorker living in Paris. I crawled into my bed (a lofted bed above a number of bookshelves) exhausted and happy to be done flying for a while.
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