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Reflections

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Now that we're back home, and our time in Greece is fading just slightly in our memories, we are so happy that we went. It was a little bittersweet. The sweet part was going back to places we longed to return to and savoring our time there again. I think we appreciated everything a little more than in the past, because we realize at our age, this will be our last visit there. The bitter part is the same thing, a slight sadness because we won't be back, as well as a poignant reminder that the Duckworths, the couple who introduced us to Chania in 1984, have surely been gone from this world for a while now, and today we are older than they were when we met them 41 years ago. Life disappears so quickly. I hope this journey will help us continue to focus on  joy whenever and wherever we find it, and to cherish it, not just in the moment, but also to remember it, especially during hard times.  Thank you, Greece, for that reminder.  

The Other Hike to Loutro

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  After our first disappointing hike to Loutro when we went over the top of the hill, we later took the other path that goes around the hill. It was much easier! It was also very pretty. We had lots of company. Not just walkers on this route, part of the E4 European trail , but with goats that were ambling everywhere. The first time we took this hike, as I was about to reach the highest point, a group of goats were headed straight down the trail towards me. I was a bit anxious they were going to run right into me. But I needn't have worried. They were quite polite. They scrambled up the hill away from us. Kevin took some photos and didn't discover until after he downloaded them that apparently some goats like to hide. What's the black spot above Kevin's shadow? Ah, yes! It's a goat head! The area was full of white plumed flowers . I tried to research them online, but I was unsuccessful at identifying them. Throughout Greece, you often come across small chapels , a...

The Old Phoenix on Finikas Bay

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  View of the Old Phoenix hotel complex from the hillside above it. Our studio was in  the building at the far left, downstairs from the owner's home. What we wanted most from our stay in Crete was to recapture some of the feeling of the Greece we remembered. The Old Phoenix provided that in many ways. It was small and family run, in a stunning setting. Manousos and Lisa, who were our hosts, were very kind and welcoming. Lisa, who was German, had studied in Toronto, so she had a very good command of English. But they were both friendly. While we were there, Lisa's parents, Eric and Maria, were visiting from Munich, and we also chatted with them, and with Lisa's and Manousos' daughter Maria, named after her grandmother.   I really liked the studio that we rented. Unfortunately, I didn't get any photos of the inside. But it was spacious enough for us with a large double bed, an ensuite bathroom with shower, a kitchenette, a table and chairs, a loveseat, and a bookcase...

The Lure of Loutro

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The harbor at Loutro I don't know what it is about Loutro that so enchants me. It has done so since we were first there in 1984. Back then it was only a small fishing village with just a few houses and guesthouses, not even a hotel. But I've longed to go back ever since. While we knew that Loutro had grown, expanding so that the entire harbor is now filled with hotel after hotel with multiple restaurants and bars, there was still something magical about it that enticed us. It's such a lovely spot. And it's still remote. It's on the south coast of Crete , and you can only get there by boat or hiking in. No cars. We didn't stay there on our first trip. At that time, we had taken the ferry to Agia Roumeli , a village at the end of the Samaria Gorge that has been a popular hike for decades. Based on a Rick Steves ' suggestion, we did not walk the entire gorge. Instead, we took a ferry to Agia Roumeli and walked up to the narrowest part of the Gorge, which was n...

The Charms of Chania

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  The view of the harbor from our balcony Chania has remained in our memories from our first visit there as a place of radiant beauty, and it hasn't changed much at all. Perhaps the buildings are in a better condition with fresh paint now, but overall, it looks much the same. The biggest difference is that in 1984, fishermen would bring their boats into the harbor. I remembered a fisherman sitting by his colorful boat cutting up sea urchins on our first trip. Today we were told the fisherman dock at a marina outside of the harbor. The photos of the Old Venetian harbor tell it all, capturing the feeling we had looking out across the water and walking along the pavement along with other tourists. We stayed at Chania one night before heading south, and then again on our return before we flew back to Athens. At the visit before we headed south, there weren't a great many people, but on our second stay, two cruise ships were docked our in the bay beyond the lighthouse, and boy, was ...