There was another cruise ship in yesterday, smaller this time, and, by the looks, more exclusive. I watched it sending its tenders back and forth throughout the day, except for when I was varnishing furniture and painting a chest of drawers in the courtyard and the upturned kitchen, where everything is out of said drawers and piled on the table. Deserving of a break in the afternoon, I called down to the bar to find it doing rather well with locals and visitors alike, and there, I witnessed the classic, happy tourist behaviour we’ve come to know and love. Not.

A couple sits down and asks for a menu. Menu provided. After a few minutes of deliberation, they ask for mineral water (€0.50), and are asked, with or without gas? What? Repeat: With or without gas. Sparkling? I want this one. Pointing to where it says Aνθρακούχο, ‘sparkling mineral water,’ in both languages, even his own. He repeats for clarity, because the servant is not English. This one, and off goes the host to return with two bottles of sparkling mineral water (€2.50 each). Puts them down, toddles away.
Mrs and Mrs Armitage-Shanks dive merrily into their chosen drinks, speaking not a word to each other as a small part of the afternoon passes by, and then, when ready, ask for the bill. Which they then dispute, because, allegedly, they asked for still water (€.50) and they don’t want to pay the €5.00 bill for what they not only asked for, but also drank – not queried or returned, but drank. Naturally, there is some debate, the upshot of which is that Mr Armitage-Shanks flatly refuses to pay the bill, using, I suspect, that British attitude of brick-wall outrage that he could possibly be in the wrong. He was, and I’d be happy to take the stand.
It does rather make one’s blood boil when you witness stubborn, and dare I say, ignorant privilege come up against gentle Greek hospitality, especially when we are talking of €4.00. Mr Armitage-Shanks isn’t having it, though. Oh no, he expounds. We fought them on the beaches when they came ashore, and I’m out there every night with my searchlights looking for small boats, so I’ve done my bit for the invasion effort, and Johnny Foreigner no longer matters because without the Eastbourne Conservative/Reform Club, we’d all be speaking humanity and reason nonsense, and it’s high time they brought back the lunchtime entertainment at Tyburn. (All in one breath of exasperation, note.)
Of course, gentle Greek hospitality and ξενοφιλία (the appreciation of foreign people) mean nothing to Armitage-Shanks and his ilk; the Duravits from Twyford, and Miss Pyramid from number twenty-six are worse. He’s off, dragging the little woman behind, and basking in the glory of having got away with paying €1.00 for €5.00 worth of drinks.
Needless to say, I hurled some choice Anglo Saxon down the Kali Strata after them, but sadly, that’s water of a duck’s arse to the smug, and my Þū unsǣlīġe ǣrs! went unheard. Probably too busy gloating and agreeing, ‘That showed them, eh? Telling me I was wrong. Water is water…’ I expect they went muttering with glee all the way back to the harbour, and round to the tender, and back across the sea to their cruise ship. Or, maybe, to their own boat, or even to catch their day-trip ferry back to another island. To be on Symi means you have either swum very hard or spent money on a flight and a boat ticket, and what with criminals now running the world and the price of oil what it is, and thus, the price of flights what they are, to fuss over €4.00 while on a holiday millions cannot afford nor will ever know… Well, it says to me that someone’s either very twisted or very upset that the little woman dragged him away from his Sunday Sport and meat pies to try some of that foreign muck. Water with bubbles in it? Not seen that since bathtime at Dotheboys Hall.
What an utter niþing. (Excuse my Anglo-Saxon.)
Because you are in no way a gloating greed like Mr Armitage-Shanks, I will leave you with this lovely photo Neil took recently.
And breathe.












