Is it possible to pop over to Rhodes for 3.5 hours? Yes. In fact, I’ve popped over for a shorter time. When collecting my biometric residency card a few years ago, I went on the early Blue Star, came back on the Sebeco and was home before lunch. Yesterday, was more leisurely. I left on the 10.15 and came back on the 15.30 Panagia. That gave me roughly 3.5 hours, during which time I walked from Akandia to the New Town and back again, via the optician, a spag bol at Napoleon’s, a brief rest at the Symi café in the new fish market, and a walk along the seafront because there was a very slight breeze there. Needless to say, with the temperature at 37° + and humidity at 70%, I was sweat wet before I even boarded the first boat. Not pleasant, but then I get like that when I walk to work each morning and that’s only across the porch.

I didn’t do well on photos. There was no time to stop and take any, really, but I got a few snaps from the boat. There are three sailings of this ship each day at the moment and I expected it to be virtually empty. For a boat that size, it was, but there were still plenty of people coming and going with luggage, so not on day trippers, a few young guys on mopeds and a little freight, but generally, it was a quiet and uneventful crossing there and back. The inside air con was down to -5°, it felt like, which was, at first, refreshing and then too much, so I sat up top among the noise of the engines, but luckily, the fumes were blowing the other way.

Anyhow, Rhodes was as to be expected. Busy with tourists, though Dimitris at the restaurant said it was a ‘usual season so far, not like last year when it was very busy.’ There were some cruise ships in dock, people swimming at the small beach between the harbours, and the usual fume-pumping busses carrying the inquisitive to various destinations. The authorities are extending the boardwalk around that dangerous section of road between Akandia Gate and the commercial harbour, so that’s currently even more dangerous to walk around (use the cut through at Akandia). The section at Kolona, the oldest part of the boardwalk, is quickly becoming dodgy with many loose boards, some rotten, others replaced and new, but mainly it’s getting a bit creaky and needs redoing. I hate to think how that will be by the end of this summer. And that’s about all I can think of to moan about this morning. That and the state of my chaffage – the Klunke Voks was soon washed away by sweat and I didn’t take the tin with me so couldn’t freshen up. Walking back up from the boat yesterday evening was something of a challenge after six miles and 13,000 steps.
