The temperature has dropped, the duvet is on, the shutters shut against the north wind and there’s a real feeling, in our house at least, that autumn has slipped into winter overnight. I expect things will warm up again for a while and it’s just one of those passing weather fronts. Meanwhile, Friday was the name day for Dimitris, and we were meant to be going to one of the festivals. However, last minute and rather urgent business came up (to do with money so very urgent) and that had to be sorted on Friday before I go away on Monday. Maybe we will finally make it next time as we’ve been meaning to go for years now.
So, to warm me up, I thought I’d post some photos from back in warmer days to give you something to look at over the weekend.
In case you are following this week’s scintillating weather updates from Symi… We did have rain on Wednesday as forecast, and it was heavy for a while. We also had a power cut in our part of the village, only for a short while, and another one later in the evening when we were saying goodbye to departing friends at the Rainbow. It’s always a fun atmosphere when you’re inside and plunged into darkness. Yiannis lit a candle, a couple of us used the torch on our phone, and just as we were settling in for a dark time, the power came back on. Such are the highlights of a Symi winter.
Yesterday dawned cloudy and a bit colder, and the wind (as I write) is forecast to get up to force seven, but it’s still quite calm now apart from some showers. That’s just as well as I have to go to Yialos to pick up a package and but some boat tickets. Anyway, as I’m rushing a bit, here are a few more shots from Wednesday.
Still cloudy, a few spots of rain on Tuesday, forecast showing more later today (Wednesday) and windy later tomorrow night but it keeps changing. It’s still warm enough to be outside, though I am no longer in shorts, and we’ve started to hang the drapes to keep out the drafts, paint the bathroom roof against leaks, talk about finding the duvet, and where did I put those heaters?
A grey sunrise
I trotted up to the monastery again yesterday; three miles and a rise in altitude of roughly 400 feet. According to an app I have on the phone, To Vrisi is at 750 feet above sea level, and the house is roughly at 350 feet but who’s to say if that’s accurate. I do know that it’s uphill all the way for one and a half miles, and then joyously downhill again afterwards. I came home to find Neil was out on his walk as he finished work later than me. No idea where he’s gone.
1.5 miles from the village at 750 feet
And talking about that… Yesterday as you read this was Neil’s last day at the bar for the season. That’s about seven months, seven days a week with no day off. He only does a couple of siesta hours per day but imagine what the all-day and all-night people who work in tavernas and shops etc., must be feeling. The end is in sight, and they can think about having a day off. We’re taking a couple of days off next week (so no blog for a few days). I think I’ve mentioned it, I’m in Rhodes for two days, and then Neil’s away for three weeks, slightly over, on family visits while I come home to write books and stuff. I’ll be heading off to Athens on the boat around 17th November for a couple of days there, and then we will be heading back, again on the Patmos on an overnight trip, arriving here at around 5.30 on a Wednesday morning. That’s going to be a fun trek up the steps with luggage in the dark. But that’s in the future, for now, I’ll stop rambling, add some images and get on with something else.
This is to show you the terraces, ancient and modernWinter skies approachingAlthough work is progressing to fix the upper village after the storm of 2017, there are still some places that need work.
Well, maybe not total silence but we’re definitely heading for a quieter time. There were few visitors around in the village square yesterday afternoon, and a few still here with only a couple more days to go of their expended summer holidays. There are fewer boats in the harbour, at least at the end of it that we can see from our balcony, and although we’ve not had bad weather yet, it is expected soon. Mind you, it was also expected a while back and never really materialised.
I am looking at one forecast (Windfinder), and it’s showing rain right about now (Tuesday morning). Looking out, I can see the sky is a little cloudy, but it doesn’t look like rain. I’ve just come back from my three-mile walk up to the monastery and back, and everything was calm if overcast. The forecast is only showing a few mm of rain anyway, and it’s still warm, in the early to mid-twenties, with very little wind. Wednesday looks calm, maybe damp, but Thursday is showing high winds up to 7Bf and from the north-west, so the temperature is going to drop. Meanwhile: Viking, rising easterly, moderate, 3 – Forties, easterly, holding, good – Forth, Tyne, West Dogger: Westerly or northwesterly 4 or 5, occasionally 6 at first. Slight or moderate. Fair. Good…
On the way to Ag Marina to tend graves
That was the (yUK) shipping forecast which, incidentally, used to be read by someone I worked with, an actress who appeared on The Archers as a character from south London. She was a right old ‘dogger’ (no offence, Celia). When not putting on her ‘saff-Lundun’ accent, she read the forecast with clarity and was a very well-spoken and charming young lady and an excellent actress. But that’s an aside. I had a look to see if we had similar shipping areas around Symi and what I found was a little worrying. Symi, on the map I saw, came under area 8 of Turkey, whereas Rhodes was area 22 of Greece. The only other Greek island that came under the Turkish shipping-weather map was half of Lesvos, but I like to think we are safely in GRC22, from Karpathos to Rhodes, although we’re just beyond it.
Monday
Anyway, that was all apropos nothing but filling white space. I’m just back from my walk, going to have breakfast and then get on with a book or something.
A couple of shots of yesterday’s sunrise. A new book out, a new day.
Now then, reviews. I know I’ve bleated on about this before but… If you do ever read and enjoy one of my books, would you be able to leave a review on Amazon? It’s easy to do especially if you are reading a Kindle or KU version. When you get to the end, the reader should say, ‘Before you go…’ and then take you to a place where you can write a review. You have to write a certain amount of words, but it’s not many. A title and two sentences would do, and a star rating. Every time an author receives another review his book is shunted up the rankings and appears nearer the top of search lists within Amazon, and the chance of more sales increases. The Saddling has hit 20 reviews which, apparently, for an unknown author isn’t bad. Anything you can do would be great, thank you, and likewise, sharing Facebook posts around if you ever see any of mine. If we can get 20 reviews for the Witchling, that would be excellent. More would be even better. If you hurry, you can be the first to review it too. I’ll leave that with you and let you enjoy the photos of the electricity pole… I mean the sunrise.