All posts by James Collins

Let’s Get On

Apart from the mule tethered up the road it’s been a quiet weekend for me. A peaceful time of reading, writing, chatting and doing very little else.

In transport news, the bus timetable has changed, and there is now a bus from Yialos every hour, on the hour, from 08.00 until 23.00, except for 15.00 when there is no bus. This will come in handy on Thursday when we are due to go down to treat ourselves for an Indian meal in the evening (Tip: book in advance).

The bother-in-law is due back from Tilos this morning on the Blue Star. He’s reported that he was looking for peace and quiet and has not been disappointed. I look forward to hearing his fuller impression later today. He’s off again tomorrow morning on another Blue Star, so that really will have been a fleeting visit.

Note: Today is one of our three water days, so we must remember to water the plants.

A plant.

Actually, I did do something else over the weekend. I started serialising a novella on my other website www.jacksonmarsh.com. It’s an old one written under my original name, and I’m going to put it up chapter by chapter over the next couple of months. What was interesting to note was that, although I only put it up yesterday and only the opening chapter, I’ve sold two copies of it online and two copies of the book that came before it, ‘Remotely’, which has the same central character, an enigmatic fix-all lady of indiscernible age but much ability, Miss P.

You can find out more about ‘Honestly’ by clicking this link. That will also lead you to the first chapter.

I’m off back to ‘work’ now, with my nose blocked and itching (it’s that certain time of year again), and the fan beside me ready to go on when the sun comes up, so… Let’s get on with the week ahead.

Quick End of Week

This morning’s Blue Star

House guest day #1. The bother-in-law arrived yesterday evening to stay for a night and a day. (That almost sounds like the magical time period from a fairytale.) He’s off to Tilos this evening, and will be calling back in for a day and a night on Monday. So, you have been warned. We ate out last night, early, at Georgio’s, where I can recommend the stuffed peppers. Our boys were working next door, offering us rare glimpses of Sam when he left the kitchen, and the other one gliding up and down the stairs regally serving his guests. The owners had earlier been displaying two massive fish I assume they had caught, so there’s fresh for you.

We’re out again this evening (it’s that time of year), but after that, I fully intend to stay in and get some things done at home. What, I am not sure, just ‘things’ that will keep me occupied for a while. Apart from that, there’s nothing planned apart from some reading, so I’ll let you get on and see you back in class on Monday bright and early.

Let the Train Take the Strain

You either love it or you don’t, I suppose. The ‘Noddy’ train that runs between Guadalquivir and old Seville… Oh, no, that’s a Chris de Burgh song (someone else you’ll either love or hate, perhaps). The tourist train that runs between the town square and the suburbs of Almost-Nimborio, offering you views along the way. Views of the throng stumbling off the day boats into your path, the shopfronts of the harbour north side, the clock tower and police station, the old boat yard and the fancy new restaurants along its water’s edge, and onwards… Past what was Paradise Beach and is now Kirtos, up the hill beside the famous Anchor House (a must-stay destination), and around the coast, offering views of the sea, Nimos, and the other side of Nimborio Bay.

Once it reaches the Nimborio terminus, it turns and comes back, so you can look at the view on the other side — rocks, mainly. I believe it does a circuit of the town square so it can park in the right direction, thus, you can get a close up of the Town Hall and other places of note. (The house that was a museum and is now given over to the clergy, the Indian restaurant – another must-visit…)

The train isn’t actually a locomotive, it’s a tractor in disguise, and it used to pull two carriages, but now has only one. Not sure why. Cheaper to run perhaps? Fewer breakdowns? It’s a bit of fun, though I have yet to indulge myself. Not sure how much the ride costs but I reckon you’re on it for around 45 minutes to an hour. (?) That’s judging by the times I see it crawling around the harbour after boat-arrival time and up to about four of five in the afternoon. In the past, it has been privately hired foo wedding parties, I believe.

There. Something to do while on your day trip to Symi.

Empty Chairs

Let me throw some numbers at you: January-April 2025: 3.2 million international air arrivals, an increase of 197,000 (6.5%) compared to the same period in 2024. Dodecanese: 217,000 arrivals (+6.1%). April 2025: 1.6 million international air arrivals, an increase of 122,000 (8.4%) compared to April 2024. (GTP Headlines and Tornos News.) “Rhodes is among the top European destinations experiencing a surge in international air arrivals…”

So how come:

That was yesterday around 16.30, a time when, in June, the village square is usually bustling with folk on their way back from the beach, and those who prefer to spend the afternoons chatting in the shade of the village square. Head to Yialos between 11.00 and 16.00 and there’s hardly enough air to go round, the place is so busy. Head down there in the evening, and (I am told) you’ll find some eatery/drinkery businesses shutting up shop at 22.00 through lack of custom. Quiet? I should cocoa.

The reason? No idea. And I can’t think of anything else to write today.

Garden and Things

After the silliness of yesterday’s post, today, something quicker. A ‘garden’ update. We still say, ‘I’m going to water the garden,’ when we don’t have one. It’s a courtyard, and we’re off to water the plants, not the concrete, so…

The innumerable chili plants are doing well, the second rose is growing, other things are doing whatever they do, and Dionysus is growing his hair while the temperature hangs around the 30° mark. This was on Saturday, but it’s been pretty consistent apart from a cooling wind on Sunday which has now gone.

There are some more plant photos to share another day. Today, though, I have a quiet day at home planned, with some typing to do this morning, while Neil is readying the ‘spare room’ for his brother who is calling in on Thursday night on his way to Tilos on Friday afternoon.

Later this week I hope to call down to Yialos not to gawp at another hundred people who got off of the boat, but to take delivery of a new fan, and while there, pay the accountant for doing out tax returns, and that, along with some piano, looks like it’s going to be the highlight of my week. That is, if it hasn’t peaked already when, yesterday, my piano pupil perfectly played the first two pages of the second movement of Mozart’s sonata number 16 and did well on the third movement too (the first movement, we ‘did’ last week, and that, too, is nearly there). Which reminds me, I need to go and look up grade five requirements to see exactly what grade he is, I reckon it’s kind of 4.5, but there isn’t such a thing, so… I’ll go and do that now, and leave you to water the rest of the garden.