Saturday Symi photos
As it’s Saturday, today we have a set of Symi Saturday photos for you, a custom I have started recently because I’ve usually run out of things to say by the weekend. I am off to Yialos today (Friday) though, and will take the camera. There is shopping to be done before a possible quick lunchtime beer with a birthday girl, an afternoon to get over that and then an evening at the taverna tonight. It’s just like the summer again. It’s as sunny, but a lot, lot colder. So, have a good weekend and have a glance at the images. The only other thing to tell you is that ‘The Saddling’ is coming along faster than I expected with its checking and setting out so it may be available before the end of April, my original estimated date. Watch this space. Now watch these photos.
On the prowlUpper HorioA boat coming into land?A bare fig tree. The leaves will soon be back.Candles in church.Spring light, in church.A view from mid-Horio.The mountainside from a distance.
To-do list
We took a walk down to Pedi on Wednesday afternoon, and I was going to take some photos, but we were running late, and I didn’t want to stop in the cold for snaps. So, I have promised myself that I will go out and about with the camera next week, weather permitting, and so, please bear with me and the photos, which are not so recent.
Quiet village ‘main street’
Yesterday, when I woke up at six, I was straight into my woollen socks, thermals (top and bottom) thick jogging ‘pants’ that have never been used for jogging, of course, two sweatshirts and a fleece, plus fingerless gloves and a hat Mother made me for Christmas. I’m not saying that it feels cold in a Symi house first thing in the morning but… It feels cold in a Symi house first thing in the morning, in February. It’s clear outside, and the wind has died down, which helps, but it’s still a bit of a rush to get dressed. Showers wait until later in the day when I’ve warmed up a bit.
The lemons are ready
Sitting at my desk with the shutters shut gives me no view of anything apart from the cat by the heater and all the mess in the office I really must tidy away one day. There’s my concertina (which needs repair) on the sofa with a book about Barbara Streisand I’ve yet to start, several notebooks each with a few pages used and lots of white space, some presents to wrap and some camera equipment to put away. Over there by the door on another table are the new keyboard that didn’t work properly (four clicks to get the mouse to work? I don’t think so) and the old office chair that did my back in. That needs to go to the scrap heap as soon as I can get it there. Next door, Neil is putting away the shopping he just went foraging for at Sotiris’ supermarket (though Sotiris is in Athens at the moment having medical work done on his arm) and very shortly I need to go and do some housework ahead of visitors arriving for dinner later.
The Trata is not open, but the menu stays all year round
So, it’s all a bit chilly, but there is a lot to do. Symi is still quiet though there’s building work going on up the lane, as there always is at this time of year when the weather is good. There’s a mule parked up in the grass nearby, and that keeps going off with a protest, and there is a distant chug from a fishing boat I can hear but not see. My list of jobs to do (when I get around to them) is growing by the day too. Take away the old vine cuttings, tidy the courtyard, cut down the fig tree opposite (it’s on common land so that should be okay), and get around to fixing the leaks on the kitchen tap, and showers.
Ah well, maybe after lunch…
Someone is speed-boating off on holiday early. Or just moving their boat about a bit.
New Symi jetty
Neil took today’s photos of the work going on at the new Symi jetty area. I call it a jetty, but it’s more like a piece of harbour, or a dock, but you know what I mean. As you can see, things are coming along. They have constructed a new wall and are filling the space behind it to make an area for vehicles. I’m not sure how those vehicles will get there and from there, but we will have to wait and see what the plans for the road are going to be. I’d heard, from Yiannis Rainbow, that the road may have to come out over the sea and curve up to ‘Council corner’ where the trucks are parked half way up the road, but that’s just speculation.
New Symi jetty underway
It was six degrees in the courtyard yesterday morning, but that was before the sun came up as I was up early as usual. What was not so usual was that I was zonked for a reason I couldn’t work out. Early night, decent sleep, early morning as usual but all a bit slow and with drooping eyes. Perhaps it’s the aftereffects of finishing a book and being able to relax a little more. I just went to see if I could find the origin of the word Zonked, or Zonk. My dictionary tells me it comes from the 1940s and is ‘imitative’, which means ‘imitating behaviour’; “Babies of eight to twelve months are generally highly imitative.” For example. I wonder who was being imitated when the word first fell into use? Mr Zonk, perhaps?
The brown water are will eventually be filled in
Anyway, what it means is that I am as tired of brain as I am of body and so I shan’t be staying around long this morning. I’ll just load you up with some more photos of the new jetty and let you take a look at work that’s going on. Once finished, this new… whatever it is, should be able to take the large cargo ships and perhaps ferries that come in. This will save lorries and suchlike having to drive through the harbour at certain times. Fewer visitors will have to leap out of the way, fewer café and shop owners will have to roll back their awnings, and there will be less pollution in the air around Yialos. That’s the theory. Let’s hope it works.
It’s a pretty cold place to be working at the momentA longer shotMuddy waters
Mixed news and veg
Here is the final cover design for ‘The Saddling’. You may not be able to read the text on the back very clearly as I’ve made the file small so I can post it here, but you should get a good idea of how it is to look. All we need to do now is get it typeset and published. Hopefully, the wait won’t be too long.
The Saddling, full cover designGeneral Symi views today
You will be delighted to hear that I can’t bleat on about the weather today as I’ve not seen much of it. I’m in my office with the cat roasting in front of the heater and the shutters closed against the cold. It’s not windy, though, just very chilly – and sunny (I just poked my head outside and had a squint).
In church for a name day
I have some sad news for those who have not heard it: Gabriel from the Diagoras boat has died. I know that many readers knew him and were fond of him as he was of them, and I know many readers also don’t use social media where the news has been shared. For anyone who also knew Robin, who used to live on Symi with his wife Gill, you will be saddened to hear of his passing too. He was a worthy cribbage opponent and great fun.
Keeping watch
It’s always difficult to come back to the next paragraph after imparting news like that, but it must be done. Not that there is anything else much to tell you. Our busy week continues with early starts to get work done before social activity in the afternoon and evening. We went shopping yesterday, to the greengrocers in Horio, and I was a bit bowled over by the prices. We stocked up on a week’s worth of vegetables, all fresh, for less than €20.00 and I am sure we have enough to make every day a vegetarian day, with the addition of some rice perhaps. We didn’t though, as the butcher is almost opposite and he has the most amazing chops; Dino-burgers, I call them. So we feasted on a couple of those yesterday and didn’t need to eat for the rest of the day. Didn’t need to, but did, as the salad veg was so fresh. Still, at least it was only a small salad for tea and not another half a brontosaurus. If you are interested: two double chicken fillets weighing half a tonne each and two pork chops that were fresh (and so not from the Late Jurassic epoch after all) came in at €15.00. That will do for at least four meals between the two of us if not five, so, add the veg, and the basics have cost us €35.00 for the week. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad by your local standards, but I am not complaining.
Cold and social
The cold wind has returned with a biting vengeance, dropping the temperature down to around six degrees in our courtyard, when in the breeze. It’s still lovely and sunny outside though which is a good thing as the town hall are currently paving the road around the town square and on towards the clock tower. The catamaran came in on the other side of the harbour the other day, and maybe did again today (I heard it but didn’t see it as the shutters were closed against the cold), which will cause some temporary disruptions for some – but it will all look great when it’s finished.
Wood for the baker’s oven.
We were up early on Tuesday. Well, Neil was up at five and I opted for another hour in bed, but it was not to be. The cat has been in a strange mood and yesterday he was tap dancing up and down the corridor outside the bedroom while singing (badly) about something or other. It took him the whole morning to calm down, several trips to the food bowl to double check, a good hunt around the grounds and then, finally, a great bit cat litter visit, which must have worn him out as he went to sleep quite happily and quietly in the sun afterwards. I am sure he is ‘going over’ a bit, he is getting on after all. It was about this time two years ago that we moved house. Perhaps that has something to do with it. Also, two years ago, in April, I think it was, he went missing for a few days and again last year for ten days, so perhaps he is building himself up to another escape attempt. If so, we will have to go hunting for him again at the old house.
Construction work at Campos
Thank you to everyone who has liked my Facebook page since I mentioned it yesterday; please feel free to share it around and to put up reviews on Amazon if you have read one of the books and enjoyed them. Today is the first day in a couple of years that I have not had to work on a book – though I have another Symi related one in the pipeline. I have an afternoon off from writing, unless I want to do some work on ‘Symi, Stuff and Nonsense’, which I don’t at the moment – I need to rest the brain and the back a little before getting back down to that one.
Fisherman at work
The week ahead suddenly holds many social things: friends popping in today for a catch-up, piano playing tomorrow, a walk to Pedi and late lunch on Thursday (also Psiknopempti, ‘meat eating Thursday’) and a birthday to celebrate on Friday. The weekend should be calmer, though there is also a party invite for Sunday afternoon. We don’t usually have this much social activity in the winter, it’s usually reserved for Summer. And, as today is Valentine’s Day, we are sending our love to all out readers. Remember, as Neil’s T-shirt reads, ‘More love less hate.’