All posts by James Collins

Quick news roundup

Quick news roundup
Here’s some other news to catch up with. It was all happening in Yialos on the afternoon of November 16th. First of all a chicken went shopping…

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Off to buy some eggs

It’s one of those things that you see every now and then. You’re just walking along the backstreet towards the post office, passing the Xatzipetros supermarket when from behind the flower shop comes a small chicken. This is being followed at a polite distance by a curious young cat. The chicken crosses your path, you grab a quick photo and then it heads into the super market (sic) to, I assume, pick up a few essentials. The cat loses interest and wanders off somewhere else and you go to the post office.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Meeting with Solidarity Symi

Later you attend a meeting organised by Solidarity Symi, the refugee and island charity newly set up to help those in need. Attending are a group of interested observers plus the hosts, the island doctors, the head of the port police, people form the Rhodes charity ‘Helping Hands’ and members of the UN. A good two hour discussion with questions and some answers follows.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
A message to remember

Later, having a glass at Pacho’s, you see a red flare being set off and wonder if that’s got anything to do with incoming refugees. It doesn’t, on closer inspection, seem so as the person holding it was on the quayside. The Dodecanese catamaran was leaving so maybe someone was saying goodbye in style. It did remind me though of a time in the summer when we were on the balcony and saw a flare, red, over by Nimos which did turn out to be a refugee boat in trouble. Red flares in the sunset.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Red flares in the sunset

And that’s my news for today, except to remind you that if you haven’t already put in your order for a Symi calendar or several, then now is the time to do so. You can find the order page here: Neil Gosling at Lulu. Or you could just ‘Google’ “Neil Gosling Lulu” and, surprisingly, you won’t find Neil singing ‘Shout’, but will find links to where you can order a copy, or several, of next year’s calendar. Well worth shouting about.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And again

Symi to Rhodes, boats in November

Symi to Rhodes, boats in November
Today’s blog post is a ramble around the boat timetable for November/December. As you know we’re heading off for a couple of weeks soon – and don’t worry, the house and Alarm Cat are being looked after – and so, as is usual around here, you have to check the boats to see when you’re going to go. Thing is, the flight is on a Friday morning and although there is a Blue Star ferry on a Friday morning it doesn’t get there early enough, so we have to go a few days earlier, in this case Monday, four days before our flight is due to leave. Why? Well…

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
At a baptism

Here’s the boat timetable from Symi to Rhodes for the week beginning 23rd November:
Monday           17.45   Pride
Tuesday
Wednesday     08.15   Diagoras
Thursday
Friday              07.45   Diagoras
Saturday          17.25   Pride
Sunday            17.10   Pride

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Sunrise last week

Not that we need to, but you can only come back on the same day if you go on the Diagoras. Now then, you say, what about going on Wednesday? Well, yes, that’s the obvious choice and what we were originally going to do. But the thing is, should something happen and that boat not go (and there have been delays due to strikes) then we are stuck until the Friday morning when the boat, even if on time, would not arrive until about half an hour before take-off. So, the only safe option is to go on the Monday. (When I booked the flights the timetable for boats was not available and I was relying on the Wednesday Blue Star, which is still the fall back option should anything happen to the Monday boat.)

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Still hot in Yialos

So, a delightful four nights in Rhodes before we jet off to visit Neil’s brother and other interesting sights in Europe. What to do? Well, first off you have to find accommodation and though we usually stay at hotels, and would in this case if it were only for a couple of nights, we’ve found an apartment in the old town at a very good price (€25.00 a night for a one bed apartment including TV, heating and Wifi); I will no doubt do a review of it on Trip Advisor or elsewhere when I get back. So, what’s the Rhodian itinerary?

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Quiet in the village in the early evening

Well, ideas for what to do currently look like this: Monday night, staying around the Old Town and seeing what a night there is like in November.  We are hoping to visit Ancient Kamiros too. This is open every day except Mondays from 08.00 to 14.40 and costs €4.00 to enter. There are buses back and forth to a nearby village and then a three mile walk. Tuesday night? Not sure yet but Wednesday is curry night with our annual Symi Dream outing to Saffron. We were also thinking of a Jumbo visit (from the sublime to the ridiculous) but that will have to wait until our return; I’m not carrying plastic tat around Europe with me. There will also be lots of walking no doubt, and a certain amount of staying in and watching television or reading to save money as the extra two days and nights were not in the budget.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
On a walk, looking down to Nimborio

So, while all that’s going on, there will be guest blog posts and I’ve only a few more slots to fill out – and I may have to do that with adverts about my books and Neil’s Symi calendar which you might want to consider ordering now so as to avoid disappointment later. Links are on the right >> and more details will follow over the next few weeks.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And looking out to sea

Monday morning

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The bridge at the back of Yialos

I didn’t get a Sunday morning blog done ready for Monday yesterday because I spent a couple of hours getting the blog posts for when I am away ready instead, and then went for a walk around the hills. So, if you’re an early-birder and have been waiting for this to appear, sorry about that, but it’s nearly eight on a Monday morning and I am only just sitting down to put something up.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Baptism favours

A few brief words, then on with my day. Saturday we were out and about in the morning to see if there was anything needing doing at the refugee centre, and then back home for a ready meal; ready meals Symi style mean having something prepared and in the slow cooker ready for when you get back, a sausage casserole in this case. We were invited to a baptism on Saturday afternoon up at Xissos; (Taverna) Zoi’s grandson.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
In the church

The family church looked superb, the arrangements and borbonieros, the baptism gifts for guests, were supplied by Symi Flower and had a Smurf theme, everyone was dressed in their best and the service was conducted by Papas Stephanos. There were drinks and pies for everyone afterwards. Later we were also invited to the family meal at Georgio’s.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Dinner afterwards

On Sunday, after doing some work on the blog posts, I went off walking with L&J; down the kataractis to the back of Yialos, around and up to the cemetery on the Nimborio road, turning left opposite the chickens and up and around above Nimborio. Here we stopped to watch a family of ravens wheeling about. They were calling and having some kind of fun and even, in one case, flying on its back, something I’d heard about but never seen before.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Ravens

After that we carried on around the back of the hills that look down on Yialos, past ‘Aslan’s table’, and if anyone knows what this might have been used for I’d be interested to know. There are signs of a building or manmade wall running along to one side of this huge lump of dressed stone, but they are hard to see so I reckon whatever was here was here a very long time ago.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
But what was it?

Coming out on the road near Roukouniotis, we then headed back to the village via the path along ‘the Wall’, stopping to watch black redstarts and listen to robins. (The derivation of the word ‘Start’: Old English styrtan ‘to caper, leap’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch storten ‘push’ and German stürzen ‘fall headlong, fling’. From the sense ‘sudden movement’ arose the sense ‘initiation of movement, setting out on a journey’ and hence ‘beginning of a process, etc.’.)

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Heading home

And that was the weekend that was. I’m heading off into my Monday now so will leave to you get on with yours and wish you a kalo evthoumada.

Saturday Symi photos

Symi Greece photos
At Panormitis

It’s the end of the week and here are some Saturday Symi photos for you; again, these are from last weekend and our long walk and the Panormitis Festival. After this we shall move on to other things for next week, though there are still many images to share. There are a few posts about Panormitis coming in the future in the guest post slots while we are away, so watch out for them. We’re away to a baptism today and then I may go on a walk on Sunday so there could be a deluge of photos over the next week.

Symi Greece Simi
On the road

Other news? Well, there’s a meeting with Solidarity Symi on Monday at 2pm in the cultural centre in Yialos and everyone is welcome. There are lots of things up for discussion and not just the refugee situation on Symi, but also what the charity can do to help locals affected by the economic crisis. We are doing out little stint at the aid centre this morning, there have been refugees coming through Symi but not in the numbers we saw in August and not as many as on other islands. But keep your donations coming as any over-spill of donations will be sent on to where they are needed if not needed here.

Symi Greece photos
The road!

More domestically; we have started readying the house for winter and on Symi this means: waterproofing where necessary – rain through windows, under doors etc., so shutters shut when it rains and some plastic sheeting up on the porch, also covering garden/courtyard furniture in plastic. We’ve filled in some gaps under doors and around windows where the cold north wind blasts in, so that should help. I am waiting for some thermal curtains to put up at the moussandra balcony so any heat we can generate in the sitting room is not lost to there and the oxeye at the back of the house. Neil’s been chopping the vine back and seeing to his and Louise’s plants that are sheltering in the courtyard. And we have dug out the electric blankets and spare blankets ready for when it gets really cold. It’s been fine of late though, hot in the sun and cool in the shade, average around 23 degrees. But we all know that cold and dark are on their way.

Symi Greece photos
Panormitis view

Anyway, enough rambling, I am going to leave you now with some more photos (in no particular order) and wish you a happy weekend.

Symi Greece photos
The safe harbour
Symi Greece photos
Symi Greece photos
Symi Greece photos
Village view

Symi Greece photos

Symi Greece photos
Bit busy
Symi Greece photos
Waiting to go into the church
Symi Greece photos
And Yialos – I told you there weren’t in any particular order

Political thoughts and then some nice photos

Symi Greece Simi
Visitors to the Panormitis Festival

Political thoughts and then some nice photos
Now I can share some of Neil’s wonderful photos of last weekend with you, and they will be a distraction as I am feeling a little strange today, a little political, and that’s not like me at all.

Symi Greece Simi
Queuing to enter the chapel (there are Security officers to help)

I was just browsing around for news and discovered a report on the Greek Reporter website alleging that the Greek PM is calling for everyone to strike today – to protest at the austerity measures being imposed by the country’s creditors. We’re used to strikes in Greece, they are about as common and as useful as early closing days. But hang on a minute… He’s calling for everyone to strike against austerity measures? Well, I can’t put it any better than the report put it so here is the quote: “How fitting that the people who are the backbone of the government that has imposed the harshest austerity measures so far, call on Greeks to protest against the government!” – While I stop laughing, you can see more at Greek Reporter.

Symi Greece Simi
Loads of boats

And then I saw another report about Britain leaving the EU and that’s another subject where I can’t help thinking that anyone who thinks the country would be better off out of the EU is a little bit ‘Current Greek PM’, if you see what I mean. Mind you, from what I have seen of my homeland recently, there are too many people who voted for the Government now pretending that they didn’t, and everyone seems to be turning against it and yet someone is responsible for putting it there. But like I said, I’m not really political though I will vote in the referendum about leaving the EU if I can – and the last I heard I could, so I can put my vote where my mouth occasionally is. Anyway… enough of this boring stuff…

Symi Greece Simi
Lots of visitors

As you can see, I am not on strike today though I am writing this yesterday, though I will be writing tomorrow’s today… And so on. So, with no other great news to impart, I shall let you enjoy some more photos from the Panormitis Festival, this time courtesy of Neil. Remember that you can click a photo here and it should then open up a slideshow where you can browse through and if you want you can download the images and save them, though they are only at 1,000 px at the most and watermarked.

Symi Greece Simi
Lots of discussion
Symi Greece Simi
The taverna is open
Symi Greece Simi
Shopping opportunities
Symi Greece Simi
And it goes on after sunset too

More photos tomorrow.