All posts by James Collins

Yialos to Horio, steps

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Part of the village seen from the harbour

Another quiet day yesterday. An early morning walk-thing, some work, a vegetable lunch, some reading… Quiet summer days staying out of the heat. A breeze helped keep things a little cooler, though I still sit by an open window one side with a fan on the other.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The Kali Strata, the more traditional route up

Somebody asked me the other day about alternative routes up to the village. There is the road, which you can walk up, or get a bus or a taxi up, and then there are the steps. There’s not just the Kali Strata, which, if it’s your first visit or you are only over for a day from Rhodes, is not that easy to find. The Kali Strata is the main way up by foot, and was a track until it was widened in the 19th century; the original way up being the Katarakis at the back of the harbour. That’s still in its original form and you can walk up and down that way, but there’s not a lot of shade for most of the way.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
View from the ‘zigzag’ path

So, find the bottom of the Kali Strata by heading to the south west corner of the harbour, the Trawler Square, or the Vapori Bar, Bella Napoli or Harani Bar, it’s there in that corner. You can follow the steps all the way up if you want, just follow the main, wide ones, there are about 380 of them to the village square that way. Or you can come up any of the side steps that join in, but here you’ll need to keep an eye on where you are going. I went on one of these paths the other day.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Cleared area en route

Start at the bottom of the main Kali Strata, go up past the Old Markets hotel, and the old door, and then the old ruin that everyone wants, the ‘Doctor’s House’ as it’s sometimes called, and you get to the renovated red property on the left. Here you can turn right and there is a very steep set of steps facing you. Go for it – as long as you’re fit enough. They are steep but they get you to half way up the hillside in only about 100 steps (I haven’t counted them). There you find the start of a zigzag path that first heads out to your right, and then starts to hairpin back. The area here has been cleared of trees recently and I hope not just so some rich house buyer has a better view.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
From the steps opposite the red house

Keep following the zigzag heading upwards and you will eventually come out on a road; this is the road to the domed church H Lemonitisa that you can see from the harbour. Turn right towards that or left towards the village square. You can also come up any of the side steps that lead off the south side of the harbour, behind the taxi rank, just past the bus stop and so on. These will start to join the Kali Strata at some point. Further along, heading out of the harbour, you find steps heading up to Petini and from there you can meander through to the village or up to the windmills.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
A lane near the top

Whichever way you go, take your time, don’t rush, do stop to admire the view and get your breath back and take photos. In summer, take water and wear a hat. It doesn’t take long to get up if you are fit, it takes me five minutes from bottom to top at a slow pace, without stopping. And coming back down from the village is easy of course, no matter where you are. You just keep heading downhill and you will find the sea eventually. It might be the wrong bay, or the back of the island, but at least it will be the sea.

Symi Wednesday

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Symi harbour yesterday

It is actually Thursday morning as I write this, now how about that for a change? I ran out of time to get ahead yesterday, what with writing and walking and heading to the harbour. So, here I am at 6.44 on Thursday morning, just back from a walk/jog up the hill to the viewpoint.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Steep steps on the way down

We didn’t go so far today thanks to having a ‘hitch in my giddy-up’ as a Californian once put it; a slight twinge, in other words. I didn’t want to risk a sports injury. But still, up past the museum, straight up the steps – always a hard warm-up in this humidity, then onto the road, and on up. A brief stop at the top and then down again. Simple. The sun was just coming up as we got home so I nipped up onto the roof for a quick view. And now here I am at the desk with the fan on and the mosquito spray to hand; I’ve already been got twice and I’ve only been here five minutes.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
A cruise ship visiting for the day

Yesterday, the harbour was pretty busy with day-trippers. I checked the post office. Found my delivery of a rather unusual DVD. A recording made at Abbey Road by Eric Wolfson of a musical about Poe. I’ve got the CD and listened to it a couple of times, but I always think musical are better watched than the soundtracks listened to on their own, they make more sense that way. So there’s that to look forward to.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Panagia Skiadeni leaving this morning for Rhodes and back

After that I headed to the dentist and saw Vasilis. We had a chat, he fixed a small filling, gave me a check-up and declared I had ‘petra’ behind my bottom teeth, ‘stone’, which translates into… well, the kind of thing dentists scrape off in adverts for toothpaste. So I’ll go back and have that done soon. I made an appointment for Neil for next week while I was there and discussed the Symi Festival events. The nice things about the surgery is that it’s air conditioned; you could lie there feeling cool for hours. Were it not for the implements and purpose of your visit.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Sunrise from the roof

After that I wandered back up the Kali Strata, as midday – mad dogs and all that, and headed to Sotiris for shopping. It was Sotiris’ name day yesterday. I picked up some decent veg and bits and pieces and arranged for four packs of water (24 bottles) to be delivered. Habib now drops them round on his moped, it’s so much easier being on the road. And that was that. We were going to do some work in the courtyard last night but that idea fell on stony ground, so we watched a couple of films instead. And that was the day that was. Onto Thursday now and more of the same, but without the dentist.

Yialos by night

Yialos by night. (Not brilliant photos, they were taken on my underwater camera, and it was very dry.) This was last week actually, I’ve not been out and about at night much over the past few days, though we did nip out to the Windmill on Monday for no reason other than because we wanted to. And very nice it was too.

The war memorial is lit up at night. On a Sunday some of the soldiers parade with a flag, sing the National Anthem and then hoist the flag at the flag pole. They return in the evening to take it down, but this one stays where it is.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The war memorial

Some tavernas, like Aris here, put their tables further out towards the road leaving room inside for dancing, but also to catch any breeze that may be out and about. (The lens needed cleaning.)

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Inside tables outside
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Manos’ fist restaurant

This was still early evening, it had just got dark, but darkness falls pretty quickly after sunset around here. This is on the corner by the bridge, a popular café. Behind it you head into the back streets and the first lace you encounter is Georgina’s Emporium which has a large range of wine and a delicatessen.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Near the bridge

Earlier in the day the Herb And Spice corner was thronged with day-trippers hearing a talk about the produce. Beside here is a small souvlaki shop, and to the other side, left, is the second pharmacy, then a travel agent. It’s a busy corner and one of the few places on the island where I feel like I should look left and right before crossing the road – sorry, right then left – as cars and bikes come around from the bridge, and from the front, and from the backstreet.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Herb and Spice corner

The shops in the harbour stay open until late into the night as it’s a place that comes alive after dark, especially if there is a Festival event on and lots of boats in the harbour. You can buy clothes, jewellery, even your groceries until approaching midnight.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Clothes shops
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And jewelery shops

Symi shrimps and Ashton Kutcher

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Symi shrimp festival

Today you have some of Neil’s images from Sunday night’s Symi Shrimp Festivals for your photo-viewing enjoyment. It was a hot night, the event was well attended, and how those dancers keep cool wearing all that costume is beyond me. I did read, somewhere at the museum (when opened), that the traditional head scarves a lady wore would sometimes number 20 or more – how heavy would that be? (Rhetorical question, no need to answer.)

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

But, traditional dances, with traditional island songs and traditional Symi shrimps and products made by the Women’s Association of Symi. All part of this year’s Symi festival. Tonight in the alternative, complementary festival is an evening of opera with Michael Powel, to be held in a private garden in the village, but open to the public, starting at 9 pm, directions will be given from Syllogos Square, look out for them if you’re heading up that way. I had the pleasure of accompanying Michael a couple of years back at an ‘intimate’ concert on Leros attended by several hundred people, all local dignitaries what looked like an admiral, and a TV crew. Great voice; it’s going to be a lovely concert.

Images by Neil Gosling
Images by Neil Gosling

And then there is the festival of Magalos Sotiris up in the middle of the island. We have attended the evening there on a few occasions, the last time we went in the back of a flatbed truck, and, apart from a fabulous festival, we were treated to the stars and Milky Way right over head. If you’re on Symi anytime it’s’ worth getting up into the hills at night to see the stars without light pollution. Pretty and amazing, and pretty amazing.

Images by Neil Gosling
Images by Neil Gosling

I’ve been having my own festival of rewriting and editing on ‘Straight Swap’ while ‘Lonely House’ continues to sell and gather interest.  We have some copies (in the UK) that we want to send out for reviews, so if anyone has any idea where might be good places to send them… Being over here in Greece I am not up to date much on what publications, papers, magazines, TV show, radio shows etc. might carry out book reviews, so if you have some ideas please drop me an email. Just click here. Ta.

Example of the kind of cover I'm thinking of (the pose will be different)
Example of the kind of cover I’m thinking of (the pose will be different)

And here’s another thing for you. I have an idea for the cover of the next book but will need a couple of models and a photographer. If anyone fits the bill and fancies being a cover model (we can negotiate a fee) or has a son, uncle, brother, cousin, friend, who would do it, again please let me know. What I want to create is something like a DVD  cover (I’ve used ‘Two and a half men’ as a rough example) but showing the two main characters. I’ll go into detail if anyone offers their services, but the two guys would need to be, or look, around 19 or 20 years old, one has long dark hair (but of a rock/goth type), the other is blonde (a bit fey). I’d just need body shot of each guy posing, they don’t have to be together, I can then Photoshop around and set the cover up. Anyway, let me know if you would like to help. Just click here.

That’s it for today’s ramble, we’ve gone from Symi shrimps to Ashton Kutcher within 500 words, not bad for a Tuesday morning. A couple more photos from Sunday:

Images by Neil Gosling
Images by Neil Gosling
Images by Neil Gosling
Images by Neil Gosling

Symi Ex-pat award categories

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Lots of yachts in

Into August and there’s probably no need for me to mention how hot it is. I could instead mention that fab weekend just gone, with surprise invitations to a birthday party, guests at the house, work on the book, the Symi Festival getting underway, the Symi Shrimp Festival held in the village square and more. The photos today are from Saturday evening in Yialos.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Coming back from the beach (and on the phone while driving! Grrr)

Apparently the mayor of Symi is to throw a party for the foreigners who support the island, and has been gathering names of residents and long-term visitors who are not on the electoral roll. With the next elections some years away I don’t think there’s a political motive other than to be seen to say thank you. And not only to those who host businesses, promote the island in blogs and positive web posts and advertising, but also those who return here or come to stay for lengths of time, and thus, I imagine, anyone who supports the island through commerce and visits. This did make me wonder if he was going to give out awards, and that made me wonder about the 2015 Symi Ex-pat awards…

The categories might be

  • Ex-pat most likely to open a new business this year
  • Ex-pat most likely to close a business this year
  • Best new foreign business not involving alcohol
  • Ex-pat most likely to need hospitalisation due to too much fun
  • The most sober Ex-pat of the season
  • Best Ex-pat band
  • First Ex-pat business not to receive a sundry fine in a season
  • Best original reason to expatriate
  • Best adaptation to current climate
  • Best Ex-pat in a supporting role
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Taking people by surprise

And so on. You can fill in your own winners and have fun making up more. There are plenty more to make up but I’m not allowed to show anyone up on these pages…

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Friendly ticket sales lady

So, instead, I’ll get your Monday off to a bright start with a few more images from Symi’s harbour on a Saturday evening.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Getting ready for the concert
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Enjoying the train (?)
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Shooting the breeze
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
An evening out
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And a surprise (for us) birthday party at Trata