Category Archives: Day to day on Symi

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream
I looked to see if I had a post from last year, for this date, but didn’t see one. I must have started the Christmas time-off early, or perhaps it was due to an over excess of fun at the Christmas quiz the night before. Who knows? I will be taking a Christmas break after today, and will probably be back to the blog on Tuesday or Wednesday, so don’t panic if we’re not here for a while.

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream
This rug needs Hoovering

Yesterday, having not been out of the house for a few days, I took a few homely shots to fill the page for you. The cat asleep, the tree, the view from the roof – there’s so much air out there! We’re planning on going out later this morning though, some shopping to do and so on, and then a dinner in the evening and some carols in the square afterwards.

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream
Must get some new lights, half are not working

Apart from that, there’s not much news from up here, so I’ll just post this quick blog and the photos and leave you with a Merry Christmas from Symi Dream, and with all our readers a great time if you are celebrating it, and a great time if you are not. Thank you for following the blog this far. Although it becomes increasingly more difficult through the winter to find things to talk about every day, I will attempt to keep the almost daily posts coming for the foreseeable future. Remember you can always keep up to date on Adriana’s twice-per-week blog at http://adrianas-symi.blogspot.gr/ and find out more about Symi plants and wildlife at http://symifloraandfauna.jigsy.com/

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream
Rather grumpy souvenir of our trip to the Nutcracker last year (actually bought in Rhodes)

If you want to give yourself or anyone (friends, family, total strangers) a New Year’s gift then it’s not too late to find Neil’s Symi and Greek Cats calendars online at Lulu.com at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/neilgosling And, if you want to stock up on some Greek, fun and chilling reading, then you can find my Amazon author’s profile here: Amazon/JamesCollins. Just make sure you then find the books from the Amazon in your country so they arrive more quickly.

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream
Harbour view yesterday

That’s it for the Christmas weekend – have a happy time and remember, if you are going out for a party and driving afterwards, don’t forget to take the car.

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream!

Merry Christmas from Symi Dream
Pedi view yesterday

 

Symi Christmas

Symi Christmas
I had a look back to see what we were doing this day last year in the run up to our Symi Christmas and things didn’t look that much different: Quiet harbour and news about boats and busses, but also, I noticed, I reported that it was warm and we were: “…in the ‘Halcyon’ days, as someone pointed out to me the other day; the period of a week either side of the winter solstice (from today the days start growing longer as we head towards summer).” It’s not that warm here today (Wednesday as I write) but days are still ‘Halcyon’ in the “A very happy and successful period” meaning of the word.

Symi Christmas
Sunny but cold Yialos

I also noticed that we had attended our first Christmas party, that we were all hoping for rain as there had been a shortage of downpours – the same as this year – and we were planning to attend a Christmas quiz night. I remember that! (Surprisingly.) It was a good evening. Tonight we are planning nothing but films and reading and staying warm inside the house. We are planning to go out for dinner on Friday night though, at Georgio’s, followed by some Christmas carols and fun fund-raising for the Rhodes orphanage afterwards, or before, depending on what time we go to eat. We were also planning for a Boxing Day party at our house. We are not having one this year. It’s always a good idea at the time but when you wake up late on Boxing Day morning with a slight thump to the head and remember that you have 30 guests arriving in two hours, it’s not such a good idea. We will, I expect, invite smaller groups of people for post-Christmas get togethers during next week instead.

Symi Christmas
The ‘Panormitis bakery’ shop, relocated to Horio

This will be our 15th Christmas on Symi. The first was spent with Jean and Sue at Jean’s house in the afternoon; we spent one with Marj and Brian at their house – that was when we had the notorious incident of the Brussels sprouts and learned not to feed them to Neil; and the others have been spent with Jenine and the godboys, a day we look forward to all year round and start planning usually on December 26th, if not earlier.

 

The tree is up, I’d take a photo but it’s the same as last year. When Neil went into hospital on January 3rd 2008, after breaking his heel on January 1st early in the morning, I dashed home to arrange a few things before heading back to Rhodes the next day. This was on January 4th and I was aware that I had to take the decorations down before Epiphany. I rushed around doing things. Lefteris ‘the truck’ had given me a lift up, Miss DJ has made my dinner, but I was still short of time as I came in late afternoon and the boat back was early morning – those were the days of the hydrofoil. The tree was still up and decorated so I just lifted it up and dropped it in the mousandra. Twelve months later I lifted it down again, fully dressed (the tree and me), and that tradition went on for a few years. I got out of the habit a couple of years ago and now we re-dress the tree every year. Still with the same decorations and lights, so I might as well just store it ‘as is’ and leave it at that.

Symi Christmas
Many shops are still open at this time of year.

We’re planning to head down to Yialos for the last minute post and presents on Friday and that’s when our Symi Christmas will really start – the last working day for a whole ten days! We will probably have our Symi Dream staff party while there which will be a giros and a beer, possibly at Pacho’s (the giros shop delivers and Yiannis and George don’t mind) but that will depend on the weather and chicken giros availability.

I wonder what I will make of this post if I look back on it in a year’s time?

Symi Christmas
Even the little-used backstreets of Symi are swept and cleaned

Post, cat routine, cold

Post, cat routine, cold
It is all very calm and peaceful around here, especially on a Tuesday when there are no boats coming and going. The addition of another Blue Star arrival on a Sunday from Athens and Monday back from Rhodes is helping with deliveries and fresh produce. Mind you, I am still waiting for some ordered Christmas items but am hopeful that they will arrive in time. I’ll go and check on Friday, the last day to find the post office open. It’s closed again today as the staff are having a well-earned Christmas party, or so I am told, and, with no boat on a Tuesday, there is no new post for them to sort out. As you can imagine, they are busier at this time of year, though things are never quiet there at any time.

Post, cat routine, cold
Windmill cat

Up at the house the cat has found a new routine which is slightly less food-orientated as before. Now that he is not allowed so much wet food due to his age and heart, he is a little grumpy about the same old same old biscuit routine, but he’s getting used to it. Now, after coming in first thing in the morning when we get up, he has his breakfast and hen heads straight for the bed. If the door is shut he will stand there and shout at it until someone magically and obediently opens it for him and then settle down for a few hours, leaving us in peace to get on with other things. Apart from making the bed.

Post, cat routine, cold
Windmill cat 2

He only disturbs my morning a few times now and, as I have a heater beside me in the office, he is happy to flop out in front of it when he is bored with using my bed. What he really looks forward to are those times when we hunker down in the sitting room. When the day’s work is done, the chores seen to, the washing away, the meals sorted, the floors swept, we settle down to some TV or a good book. Fire on, shutters closed against the cold, blankets over knees, hat on, and cat on lap, when not sprawled in front of the fire. He’s happy – when he has someone warm to sit on.

Post, cat routine, cold
Sotiris supermarket during one of its rare closing times.

Change of subject: if you are on Symi at the moment there is a fund-raising carol singing event at Lefteris’ Kafeneion on Friday evening, around 7.30 or 8pm I think. I’ve not had it confirmed as yet, but it’s down for the 23rd and last year it started at around eight in the evening. Everyone is welcome to come and join in, or just watch and money raised will be for the orphanage in Rhodes – the same charity as the hotel we stayed at last week was raising money for.

Post, cat routine, cold
The Corner Shop, open all hours.

I’m off to do some shopping now, then lunch to see to, a few odd jobs to do and then it’s cat time as we settle down to keep warm in the sitting room. He’s already badgering me to stop what I am doing and pay him more attention…

Symi Dream rankings – odd

Symi Dream rankings – odd
I noticed something strange yesterday. A friend of mine had been talking about Google rankings and getting your website noticed and all that kind of stuff that I don’t understand. Apparently, there are so many blogs and sites now that things like Google are getting upset…

Symi Dream rankings
‘Empty squares with empty tables’ (pre-lunch, winter mode.)

You have probably noticed the number of pages out there which seem to be given over to adverts only, with perhaps one line of readable text that’s on topic somewhere in the middle of it all. Well, it’s this kind of thing that have made the big search engines start to look again at how they rank sites on their pages. Apparently, these days it’s best to have over 1,000 words per post, you will rank more highly. And you need to put the title of your post as the Alt text to your photos, or something; use your keywords in the right way, adhere to a set of rules laid down by… I have no idea who, or else you start to fall off the rankings – that is off the first page of Google where no one ever looks.

Symi Dream rankings
Colourful fresh fruit and veg is available!

Well, there’s no way I am going to write over 1,000 words every day on my personal blog, so we’ll just have to fall off page one, which isn’t a problem; most people searching for Symi will find this page and it’s only here to let you, dear reader, know what we’re up to and you’re reading this already so, job done. But I did go and have a look at our stats and see how many visitors we were getting. Was it less than the average 700 per day we have been having over the past however many years? Well, as it turned you there was a surprise. The average is around 700, which is good, but for a week this month, when I was posting about Rhodes and after, we had over 2,000 each day.

Symi Dream rankings
Decorated for Christmas

I suspect some kind of Google-bot-robot thing, but it doesn’t look like it. A sudden interest was clearly sparked and I have no idea why. What I need to do now is check to see if that spike in visitors to the blog led to any more sales in books, as that’s another reason for this blog. I’ll take a look later. But it’s strange and I have no idea if these sudden new visitors are real or virtual. But, if you’ve fallen here and decided to pop back almost daily to read my ramblings, then welcome… all 1,300 extra of you and I hope you discover Symi through reading us. Oh, and enjoy the pictures; today’s lot were taken yesterday as we headed down town for a walkabout, shopping, post and a beer.

Symi Dream rankings
Cold afternoon in Yialos

Run up to our Symi Christmas

Run up to our Symi Christmas
A weekend of preparation for our Symi Christmas has just taken place at our house. Finding the tree and decorations up in the mousanrda, wrestling with the tree base that’s an imaginative piece of 1950s engineering (we bought the thing only a couple of years ago), getting covered in thin strips of silver plastic, finding half the baubles no longer have thread on them to hang with so substituting with paperclips (a handy tip, that one, just make sure the paperclips are a suitable colour and not too prominent), and then wrapping presents to put under the tree.

Symi Christmas
Early morning, December (The Patmos has just come in)

Meanwhile, the Symi Christmas Fayre continued, with a ‘German Christmas Market’ theme organised by some of the school teachers and their classes, and others, I am told. The boats came and went, including the new Blue Star run on Sunday morning. (I assume: I am writing this before it arrives but it’s showing on the Live Ships map as just leaving Nisyros and heading to Tilos and is due in here after 10.00.) There are two more sailings to Rhodes before Christmas, the usual Wednesday and Friday, and no talk of strikes that I have heard of yet. The weather has been cool and calm, the sea only slightly ruffled by a breeze and the island seems quiet.

Symi Christmas
Winter view a little later (the Patmos leaving)

Sotiris supermarket has been stocked up with Christmas items and chocolate, there’s fresh veg in the greengrocers, the ‘American’ supermarket has all you could need, from stuffing to five litre boxes of wine, I’ve been seeing news reports telling everyone when there will be fresh sprouts in what shop, and who is going to be bringing in parsnips. You can keep the parsnips but I’ll try a few sprouts – unlike Neil who is no longer allowed to eat them; not since a Christmas dare half way through lunch that resulted in… well, just don’t feed him any sprouts (messy), it’s all I’ll say and I will leave it at that.

Symi Christmas
Horio square

And so, it looks like everything is geared up and ready apart from, in my case, the arrival of a few final gifts that were ordered some time ago and were probably held up in the boat strikes of last week/week before. The post office is closed (I am told) on Tuesday and Wednesday this week, so the last search for deliveries must be made on other days, unless they have come with one of the couriers. Anything else will have to wait to be presented later (or presented if, to give a present, can be pronounced like that – presented, rather than presented… I know what I mean); New Year’s Day is much more of a local celebration day anyway, being the name day of Saint Vasilis.

Symi Christmas
Funfair in Yialos

As for the rest of this week, for me: I keep telling myself I will do some creative writing over this Christmas period, but then I tell myself that having written two books in the last 18 months, taken my scriptwriting course, and mapped out and almost-first-drafted another book, that I can probably afford to take a couple of weeks off and do some reading instead. I call it legitimised laziness; the writing can wait until early next year, meanwhile I’ll try and act like a normal person and do the housework, watch television, read some books, go for a walk, put the clothes away…

Symi Christmas
Yialos, December

For this week, there’s nothing in the diary as yet apart from: Checking for last minute post, buying in the stock of Christmas ‘ale’ (the once-a-year stuff, you know: sherry, port, Baileys, Alka-Seltzer), vegetable peeling on Christmas Eve and a day with the godboys on Christmas day to look forward to – as always. I hope your run up to the festive weekend goes well – if you celebrate it, if not, I still wish you well. I’ll be around this week with my usual odd posts about… ‘whatever!’ and some photos that don’t really go with anything.