Kali Strata, there and back again

Kali Strata, there and back again

Yesterday, I had a package to collect from the bookshop, so I took a stroll down the Kali Strata for the first time in weeks. The package was a copy of my latest novel, which I had ordered via Amazon Germany to avoid the balls-up caused by the B-word that’s still affecting deliveries from countries outside of the EU. I am now ordering online only from EU countries (Amazon Germany, France or Italy) and from America because that has never caused extra expense either. If there was an Amazon Greece, I’d use them, obviously, but I use Greek companies for things I can’t currently get on Symi as and when I need to. https://www.skroutz.gr/ is a great place to start.

March 29th_8

I was also able to pick up a new charger for my phone and a lead for my new headphones before walking back up the steps. For a reason best known to anyone but me, I decided to take the more direct route home, and turned right opposite the red-painted house towards the bottom of the Kali Strata. The steps there are pretty sheer, a bit like a ladder at times, and about 10 inches high, but that’s good for the thigh muscles. They take you to near Villa Papa Nicola, and a zigzag path, so it is not all steps, and needless to say, I stopped to take photos at every opportunity and breathe.

March 29th_9March 29th_6

Because of the hour shift, I’d woken hideously late, 6.30 or something that felt like mid-morning to me, and so, I didn’t have time to work on my book. This morning, I was up at 3.00 and apart from going shopping and perhaps taking a quick 20-minutes’ exercise, I have plenty of time to work on the new book. Which reminds me, I have a question to ask. Is anyone good at creating maps? For my last Clearwater book, I want to include a map of Europe (1890) showing the basics, but looking like a real map, with the route of a journey highlighted. The journey is by train from Bodmin, England, to Rasnov, Romania, via London, Paris, Vienna, Budapest, and back via the Orient Express from Temesvar. If anyone knows anyone who might be able to produce something realistic, would you drop me a line or put a note on the FB page? It’s not vital, I just thought it would be a nice addition to the beginning of the book. Ta. Something like this (which is a modern one):

Orient-Express_1883-1914-3

Oh, weather update: Warming up again, no wind, calm, sunny, 18 in the courtyard, all is well.

From the weekend

From the weekend

I don’t know about you, but I had a lovely weekend. It’s currently Sunday morning at 5.30, except that’s really 4.30, but that doesn’t matter. The earlier I get up, the more time I have for the day. My weekend started on Friday, which you may have noticed was my birthday. My husband certainly noticed, and the day began with breakfast where the table and kitchen were strewn with glitter paper, the bears were invited, and we had yoghurt, fruit, honey and homemade meringues.

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During the day, I spent some time on my writing work, in this case, preparing a blog post about my next project, which you can find here. As the breakfast came with a bottle of Cava, the morning was a little wobbly, but I soon sobered up when lunch came around; bangers and mash. It was accompanied by a bouquet of flowers. Later, in the afternoon, after the homemade birthday cake, I did an online piano lesson with godson #2, and later, a video chat with the family where he played me happy birthday and a tune from Phantom of the Opera. That fitted with the present I had bought myself; a model kit of Jekyll as Hyde, which is now waiting in line with my Wolfman and a second Phantom. (The first is in the sitting room with the Invisible Man.)

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I was thoroughly spoiled, had so many messages on Facebook it was impossible to reply to them all (thank you!), and Neil wouldn’t let me do a thing, though I did have to put the washing out as it was a good drying day, it was only three things, so no great hardship. I was on a walk the day before and passed by where we used to live, right up at Ag. Triada. I passed under a tunnel attached to our old house and remembered a photo Amanda (of the Windmill fame) took around the time of my birthday 18 years ago when I’d just turned 40. I posted my photo, and she came back with the one she had taken all those years ago. It feels like only last week.

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On Saturday, I was able to spend all morning on the next part of my new novel, which is now up to 100,000 words, and I still have a fair amount of story to write, and I found myself researching the Express d’Orient train journey towards the end of the 19th century. I also found some interesting advertising from the 1890 Russian Flu pandemic and spent a couple of hours in the National newspaper Archives happily getting lost in reports and personals.

various_8 1890 newspaper_2

Sunday has only just started, and I am not sure how the birthday weekend is to finish. Probably with some sofa surfing and maybe a short walk later. Tomorrow, it’s back to the routine one year older but just as content as I was when I was 57.

Celebration Days

Celebration Days

Two days ago, there was the festival of Evengalismos, yesterday was Greek Independence Day, the 200th year celebration, and today, it’s my turn as it’s my birthday. And, because it’s my birthday, and because it’s a Friday when I usually post just photos, I thought I’d share some pictures from various times over the last 58 years. These are images I found lying around on my computer and have little to do with Symi, except that I have ended up here for nearly 19 years. So, forgive me the self-indulgence and have yourself a good laugh.

In no particular order:

Neil and I at Glyndebourne, 2002
Neil and I at Glyndebourne, 2002
Pilate in a school play aged 12
Pilate in a school play aged 12
Neil 1987
Neil 1997
As a character in a play 90s
As a character in a play 90s
Glyndebourne in a suit hired from a fancy dress shop
Glyndebourne in a suit hired from a fancy dress shop
With my dad, New Romney, late 80s
With my dad, New Romney, late 80s
A great house to grow up in (this was after we lived there, and someone else added that hiddeous porch)
A great house to grow up in (this was after we lived there, and someone else added that hideous porch)
My old prep school (not me in the photo)
My old prep school (not me in the photo)
Brighton 1997
Brighton 1997
Kinny and I doing a thing for the BBC as the Sussex Arts Club (rehearsal)
Kinny and I doing a thing for the BBC at the Sussex Arts Club (rehearsal)
Taken by my best freind when I was about 17
Taken by my best friend when I was about 17
Yeah, well...
Yeah, well…
Just showing off
Just showing off
Cast of one of my shows, in our garden in Brighton
Cast of one of my shows, in our garden in Brighton
Me and Jack, Symi
Me and Jack, Symi
The cheekbone days (1980)
The cheekbone days (1980)
Tintern Abbey
Tintern Abbey
Me and the bros, 1963
Me and the bros, 1963
Me and the bros 20 years later
Me and the bros 20 years later

Rainbows and other news

Rainbows and other news

The dust cloud and other shady weather passed over us on Tuesday, turning the sky a mysterious colour and, where the sun broke through, giving us some interesting lighting. There was a little rain in the afternoon, enough to produce a double rainbow over the harbour entrance.

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You can’t really see the second one, but it was there.

In other news, the country continues to struggle with more cases and fatalities. There are stories of this opening, and that not opening, tourism being promoted from this date but only from that country, and maybe restrictions will be lifted then but only when… And it’s all still in a state of flux around here. The mayor has advised people not to travel by boat unless absolutely necessary, and the island remains mainly quiet and cautious. The Ministry of Health has announced that the platform for scheduling vaccination appointments for people aged 70 to 75 will open on Friday. In early April, the platform will open for those in the 56 to 69 age group, and there’s hope that more vaccination centres will open from April 1st onwards to speed the programme. I turn 58 on Friday, and so must wait a while longer, but some friends in their early 60s have received jab #1 and have an appointment for jab #2 in a couple of weeks; others in various groups have already had both.

March 23rd_1

So, we’re keeping an eye on all of that. The only trip I must make is later in April, and that’s to start the process of my biometric residency card, which can only be done in Rhodes. So, thanks for putting me in danger, Brexit, and double-thanks as it will involve at least one more trip after that, possibly two, a few weeks later. If I don’t or can’t keep the appointment, then the alternative is to take pot-luck one day after June 1st, turn up in Rhodes and wait in the hope I will be seen that day. If not, I’d have to stay in Rhodes and try again each day until I can be seen, and then repeat the journey twice more to complete the process. Again, thanks, Brexit. The fine details of what this disastrous move will entail are only now beginning to show. Things like people having to pay twice the value of a package from the UK because of customs rules, people with properties here not able to stay more than three months out of six (roughly), and other personally hurtful scenarios that no-one bothered to think about before. No-one other than those who could see such things coming. But let’s not get me started on all that. Let’s just remember that there’s still a land that I dreamed of somewhere over the rainbow.

March 23rd_4

Poseidon Weather

Poseidon Weather

I’m keeping an eye on the weather today (Tuesday). There was a news announcement on Monday saying a great cloud of Saharan dust was coming or way. This comes along at least once per year, and locally, we call it ‘red rain.’ When the cloud is up there, and the rain comes down here, you find the dust over everything; washing, courtyard, rooves… When it’s up there and falling without rain, it can clog you up as much as it clogs the shelves. So, I went to the new-look Poseidon weather site and discovered that since it upgraded its pages, it now offers a ‘dust’ forecast. It might have done this before, and I never noticed, but I saw it yesterday and received this forecast.

FireShot Pro Webpage Screenshot #144 - 'Map I Poseidon System' - poseidon_hcmr_gr

That accounts for the strange colour of the sky and the covering of cloud. We did have rain overnight on Monday, but I’ve not been out there yet to see if it has dried to dust. Whatever. We’d brought the washing in, and today, the mains water should be coming in, so we can hose off the few plants we have in our courtyard.

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Today’s photos are from a while ago, but still this year, and give you an idea of the weather we get during the winter months. It’s warm at the moment too. I commuted to work yesterday (three steps across the porch), and it was raining, but there was no need to put the heater on. The courtyard temperature read 19 degrees on Monday afternoon, and I’ve not had to sit under a blanket for a while. The weather is unsettled but not intolerable, and the island remains very quiet as lockdown goes on. We now have quick home tests available from the pharmacies, I am told. I must go to the harbour to check the post office sometime this week, and that will be the first time in weeks I have been below 500 feet, or whatever altitude the village is at. I wonder if it tells me that on the Poseidon weather channel? I must go and look, and if you want to see the weather and conditions down here in the south-east Aegean, here’s the link.

https://poseidon.hcmr.gr/

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Bonus cat photo.

february and march_20

Writing on a Greek island

Symi Dream
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