Today’s Symi News

My style of Symi News live from the desk at 06.40 this morning: The Panagia Skiadeni has just gone out, the sun has just come up and I have just sat down at the desk with a mug of hot water and lemon. Mr Hayfever is next door in his office checking his emails and Jack the cat is still out in the ‘hood somewhere. Here are some photos of the sun-up this morning.

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

Jack went out, or was put out, two nights ago and hasn’t been home since. We’re not worried. He usually comes back anywhere between nine in the morning and three in the afternoon. Yesterday he wasn’t back by the time we went to Yialos, and then we didn’t get back until early evening and, by then, he’d probably decided to stay out anyway. No doubt he’ll be back soon enough, shouting the house down.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
A little before

Talking of noise; I walked down to Pedi this morning for a change and was practically deafened by the noise. You can tell you’re rural when all you can hear are 101 cockerels going off, dogs barking, chickens fussing about a couple of sheep that were, as far as I could see, rutting, birds waking up – and that includes the one outside the window which sounds like a football rattle crossed with a machine gun – and goats bleating. I was passed by one truck in the forty minutes it took me to walk down, take some photos and walk back up again.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
It is a different picture, honest

It’s still too early for swimming, for me. I tend to go in on August 12th and leave it at that, just to be safe. No, not really. Last year we went a couple of times per week through July and August, I may do that again, when the sun comes up earlier and I can get up at 5.30 and be back at the desk by seven.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
I think this one was on auto

We managed to get lots of ‘formal’ things done yesterday; enquiries at the accountants, papers from the doctor, and so on. We also saw another clutch of refugees heading around to the Symi for a trip on to Rhodes, leaving even more at the police station being ‘processed.’ We visited the nautical museum and the antique shop that is also housed there now. A great idea; the museum can now be open in return for someone housing their shop in the downstairs part; previously it was generally closed.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And coming back up the road later

And that’s today’s Symi News from my desk. I have things to be getting on with today, mainly around the house and I am not planning to go anywhere today, though we may be planting some plants in brightly coloured pots we bought yesterday, and no doubt Mr Hayfever will be sneezing a lot. It doesn’t get much more newsier than that.

Lots of free water

When the economic crisis was really starting to kick in and the government had decided it really was high time people started paying for things again, there was a report on the news about water supplies…

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Tuesday morning at 06.00

A dear old dear from somewhere ‘up north’ in the mountains of mainland Greece was being interviewed about the situation. She was outraged because, after all this time, she was being asked to finally settle her water bill. ‘Why should I pay for water?’ she said, ‘it comes from God.’

Well, I was feeling a bit that way yesterday too as the rains came in. It was like autumn had suddenly struck. The warm weather evaporated, the thunder rolled in, there were a couple of big bangs, and the house was warmer inside than the air was outside. I even went back to long trousers and a fleece. You can see from today’s photos that things can change very quickly around here, weather-wise.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Tuesday three hours later

Only the day before, Lyndon had come around to check out a piece of plumbing for us and is, as I write (Tuesday) out there looking for the correct join. This is for the rain water collecting system that Andreas, the landlord, has ingeniously put in place. When it rains, like it is doing right now, the water runs off two flat roofs and drains into a pipe. This leads down and out and around, and joins another pipe, and then drops down and in to the ‘workhouse’ where it travels along until it meets a large tap. When this is off the water just stays there and, I assume, finds another way off the roof. But when the tap is open, the floodgates are opened, and the water pours into the sterna beneath the office, as it is doing now.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The silver thing is the sock and tin foil arrangement

And it is doing so now because, while waiting for the correct join in the pipe, I made up my own. We had a T joint lying around but with the down section wide open, so the water poured straight through. A pair of socks and some tin foil soon sorted that out, and in the rain, I went out and stuck the thing back together. So far the socks are holding and the water is being redirected into the tank. Nice and free and exactly what Mrs Up North would approve of. So, ta for that God, if I’d known I wouldn’t have taken four hours of town hall ‘to be paid for’ water yesterday, but it’s never very expensive so I don’t mind.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Collecting water for the plants for later

The weather today (Tuesday) may put paid to our plans to go to Yialos to see accountants and do business things, and it might even prevent us from attending the opening night of Taverna Zoi, unless it clears up enough for the taverna to finish making ready and for us to safely venture outside. But hey, at least we’re filling bottles for future plant watering and the new plant (thank you Jenni!) is getting nicely watered. I’m glad I am not traveling today, it’s not windy, just very, very wet.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And free water going into the sterna beneath the house

Now, I must remember to turn the water input device tap to the off position or else the sterna will overflow somewhere, and I don’t like to think where that somewhere may be. Mind you, I seriously doubt that the sock and tin foil arrangement will hold the pressure of the water with the tap off. We shall bite nails while we wait and see. Well, there’s not a lot else to do around here when it’s raining.

Dates and Symi sunrises

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Symi sunrise, May

It’s still only May and already the diary is filling up! Monday evening: friends around for drinks and to see the new house.

Tuesday afternoon: online meeting with the Editor. Tuesday evening, Taverna Zoi is opening and we are booked in for a meal. Saturday evening we are invited for drinks. Next week we have another evening at home with friends… It’s a wonder we get any time for any work.

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

Monday morning the alarm went off at 5.45, though I was already awake. Not because of the Alarm Cat, he went on the night before and didn’t come home until around half eight in the morning, quite early for him. He seems to be enjoying his new neighbourhood now, but I’d love to know where he goes. Anyway, I was up early and went straight out, this time towards To Vrisi the monastery on the side of the hills overlooking the Pedi Valley.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The crowd cheer me on during my jog

It was a great Symi sunrise, as you can see from the photos.

I’m looking forward to my trip to Tilos which isn’t until the end of the month. The other day people were asking when I was going, then some thought I had gone and come back, and then someone asked me again when I was going so I volunteered to go tomorrow if they were that keen to get rid of me. Don’t know why I said I’d go at the end of the month, thinking of pay day I guess. But still, less than three weeks and I shall be away.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
This is how Sunday closed

I’ve been working on the new book bit by bit when I can, but what with all these visitors and blog posts and housework, and trips to Yialos for things, and dinners and so on, it’s a wonder I’ve got anything typed at all. But I am doing what I can when I can.

And that includes today, so now I am cutting myself shorter than I usually am and heading off into novel land. Have a nice day!

Healthy Workers = Happy Workers

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Definitely summer: the awning is going up (just for you, Allan and Julie)

I’ve not doing brilliantly on my personal targets of late, though keeping up what I can. Not as much written of the new book as I would like, last week, but I did manage two early morning ‘strenuous’ walks, and two Kali Strata assents, one while weighted down with shopping.

Neil’s had a busy weekend. There’s this new thing in Greece now (he says; it may not be new at all, but it’s new to me), where anyone who works with food and drink has to take a compulsory seminario (course) over two days. This teaches you all about health and hygiene, and there is a certificate you have to gain in order to work legally in a bar, café, restaurant taverna, creperie, supermarket, kafeneion, or anywhere that involves food/drinking.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Yialos, Saturday morning

That all sounds like a very good idea to me, but then I am not paying for it. Each person has to pay €80.00, or their employer does, and when you think how many people work in these kind of places (including hotel staff, canteen staff…) that’s a lot of money going into, I assume, the government. Another way of Greece clawing in some much needed revenue?

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Long shadows on the way down

Anyway, Neil was there Saturday and Sunday morning, and he stayed the whole course – some people registered, and left pretty smartish, apparently. If you get found working without this certificate there’s a hefty fine. As there is if you get found working without all the correct paperwork, and that takes several days and Euros to arrange as I saw last year. But when it’s all done it’s all done and legal, and that’s what counts.

And it did make me think, do you have the same things when you go for a bar job in the UK (or other countries)? It’s not just the safety course, but last week he was over in Rhodes having a chest X-ray and a… hmm, what shall we call it…? A ‘yesterday’s dinner’ test; he need to get things certified from the doctor here saying he doesn’t have anything nasty, and that’s all on top of the strange work permit papers everyone must have (even Greek people I am told) which cost another €3.00 in ‘tax’, and all that jazz. I’m sure you don’t have such stringent rules in place elsewhere. Maybe you do, and quite right too.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Harbour boats – it’s very warm down there now.

At least in Greece you (should) know that when your moussaka is served alongside your ouzo that the person giving it to you is not also giving you TB with a helping of dengue fever on the side.

Well, there’s a lovely thought to get you off to a good weekday start, and another reason for visiting Greece; it’s a very healthy pace to be. Sun, sand, sea, swimming, relaxation, fresh food, and waiters free of scurvy. Book now I say.

Symi Saturday

Today’s photos show the military helicopter coming in to land on Symi. It was V.E. Day yesterday and here that’s marked by a commemoration of the signing of the surrender of the Dodecanese and the handover to Greece – via British caretakers.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Military helicopter arriving on Symi – 1

I’m not hanging about long this morning as in want to get on. I’ve had a slough of writing to get through, which I am almost through and I could do with a break. So today I am not working and instead I will be tidying the house, hoovering, getting the cat fur off the sofa (approx. 30 minutes with the hoover), shopping, cooking and later entertaining at home.

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

But during that time I may take a moment to sit on the balcony and read my latest book, The Etymologicon, by Mark Forsyth. This is actually book one of three which I bought in a box set, hard cover, as a bit of an inexpensive treat to myself. The Etymologicon (a word invented by Milton, along with many others, including ‘wording’) explains how some words came about and how their means and usages changed over the years, so that what was once Codpiece is now a Bracket, and so on. All right up my street.

The second of the trilogy, sorry, Ternion, is The Hologicon and is all about (as far as I can see) obscure words and their meanings, and then there’s the ‘The Elements of Eloquence’ as the third book and I am really looking forward to having a go at that one.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
And three, touch down, almost

But all in good time, first a day off while I do the housework and shopping and… Oh let’s just get on with it. Back with more Symi news and that from my desk next week.

Writing on a Greek island

Symi Dream
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