Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Port of Piraeus

 During winter there are only 2 catamarans daily between Poros and Athens.  One in the morning and one at 5pm. We were finished and at the harbour at 1 and  had a 4 hour wait for the evening boat. The passenger waiting room was padlocked.  Thank goodness there were toilets, sparkling clean too, a canteen and an open air seating area

I bought K a can of beer and a bag of chips and went off to explore the harbour shopping district


Electric Bus was written on it's side. The buses were very quiet and so was the tram gliding along the harbour.  I looked left, right and left again before crossing its tracks.  That's something new too. I have no idea where the tram goes but I'd love to take a trolley ride one day


Itinerant sellers
Most were Greek but this one was Pakistani selling sunglasses and belts
There was an endless stream of them selling more sunglasses, perfume ('genuinely' fallen off the back of a lorry), belts and phone chargers


I bought 3 pairs of socks. 1 euro a pair. They're really good socks. I wish I'd bought more but we'd run out of small notes buying beer and chips

I'd given my last 2 euros to a true beggar. No teeth, filthy and rather smelly.  I wish I hadn't. After his thanks he gave us a long lecture on the decline of Christianity in Greece and the dangerous influx of infidels and heathens. We didn't make any comment and thankfully he wandered off to the next victim. 


There was plenty of opportunity for photos but nothing exciting. Boats coming in from Aegina and Salamina, unloading cars and people, loading, leaving.  These are the closest islands, one hour by slow boat and have a continuous timetable all through the year


We lived in Piraeus for 10 years and I know it well, on foot.  I was looking forward to wandering around the harbour shopping area.  From the taxi it looked bright and busy with a few new shops.  A Lidls and an IKEA store. 
I was sorely disappointed
The Lidls was too far.  And IKEA was a store front only, an advertisement 




Once colourful, bustling with sounds and sights and smells
Now, 50 years on, it's dirty, full of old boarded up shop fronts
This building is seriously dangerous. The top half looks as though it's going to collapse at any minute


One shop that's new. This is a chain called Miran.  It sells all sorts of cured meats, spices, cheeses. I thought I might get K up to come and inspect it but he was happy on his hard harbour seat. 


The last fish shop left at the old fish and meat market. This is a short alley which once had a dozen or more little shops cheek to cheek with open showcase trays of meat, fish, cheese and Greek specialities 
Like many Piraeus housewives I used to come down here to buy a kilo of today's catch or a few pork chops to cook that day. Everything was fresh and cheap. The sellers would be shouting out their wares one competing with the other. I'd wander up and down, trying to avoid being collared and compare prices. It was always crowded, mostly with men, retired and sent off by their wives to bag a bargain and get out of their hair for an hour or so.  There were cafenions in the area where the men gathered to drink coffee, have a cigarette and pass the time with their friends, bags of shopping at their feet



I walked slowly around the harbour streets, seeing what shops were left.  There were still a couple selling underwear, pots and pans and a few with bags of herbs and spices at their doors, a shoe shop and my old wool shop was still there. 
It's a place hard to find, down the end of a closed passageway. You can see the dark tiles and flowers in old oil tins. Very out of date and a strange place for a wool shop. There's a cafĂ© in the alley and some sort of nightclub upstairs. 
I strolled down to look at the wool but nothing jumped out at me. I lost my shopping mojo after seeing how desolate the whole area had become 

It's no longer an exotic and exciting shopping hub. Once you could buy anything in the streets around the harbour, a Naval uniform for K, a few kilos of cabbages, the old black house frocks my m-in-law lived in, a hairnet or a hamster. There was even a red light district. That might still be there for all I know. 

In days of yore we would come in on the early morning Delfini Express, rush off to a doctors appointment or to organise some official paper and be back for the return journey at 2pm. We'd all be carrying bags with bananas, which were hard to find back then, a large bag with a greasy and aromatic rotisserie chicken from one of the waterfront tavernas and shopping bags overloaded with all the necessities we couldn't get on the island. I can remember hauling plates and glasses, towels, a kilo of fresh ground coffee, a string of garlic, cheap toilet paper, bottles of booze, new shoes for the girls, a side of lamb, a few of those hairnets my m-in-law favoured, crocheted slippers sold by Grannies perched on a crate on the footpath.
On the big car ferries we hauled a chest of drawers, a coat stand, your newly purchased washing machine, mattresses, barrels for wine or oil

Those were the days

Today we finally boarded our catamaran at 4.30 with my 3 pairs of sox and settled back to enjoy a smooth and quiet trip home.  It's only one hour now and non stop to Poros 

Nothing like the return on the Delfini Express or one of the old slow chugging car ferries where we spread out our chicken, ripped up a loaf of bread and bought a few beers to share with all the other locals doing the same and shouting out to each other and comparing the bargains we'd bought .  The air was always thick with cigarette smoke and very noisy, not just conversation, because those old boats made a lot of noise. They really did chug and they shuddered terribly. The trip was usually around 3 hours with stops at Aegina and Methana. An opportunity to get out on deck, watch the people and cars disembarking and take a few lungfuls of fresh air

Sorry that was so long. It grew along the way







Sunday, 1 March 2026

The Big City

 The day after that celebration of shellfish and ouzo we were up at 6am  to catch the 8am catamaran to Athens.  It was a freezing morning and I was glad to walk up the gangplank into the warm lounge of the high speed catamaran.  I haven't travelled on one of these for years.  I loved the trip.  It was quiet onboard, the seats were wide and comfy and the sea was smooth.  I had a seat beside a large window and enjoyed the sights.  Small rocky islets came into view, then the islands of Angistri and Salamima and the backside of Aegina with its sheer cliffs, narrow enclosed bays where they met the sea. Then the container ships anchored and waiting their turn to enter the Port of Piraeus and finally the port itself with a huge cruise ship tied up to the tourist wharf and the big boats which steam overnight to Crete.  I remember them from our years living at the Navy Base on Crete though that route is now covered mainly by high speed catamaran in half the time


On entering the harbour you're greeted by this huge poster.  The man with open arms is the owner of SeaJets wishing you a Bon Voyage. Or wishing himself a good journey to the next life.  It hangs over the front of the company offices

Our mission today was to reach the Naval Hospital in central Athens without hiccups.  There is a metro station near the hospital but we haven't been on the underground for years.  There are so many new lines, stations and ticket options we were a bit wary of even finding the right entrance.  Old-er age and uncertaintity has set in.  So K found a taxi and agreed on a price for the journey.  We were slightly overcharged but it was worth it, and he knows for next time.  The taxi drove through the outskirts, into the centre around Syntagma Square, Parliament buildings and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, round a few backstreets and avoided all the congestion on the main avenues.  The taxi driver had a GPS which showed the route and traffic delays. 
K showed his ID card at the hospital Guard House and we sailed through.  I had my Naval ID card in hand too.  No problems, they didn't even look.
The orthopedic dept was busy, people everywhere, some with crutches or legs in plaster. As you would expect. 
All went well, we were called before time to see the doctor.  K had served with him at Poros Naval Base and they're old friends.  We had a box of Poros almond cakes to give to the doc to sweeten him up. No envelopes under the table here.


K severed some tendons in his shoulder 4 years ago and should have had an operation back then
But.... he thought he could sort it out with physio and painkillers.  Time does not heal tendons and now an operation is a necessity.  The pain some days is unbearable and he can't sleep at night.
He has been reassured, it will be keyhole surgery and only one night in hospital.  Should have done this years ago.
Now we wait for the call .  Could be a couple of months.  Doesn't matter.  He's on the list 

We both breathed a sigh of relief and went downstairs for a subsidised coffee and cheese pie in the canteen.  It was lovely just being somewhere different and watching a parade of people, officers in uniform, doctors in scrubs, sights we don't see on Poros.

I hadn't realised how narrow my life had become.  It was exciting seeing block after block of apartment buildings, hearing sirens and honking horns.  On our way back, once again by taxi, and 10 euros cheaper, we passed the American Embassy, The Athens Concert Hall, the marble Athenian stadium and the old Hilton building.


Apartments old and new and no place to park
I enjoyed the visit but wouldn't want to live here any more


The Kalimarmaro Stadium
Built on the site of a 4BC stadium
Restored  for the modern Olympic Games held in Athens in 1896