Sunday, 6 July 2025

Summer Lunching

A birthday lunch with friends who speak English. Do kiwis speak the King's eengleesh?  Do Americans? 
Mr Google says we both speak an English dialect.  We share a common foundation but each country has it's own unique characteristics.
Anyway, we were an international company for lunch.  England, NZ, USofA and Greece.



The setting
Looking back towards the island
It was a little windy and the sea rather choppy.  The breeze was a welcome relief from the scorching heat of previous days


Plaka beach
Local children enjoying the small waves


Here we are.  Except me.  I forgot to get the young lad who served us to take a photo. I also forgot to take a photo of the 2 pooches Winnie and Choco.   We were too busy eating and talking.
K soon moved over to the table next door to talk with some greek friends.
Our english conversation got a bit too fast and colloquial for him to keep up.
We covered everything from local gossip, what the ex-pat community are up to,  memories from years gone by, buying and building houses, dogs and other animals. 


Tomato and zucchini fritters with a yoghurt dip
Lots of fried potatoes (chips) and the ubiquitous Greek salad

Just a little of the delicious food served here at the Plaka Beach taverna.  Known to locals, not on the tourist map. 
They let K and I choose  plates of different food to share.  Enough to fill  the table, our tummies and some to take home. We finished off with cold karpuzi (watermelon). 
This was the 3rd 'party' to celebrate friend Jan's birthday.  She was working on her birthday this year, helping the Danish vets neuter a hundred stray cats.  That was over a month again.
The, possibly last, celebration for this year's birthday was thanks to good friends Steve and Judy who are far away in England.   A thousand thanks you two.
I always enjoy myself immensely when I'm with a few English speakers, though quite a few times I grasp for the right word. They understand. 



Fava - pureed yellow split peas
Pease pudding (cold) mixed with lots of olive oil and chopped onions. 

You can be sure when you let a greek order that you'll have a good variety of traditional food and lots of it



 


Friday, 4 July 2025

Grand-kids

 We had a night out with some of the family and all the grandkids.  We took them down to the Navy beach taverna/canteen where we can all eat and drink at subsidised prices.

It was a most enjoyable evening.  Naturally enough.  All the 'kids' get on well and there's a lot of laughter.  They're all on the island for the summer but it's difficult getting them together.  Most have summer jobs.  Luli is doing summer lessons to get ready for next years University exams.  



The setting.  Tables beside the sea with a view of the lights of Askeli Bay opposite



The group photo


The aftermath 
We managed to chow through 40 kalamakia, chicken and pork on a skewer, a dozen kebabs (spicy mincemeat on a skewer) a couple of salads and lots of tzatziki and fried potatoes.  Jamie is the tzatziki king, he always manages to finish one bowl of it on his own


The family


Dear Daughter Elli and me (or 'I')



Jamie, the Tzatziki King, with his Mum
In a squirmy moment......but he loves his Mum.  Of course


Best friends
Cousins George and Luli
The oldest and the youngest


George and BF Dimitri enjoying a cold Alpha or 2 or 3 or .....



Kostas and one of my lovely sons-in-law Kyriakos


Poppi and sister Nels


They always have to pull a face
Even though I yell at them and tell them to 'Close your mouth for goodness sake!!!!  The wind will change and you'll stay like that forever'.  
So we were once told by our parents 


Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Fishin the Med

 Where's the net..... 



The Med is full of fish 
Not just those
 farmed bass and bream
Dip your feet in to get them nibbled


Poros from the mainland 
The wind turbines are on the mainland hills. 
This shows the strait, the small island in front and the bigger island spreading out in the background


The narrow strait which divides Poros island from the Peloponnese
There's a line of water taxis waiting to take you across



Thursday, 26 June 2025

Home and Away

Little things in our small world


A tuna
A big one for our seas
We were doing some grocery shopping when K got a phonecall.  'Bring a plastic bag I've got a fish for you'.
The fishing boat couldn't sell all it's catch and was handing some out to friends.
K cleaned it and chopped it up into steaks and we had some fried with a greek salad that day.
We also gave some away .  Give and you shall be given


We were parking our car again under the olive tree out of the sun.
However it gets covered in dry olive leaves and has to be swept and cleaned before we move it.
So it's back up next to the house.  K found a big piece of canvas.  One of those 'treasures'  which he won't let me get rid of.  It covers the roof and windscreen.  At least the paint won't get blistered




Danae opening up the expensive liquor shop.  She may sell, and does sell, 250 euro bottles of gin, but still has to sweep up and clean the loo 



Brother Tony is an artiste.
He made these necklaces from seaglass picked up on a local Maketu beach.  He brought a dozen, at least, for all of us.  Some are made with shells.  These are mine and I love them.  I wear the spirit of a kiwi beach.  I'm polishing them with balsam oil.  Tony says use baby oil.  But balsam oil is what we've got here.  Balsam oil comes from a herb of the same name which is used for skin repair.


   


And here's the boy.  With his eyes closed.
Holding a bottle of coke with his name on it.
For some promotion campaign or other. Coke zero in Greece is putting people's names on the bottles.
This one says
ΑΝΤΩΝΙΣ
Anthony


Our Mayor was talking to a Parliamentary Committee yesterday to put his case against the fishfarms.  He spoke very well and forcefully, we thought.  There were a dozen speakers, some for the Company that owns the Farms, most against them with lots of scientific data, research findings and the like.  The second to last speaker was the UnderSecretary for the Ministry of the Environment.  What an ignoramus.  He tried making a few weak jokes which no-one laughed at and basically put the Company's case across saying that he was sure Poros would benefit from a few more fish farms.  Fortunately our Mayor was able to rebuttal and he put him down quite sharply.  
Now, as all Committees do, they will go away and ponder for a few months, more than a few I would say.  They'll all be away on summer holidays for July and August.  While we all await a verdict or another round of protests and speeches.






For kiwis everywhere!
Mallowpuffs, my all time favourite.  I grew up with these and they're still on the supermarket shelves.
A biscuit base, marshmallow and covered in chocolate!!
Thanks Elli.  She finds these picture of NZ classic edibles and sends them to me to drool over.


Tuesday, 24 June 2025

Fish Farms? NO


NO

A huge protest took place against turning Poros into an industrial  fishery zone .  The island now has 4 fish farms breeding sea bass and sea bream.  With the new zoning regulations the fish farming industry will increase 28 times bringing tons of pollution from waste food and fish faeces.  

It is estimated that there will be 15 tons of organic waste dumped into the sea daily. Plus a substance called formalin which is used to prevent diseases in the fish cages and has been found to be carcogenic.  77 tons of it has already filtered into the sea surrounding the island  in the last 2.5 years. 

  The peaceful and clean bay below us, our swimming hole in the summertime, could potentially have a fish farm plonked in the middle of it.

Thousands have turned out from the towns and islands in the Saronic Gulf where there are  dozens of already established fish farms.  A small number of  Poros locals are employed by the Company but nothing like the number employed in the tourist business.  

Poros has lived primarily on tourism for the last 60 years, or more.  Over 20,000 yachts pass through the straits and tie up during the summer. Greek visitors come by road.  Poros is only 2 hours from Athens, one hour on the Catamaran.  We complain about the traffic jams these rich Greeks cause with their big flashy cars but they spend money and come all year round. Foreign tourists start arriving around Easter and keep holidaying till late October.


Speeches first


After all the speeches
There was a protest march to the centre of town


All the family were there
Grandaughters Nels and Poppi with their mother Danae and Poppi's goddaughter 



Then they all formed a human chain along the waterfront 
Poppi with her goddaughter. Sound asleep 


A serenade for Poros and it's protesters for Clean Seas and Beaches



Sunday, 22 June 2025

WhatsUpp

 WhatsUp or WhatsApp?

I've had this conversation with visitors before.  I'm told it's App with an A.  But we all pronounce it with a U.   Penny dropped this time.  There is no U in greek.  A is pronounced U. So it's whatsUpp to us. OK



Novak Djokovic is apparently buying a house in Greece.
He is surveying property in Athens and looking at schools for his children.
He has been granted a golden visa which allows him residency in Greece.
He already has a house in New York and Miami, a villa in Marbella, a home in Monaco and a penthouse in Belgrade.
So many choices.  Wonder why he's thinking of Athens?


Personally, I'm a Raffa fan


Almora
For hydration in summer heat.  It provides electrolytes and strengthens the immune system.  K takes it because he sweats so much during the summer.  This one also contains magnesium which is supposed to help prevent cramps.
Poppi has just informed me she takes strawberry Almora.
Didn't know they had flavours



The summer cinema has opened
The showings take place on a rooftop near the harbour
5 euros for children
7 euros for adults




Just like a gang of naughty little boys. 
They were only having fun! 


Thursday, 19 June 2025

More of Our Summer

 


Good morning
Kalimera
From our neighbourhood

Summer is here.  It has been a bit cooler this week but the Cicadas are trilling merrily away and I enjoy the birdsong at 5am.  Days are long.
It's midsummer next week, the summer solstice,  celebrated on the 24th June here.  There are different traditions in different parts of the country, most pagan.  It was once time to light bonfires at crossroads and burn the MayDay wreath.  Fires are frowned on now at this time of the year.  Our children and grandchildren used to jump the bonfire to bring good luck 


We have our TV outside for evening watching, with a cover to protect it from the searing midday sun. Our Greek MasterChef is coming to an end so it's less boring as we anticipate the winner and we watch Greek Chase and Who Wants to be a Millionaire. I'd be glued to CSI and Bones but...we have different preferences. 





My garden has become a toilet for nieghbourhood cats.  
I keep a bag of rotten lemons to throw at them and hose them when I can.  They hightail it over the fence only to return again a little later.
We used to feed 3 or 4. Then new neighbours moved in and gathered all the wild cats that roamed free. We estimate there are about 14 and lately we've been hearing kitten noises. 
The neighbours have a much larger piece of land but our garden is the main attraction 


Fly swatters. 
 Flies can be annoying when we are eating outside in the evening. My brother Tony suggested I tried these.  They're like fans and generally work well.  From a Chinese online shopping giant for a few euros


My solar fountain.  A present from my dear daughters.