Saturday, 24 January 2026

Photos in the Storm

 Why has this storm not been given a name?? 

There was bad flooding all over  the country.  Two people were killed, one by raging flood waters and the other by huge waves while securing a yacht


Our stupid cat 
It's pouring with rain and she's sitting out there on the wall. She's been fed and had a little extra but just won't go and shelter
Daughter Danae suggested she wanted to come inside.  Not this one. I've been feeding her twice a day for 10 years but she still spits at me when I bring her food and will swipe with open claws if I get too close

 

Son in law Kyriako's, blue and white,  water taxi in the distance . It had just been hit by a rogue yacht.  The yacht came free from it's moorings across on the mainland, got swept across the strait and collided with the Socrates which was tied to the wharf on Poros .  Fortunately the damage was minor but involved a lot of paperwork afterwards



Cleaning up
The harbour is full of rubbish


Son in law Yiannis went down to pump out the water in Ks boat
He had to do it with a hand pump 
There was so much flotsam and jetsam he couldn't risk it being sucked back into the engine if he used the boats electric pump



A stormy harbour



Fousa.
 Grapevines under even more water


And now there's more rain scheduled tomorrow 

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Red Alert

 


*The time has come the Walrus said

To talk of many things

Of ships and shoes and sealing wax

And eating gingerbread


It's gingery and peppery . The best gingerbread house I've eaten.  K loves it too so thank goodness I don't have to eat it all by myself


Today is the perfect day for eating gingerbread and drinking mushroom coffee. For a start...... 

Last night we all got a Red Alert on our phones.  Extreme weather was on its way. Has arrived.  

We are now being battered by strong winds and rain. Schools are closed today.  I know, once upon a time we'd be battling through the storm barefoot to get to school. Times have changed.  But I must admit that we are seeing pictures on the news of schools with flying tiles and the front yard of the Primary School here floods in weather like this.  


I was going to open the Beaujolais. Vintage 2024

But today I need something to warm the cockles of my heart

I decanted a 'vintage' red, from a 5 litre jar to a smaller bottle and into my special wine glass, a present from a special friend.

The red wine was given to me by my son in law Yiannis . Yiannis gets his wine from a small village a few hours away where family grapevines produce excellent wine. It's a 'bold' tipple.  One glass and I'm glowing 

Meanwhile down under in the Bay of Plenty, NZ, they've also had a Civil Defence warning


Our family man digging a trench to divert flood waters away from their house 

The only difference are the temperatures.  It's probably in the 20s there while it's 7oC here.  




*I hadn't realised how many verses there were to this piece of poetry .

The Walrus and the Carpenter

By Lewis Carroll 

Worth the Google and the read

Monday, 19 January 2026

Ukrainian Freeze

 Ukrainian freeze refers to the polar weather  we are experiencing at the moment

The cold  snap comes down from the Ukraine, with temperature drops up to 10oC, gale force northerlies and snow on the peaks around us. 

I lit the fire at 11 this morning and brought in armfuls of olive wood.  It burns fast and I can see the huge wood pile going down, down. 

A big pot of traditional bean soup, fassolatha, went on the stove early in the morning.  This is Greece's National dish. Not moussaka. 

It would have been even better with a few pieces of sausage but I've eaten them all.  K approved of it as-is so all is well. We have some feta cheese and a tin of sardines to go with it.  Salted sardines are more traditional but he'll take what he gets today. 

Yesterday I was supposed to attend a memorial to commemorate the passing, one year ago, of an elderly aunt but it was just too darned cold. 

I would have had to drive down icy mountain roads to the harbour, huddle up against the glacial winds, take the car ferry across to Galatas and be blown along the waterfront to the church. My fingers would have turned white, my nose would have been running and I'd have been completely frozen when I finally entered the church.  Not to mention being vulnerable to all those seasonal bugs from the close company of a church full of coughing worshippers. 

So naturally I stayed at home. 

I did miss out on roast lamb and potatoes though.  The family had put in a large oven tray of meat before they left for church and they are renown for their excellent traditional Greek cooking.  Aunt Eleni, RIP, used to be head cook.   Her fried cheese bread was irresistible.  Thankfully she passed on her recipes, knowledge and love of cooking to others in the family. 

Daughter Danae has just added something which is worth noting.  Danae makes Tiganopsomo, fried cheese bread, and so do I sometimes.  I have even watched Eleni kneading and frying them but they just aren't quite as good as Eleni's .  Tasty, crunchy but her touch is missing .

She was a master chef and we were fortunate to have had her in our lives.  Eleni was the Aunt of our son in law Kyriakos and became part of our extended family only in the past 20 years



Poppi got another award yesterday
Her Aunt Elli picked it up for her. Poppi is at school in Athens
The Poros Rowing Club held their New Years cake cutting and Award Ceremony 
I'm not sure what the award was for exactly
She helps coach the younger ones when she's on the island too


Our house in the foreground amidst the olive trees
Under winter skies 
And underneath those abandoned houses on top of the hill



Saturday, 17 January 2026

Winter Roads

 Walking in the wild.  

I walked slowly today but went further than I usually go.  The sky was blue, there was no cold wind, no traffic or people and I had no time limit. No one waiting at home, wondering why I was taking so long, worrying that something had happened. Nice to have someone back home, yes, but not the restriction. 

I had my favourite country and western music to listen to. And my tablet to take some photos on a wider scale.  The vistas aren't overly inspiring.  Roads and fields, green grass now instead of brown.  Scenery I've photoed over and over.   This is my turf. This is my life. 



The home run.  It's a steep hill as soon as I go out the front gate. 
5 years ago when I started my daily walks up here it took me 5 minutes with 5 stops to reach the top. Now I can do it easily in one minute
I've lost a lot of kilos in those 5 years and I'm a lot fitter
Coming back it's an easy downhill final 'run' 


After a kilometre the sea is on the horizon
The sea, the mainland and the extinct volcano above the village of Methana


A detour along the dirt road leading down to the fish farm
I count the power poles and try and go one further everytime I come along here



Or I continue down the tarsealed fire road round the back of the island
I usually go as far as the small chapel dedicated to St Antoni.  About 2 ks

And it just happens to be 17th January today and the Fiesta of St Antoni.  Happy name day to brother Tony
It would have been decked out in flags today for a festive morning service. 


Looking down over the fertile plateau of Fousa
The water doesn't drain easily from this flat area with its olive trees and vineyards.  In days of yore when there was a greater rainfall the grapevines were trimmed in January from a rowboat.  So they say


The abandoned houses on the hill, slowly falling in on themselves . Built without the correct permits.  Building was ordered to stop over 20 years ago. What a waste.  



Next door neighbour Hera. She follows me quite a long way, on the other side of a high fence. 
She's a malinois, dogs known for their ferocity. 
We get on OK. She gives a bark when she sees me. I speak to her softly and she stops and listens.  I am glad though to have that fence between us



A promise of spring





Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Extra.... Cold

The first snow fell on the tops of the mountains opposite Poros 

A quick cold snap is passing through.  By Wednesday it will all be over


Those clouds are dumping snow
So exciting for us
It doesn't happen every year


The view from Elli's balcony

I remember when we used to live there. Those snow clouds will leave a good covering


The olive groves at the top of those hills.  The olive trees like a bit of snow. The crop should be a good one this year


What to do when it's freezing outside? 

K cooked broad beans


And I made garlic sauce which always accompanies broad beans
The sauce is made from bread soaked in water, vinegar and plenty of garlic and olive oil


K eats it spread on bread
And he stinks of garlic for days
I made it good and strong


And while that was going on I kneaded a small loaf of bread too


Warm and cozy
All day long
With plenty of olive and oak wood 


Monday, 12 January 2026

Busy-ness

 



A load of olive prunings from the olive grove of a good friend of ours 
A thousand thanks for a load of cheap firewood 



He dumped the load and we paid a couple of young workers to come along with a chainsaw, cut it all up and throw it into our front yard


Hardly more than an hour and they'd cut it, thrown it all over the fence, stacked and covered it.  
They got a tot of raki  before driving off

A job well done



Christmas is officially done and dusted
Grandson Jamie came, taped up the boxes and stacked them on top of our big wardrobe

All the boxes used to go into our store cupboard above the bathroom.  Now the Grandchildren have flown it's just too hard for us to retrieve stuff so it's stored in plan sight 
At least we can reach things when we want it
 
Jamie is another tall grandchild and didn't need to climb our IKEA  steps to arrange all the boxes . Thank you Jamie for helping out your Nana and Papou...... Now that Poppi has gone 
Jamie has now also left for Athens before another storm came in
 
When K and I want something we wobble on a stepladder and hope nothing falls on top of us

 




Saturday, 10 January 2026

Gingerbread Men

 Baking gingerbread men has become an annual tradition. Not for me. I just eat them....

Gingerbread is not a Greek Christmas tradition.  There are plenty of other syrupy, sugar covered sweets

 A few years ago powdered ginger was very hard to find and it was expensive. Greeks bakers use more cinnamon and cloves and two other spices mahlepi and mastiha. 

Most supermarkets do stock ginger now and even our little grocer has it, powdered or fresh. 

Of course when I googled I was not surprised to read 

'Recipes for Gingerbread originated from  Greece in 2,400 BC' 



My daughter Elli and the girls from her office have a gingerbread baking day just before Christmas 


Maria and Katerina make an amazing array of gingerbread


This is my little house 
If its anything like last year's it's going to be delicious 

Sometime I'm going to have to break it up and eat it
I'm not looking forward to that at all.   Last year's gingerbread house was delectable and I ate most of it by myself
Once it's broken up I'm going to be gobbling it down