Saturday, April 28, 2007

I am in ISTANBUL!!!

I seriously can't get over this... I AM IN ISTANBUL. This is probably the coolest thing I have ever done, ever. The city is amazing, I alreadydrove by the Blue Mosque and I am going on a full tour of the city tomorrow. I cannot belive I am really here.

Friday, April 27, 2007

2 posts in one day, oh my!

Ok, so I feel like my dinner tonight requires a post of all its own, and so it is going to get one...

Tonight, we went to Roula's. At least, we call this restaurant Roula's, its really Tavernaki a Costas. We randomly found it while wandering in search of food one night, and have been going back religiously ever since. The food there is the best in Greece. If I was an English Major or a poet of any kind, I would I would write an ode to this restaurant's arni me potates (lamb with potatoes in a tomato sauce) and I don't even like Lamb. But, not only is the food amazing, the place itself is adorable. It is in a converted two-story home, with a small front garden. It is a significantly older style home than the 60's era buildings that surround it. It has orange shutters on the windows and a big double wooden door. All of the tables are in the front rooms of the house, and they are decorated with tons of random Greek chachkies and paintings. The walls are painted yellow, and it is a very welcoming interior. The food is also amazingly cheap. A dinner for three with an appetizer and wine is around 25 euros.

So tonight we went there for dinner after class one more time before we all go our separate directions for the 4 day weekend. So, we were sitting at our table, having our AMAZING dinner (I had fried zucchini with tzasiki -mmmmmm!) when suddenly the lights went out! There was a brown out in our neighborhood of a good ten minutes. We remained contently in our seats munching away on our amazing meals in the pitch black, until all of a sudden they flashed back on. We ended up with a dessert on the house (which was also AMAZING!) and then off back to my room for bed time!

Yep..this one is long!

Alright, so clearly I have not been keeping up on this blogging business like I should... so here is an in-brief recap of the last two weeks or so.

All of last week was in Athens taking class. We went on one-day trip to Amphiareion on Thursday -- which really couldn't have been more boring. Our teacher had no idea what anything on any of the sites was, so he just read to us out of his guidebook and I was so frustrated. He also has been just extending our classes over the time allotted without giving us any notice or warning when we should expect it. Basically, I just don't like this teacher.

This past weekend was great. We went out a TON. On Friday night I had a girls night out in our neighborhood with Mieka and Liz. We started out at this cool place called Kasbah Ethnic Club. It had a great lounge atmosphere and an awesome DJ. When the place finally starting filling up though (we went out early so that we could chill and chat with fewer crowds) we realized that it was a MUCH older crowd that frequented this bar, and we couldn't have been more out of place. Haha. So we decided to move on to a different bar/restaurant in our neighborhood that has a very Greek name that I can never remember. We hung out there and danced for a few hours before heading home for the night.

On Saturday a large group of us went to Psirri, which is the clubbing district in Athens. We started out at a very nice lounge called Liquid. Not a dancing kind of place, but a great place to sit and talk while listening to good music. After Liquid we decided we wanted to dance, so we all went to a club called nora.nora. It was Lebanese and has a very harem-like interior. It was PACKED with people and had the loudest music I have ever heard. They had a male and a female belly dancer, as well as hookah at the VIP tables. The place was fun, but the strange Greek music was really hard to dance to after a while, we just couldn't figure out the beat! The music finally became WAY too loud for us (I'm pretty sure I permanently damaged my hearing! haha) so we decided to go in search of a new place to hang out. I wasn't in the mood for more dancing, I just wanted to sit and hang out and meet people, so we ended up at this really popular hookah cafe that stays open until 6am on the weekend. It was full of Greek 20somethings all being really friendly and flirtatious; it was fun to watch. We got a table and hung out there for hours, talking to our waitress in broken Greek/English about the good nightlife spots and what its like to be 22 in Athens... It was just generally a great night.

Sunday was a relaxing day. I only did my laundry, my homework and just hung around the apartment. I did go out to lunch for some really great pizza though – we have found an amazing little place that makes your pizza right when you order it in a wood-burning oven! I thought about going out again, since we didn’t have class on Monday, but two nights a week is really more than I can take. I like my sleep!

Monday I went out shopping and exploring around the city on my own again. I wandered all over the place as always. Every time I get a chance to just go out ad walk around I fall in love with Athens even more. Sometimes I wish I could just stay here for good.

Then on Tuesday we left on our group trip to Delphi. The drive there was 4 hours long, and we were stuck in traffic for at least an hour. Luckily, I slept most of the way, so it didn’t really bother me! We first stopped at the Osios Loukas monastery. It is a famous example of some artist something, but once again, because my teacher is an idiot, I’m not exactly sure why it is famous. It did have some really amazing Byzantine mosaics though. It is still an operational monastery. It is not named after St. Luke the Apostle as you expect actually, but it after a Greek Saint Loukas who was an ascetic. The ultimate test that he passed was lying in bed with a woman without being tempted…hmmmm…. But, when he died the wealthy people in Thrace built the monastery in his honor.

After that we drove to Delphi and checked out the Archaeological Museum and the Gymnasium, neither of which are at the actual site of Delphi and both of which are pretty boring. Then we checked into our hotel. It was a totally gross and depressing hotel with the smallest shower in history, so I was VERY grateful we only stayed there one night. That night we had a group dinner at a big touristy restaurant (not that there is anything u-touristy in all of Delphi) that was quite good. After that I was so exhausted I just fell asleep.

The next morning we woke up and visited the actual site of Delphi. It wasn’t nearly as cool as I expected. It is swarmed with tourists, very little is left of it and what is left of it isn’t the cool parts. My high hopes ended up being for nothing. We did get to spend 2 hours exploring the site on our own, which was great. I tried meditating to channel Apollo and be my own oracle, but no such luck.

After that we had lunch in Delphi town (another tourist trap, but this time not a good one) and then drove the 4 hours to Olympia. When we finally got to Olympia we checked into our hotel. This one managed to be even worse than the last. The beds were made out of two sofa cushions pushed together, there were cockroaches and the place was just generally horrific. I was positive we were going to be murdered in our sleep. (If you ever go to Olympia, avoid the Hotel New Olympia like the plague!) We then went to the museum. The museum was REALLY GREAT. Worth every minute we spent there, if only for the pediment sculptures from the Temple of Zeus at Olympus and the Nike sculpture.

After that, around 7pm, we went to have class outside the museum. We sat in a park to discuss Medea, as our teacher has been unable to stay on schedule. While we were sitting there a homeless man, who was clearly mentally ill, came up and started talking to us. He was having a conversation with our teacher about drinking with Jesus when suddenly he pulled out a knife. Luckily he only pointed it towards himself, but after that we had to get up and leave. We continued our class in the hotel lobby until 8:15pm. After that, we all went to dinner at an AMAZING restaurant. Then pretty much the whole group went out to an Internet café/club to go dancing. But, since we had to be up at 8am again, we were all home by midnight safely in our beds.

The next morning I was so happy to get out of that gross hotel, I cannot even tell you. We started out the morning at the site of Olympia. Olympia was by far the best site we have been at in Greece. Its natural beauty combined with the relatively large number of ruins there made it just a great place to visit. I saw Nero’s house, the Temple of Zeus, a Byzantine Church, Roman and Greek Baths as well as the workshop where the GIANT sculpture of Zeus was created. (Justinian destroyed it during his sack of Constantinople because he was a Christian) There is also an amazing stadium there for the Olympic games. I also saw the altar outside of the Heriaon where they light the modern day Olympic Torch to take it around the world. I would go back to Olympia in a heartbeat – it was worth every minute it took to drive there.

After we left the site I had lunch at the Olympia Palace Hotel, which was delicious and cheap! It is also a beautiful hotel. Then some gelato before we had to hop on the bus for the 6 hour ride back to Athens!

When we finally got back I ran off the bus to get back to my apartment to relax and go to bed! I was exhausted.

This morning I woke up at 9am, put in a load of wash, finally took a shower and read my book for a while, after putting in a load of laundry. Then I went out in search of food, I found some cute clothes along the way, and then had a yummy lunch near Monasteraki. After that I came back here and started on this endless blog entry…. Now I am off to an hour of class and then I have to start packing for Istanbul tomorrow!!!!!

Monday, April 16, 2007

I am going to do a better job this week, I promise

So, since I have no interest in doing my homework like I should, I am going to write in my blog tonight....

This morning we had free, so I slept late, of course, and then washed my sheets. Fabric Softener is the best invention of human kind ever. Well, that may be a slight overstatement since it is relatively useless without a washing machine, but it has improved my HORRIBLE SCRATCHY sheets about 100%. Consequently, I am about 100% happier. Then off to the grocery store for more food, and hangers for my clothes. I also worked some more on my new, very cool website uchicagostudyabroad.wikispaces.com I am very proud of it, but it is no where near finished yet.

Later today we had our first day of our second class in Greece. This section is going to focus on Ancient Greek drama. We read the play The Persians for class today and discussed the model of Ancient Greek tragedy. The class was interesting, but I did not entirely care for the way our teacher asks vague questions while looking for a very specific answer. My roommate described it as an academic game of "guess what is in my pocket." It got very frustrating very quickly for the entire class because we were not able to provide the answer he was looking for. When we finally got to it, we kind of wanted to strangle him, because his questions actually led us away from his answer in a lot of ways. The one amazing thing he did do though was to shut up the obnoxious kid in our class who often says very dumb things that are barely tangentially related to the subject at hand and are only intended to make him look intelligent, but fail miserably. The teacher pretty much shut him down completely which in my book makes him a good teacher.

After that I had another 2 1/2 hours of Greek class, again. I am about to go ito Greek class overload, but luckily next week only have 1 1/2 hours for the ENTIRE WEEK! I love the class and I love our teacher, but enough is enough, ok?

Then tonight for dinner I went to the Souvlaki Shop in the square that is pretty good. After all of those classes I was starving and ended up eating 1 1/2 gyros in about 2.5 seconds flat. They were amazing but now I may never eat again.

And now I should actually do my homework so that I can go to bed at a reasonable hour...

Sunday, April 15, 2007

I know its been a week...

So, its been a week since I last posted, but a rather uneventful week so I'll be able to recap relatively quickly...

We had no class on Monday, and I pretty much did nothing, since the WHOLE CITY was still closed. The Easter holiday is the most important for the Orthodox Church, so everyone has at the very least a four day weekend. The students get two weeks off, and a lot of places are closed for the whole week before Easter and the following Monday. I thought about writing my paper, but never actually got around to it...

On Tuesday Morning we visited the Athenian Agora with Cam where he lectured. We had already visited the site one before, but it is still really interesting and the museum there has a large number of very well preserved artifacts. In the afternoon we had discussion class again, but it was FINALLY about Modern Greece which is my actual interest. The discussion got very heated but was much more interesting, in my opinion, than any of the others that we have had. After discussion class I had 2 1/2 hours of my Modern Greek 2 class. Our teacher is really interesting and fun. She has taken into account what we wanted to learn, and has expanded our Greek vocabularies so much already.

Wednesday -- Today was our site visit to Ancient Korinthina (Corinth). This trip was basically the highlight of the week. We had this amazing Archaeologist named Guy Sanders, who is the director of the Corinth site, show us around the site. We started with the original site, which included the famous temple. After that he showed us their most recent, and still ongoing excavations, including one of the graveyards for the city. They had just recently uncovered a new grave, with a stone sarcophagus, indicating the relative wealth and prestige of the person buried there. They had already opened it and removed the important artifacts, but they hadn't been able to move the sarcophagus yet, so we were able to see it in its original location. Guy then went on to describe some of the burial practices of the Christian, Muslim and earlier Pagan people who were buried in the cemetery, as well as some of the more gruesome stories of the people who had been excommunicated before they were buried. These people were buried in specific ways to ensure that they were permanently denied the glory of the afterlife. Then, ironically, it was lunch time...

For lunch we went to some of the very few, and very touristy restaurants to eat. The unique thing about this one is that it has a terrace that overlooks the sit itself. It has probably the best view of the temple in Corinth that you could get in the city. The food was mediocre at best, but the view was worth it.

After lunch it was time to see the ACROCORINTH!!! So, anyone who is from my generation remembers the TV show that was on Nick called Guts. In the show, four "international" kids competed for the championship by climbing up the Agrocrag. The Agrocrag was a fake mountain obstacle course including foam avalanches. Since everyone on my trip is within one or two years of my age, we all had the exact same reaction to the idea of the Acrocorinth -- THIS IS THE BEST THING EVER! and we had to compete to get to the top fastest in order to win our piece of the Agrocrag! Unfortunately, we underestimated how HUGE the Acrocorinth. It is actually a Venetian fortress with cliffs on three sides, so it can only be approached on oe side. It was captured by the Ottoman empire and then in the early 1820's by the Greeks during the independence movement. As a group we finally, but just barely made it to the top of the fortress, where you could see both the Saronic and the Corinthian gulf, with the Corinth Canal running between the two. It was one of the most beautiful sites we have seen yet...but then we had to get down.

On Thursday we had a free morning, which I spent starting my paper, and then mastering all forms of procrastination...such as cleaning my room, cleaning the kitchen, organizing my clothes and books, ect... It was a very productive procrastination morning. Then the rental company came and installed the washing machine we rented in our apartment (hugest life improvement ever) just before it was time for me to go to class. Another day where we discussed Modern Greece, but once again, the classics majors in our class managed to make it about the ancient world.. Then another 2 1/2 hours of Modern Greek before MASSIVE paper writing.

The Friday morning we visited the National Archeology Museum -- which was a mob scene. Every annoying tour group in the entire country was visiting the museum at the same time we were. Our group has had an ongoing war with the rude tour guides since we were shushed while discussing the Parthenon while on the Acropolis (with our teacher!) so that she could give her boring intro to the site. Today, it got even worse. An Italian tour guide actually pulled one of my classmates away from an artifact that he was examining so that her group could crowd around the rather large case. Basically, it was war. But our teacher Cam stepped in and moved us on to the next gallery before a fight broke out in the National Museum. Haha.

We has our last session of the first class we are taking while here (our program is divided up into three, three week intensive classes with modern Greek throughout) on Friday afternoon. We then had another 2 hours of modern Greek. Right after Modern Greek we went to Nodia, a (pretty bad) restaurant on the square near our apartments to have a farewell dinner for Cam, our teacher. We really liked him, and felt like he was a friend to our whole group, so it was a very boisterous yet sad dinner. The food was awful, and the wine was probably a little worse, but it was fun anyway.

Saturday -- I spent the day out shopping with a two other girls from my program - Amanda and Julia. It was Julia's 21st birthday, so first we went to the bookstore to get some more light reading for our downtime, and then we went shopping for clothes on Ermou (the Michigan Ave of Athens. I bought myself a really cute dress, a pink-ish blazer, a t-shirt, a tank top and a tube top. They are all very European cool and I have a feeling I am going to be wearing them constantly while I am here. Then we went to Monasteraki for lunch...mmm gyros! We were exhausted from our excursion after that so we decided to stroll back towards home through the Monaskeraki market. On our way through we found an amazing show store with adorable and really cheap sandals! I bought a pair of gold Grecian style sandals and a pair of bronze wedge heels. Then we actually did make it home weighed down with all of our purchases.

That night we decided to go out clubbing for Julia's 21st Birthday and almost everyone in the program went along. We ended up at a club called Luv with great Trance music and a huge crowd. We stayed there all night just dancing and having a great time.

And now today all I am doing is writing in my blog and being incredibly lazy, because that is what Sundays are made for.

Sunday, April 8, 2007

Re: Well, somethings are disappointing, and others are better than ever

Alright, so, simply put, my dates were unmitigated disasters. Both guys were boring, one was WAY too forward and I had to get up and leave, while the other talked on his cell phone the whole time. AND they both chain smoked. GROSS. So, leaving that at that, on to the fun part of my trip...

I went to Aegina for a traditional Greek Easter with the family that we met earlier this week. It was pretty much the coolest experience of my entire life. On Saturday at midnight we went to church and lit candles from the holy light that traveled all the way from Israel. After that we went back to their house for a huge feast that included Margheritza, a soup that is only served on the night that Christ rose from the dead (Easter). We played the traditional "crack the red egg" game that I always used to play with my YiaYia and Papoulie. At around 2am we finally stopped eating and went to bed -- only to start right up again the next day.

On Easter Sunday Greek families always get together for tons of food and dancing. They also always roast an entire lamb on a spit. The family we were staying with, did both, and it was awesome. We ate an enormous amount of food and then had to come back to Athens, to write our essays for our class tomorrow. Which is what I should be doing right now, but I am so tired, I am just going to bed.

Saturday, April 7, 2007

Re: I REALLY like Greece

So, my life in Greece is way better than my life in the states. I may never come back again. Just a quick re-cap of today, because it has been even better than normal.

Woke up around 9am and went to Pireaus to sail back to Aegina for a traditioanl Greek Easter with my adopted Greek Grandparents.

Made it to Aegina, and went to a cafe for a snack while waiting for the bus to Agia Marina. I got the MOST amazing chocolate crepe I have ever had in my entire life, and as I am enjoying this amzing crepe (with chocolate ALL over my face, as always), the waiter strikes up a conversation with me. We discuss my plans for my trip, and it all ends up with him asking me out for coffee tonight! I accept and head to Agia Marina.

We check into our hotel, which is even more beautiful than I remember it, but this time, we are given a room with our own private terrace overlooking the ocean. So, I have a hour to kill before getting back on the bus to meet my date, so I changed into my bathing suit and laid (lied? i never understood that part of English grammar) out on my terrace until I had to get dressed to go. So, the bus drops me off in Aegina early for my date, so I decided to wander around until its time for my date (which, by the way is still 10 minutes away). So as I am wandering, I run into the guy Stavros and I met on our last trip here who rents scooters. We had talked with him for a while about Aegina last time we were here, and he remembered me. So, we strike up another conversation, and yes, I get asked out on ANOTHER date for tonight. So I have one coffee date for 6pm tonight and one for 10pm, and then church at midnight followed by a feast.

Yeah, Greece is AWESOME. And to quote Tupac -- "'nuff said."

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Trip to Aegina Part III

So, now I am safely back in my apartment in Athens, and ready to fill in the remainder of my trip...

We woke up early and met up downstairs in the restaurant/lobby of the hotel. On the way down, of course I trip and almost smack my head on the marble stairs, being the total klutz that I am. After I finally make it down the stairs, we go into the restaurant to check out, and the proprietors wife had just arrived from Athens. We started talking to her and it turned out she was from Elmwood Park! Which is the suburb of Chicago right next to where my Greek grandparents live. She had come to Greece on vacation when she was 20 in 1977 and had fallen in love Aegina Island and then with Nikos, her future husband. They returned to Chicago for 2 1/2 years and then in 1985 they had purchased the Kavos Bay hotel we stayed in, and moved there permanently. After telling us her life story, she invited us to come back to Kavos Bay for Orthodox Easter which is this Sunday. They will be doing the traditional lamb roast on the spit and going to church and just having a huge party! So, of course, we will have to attend, as Easter is a time to leave Athens in Greece and return to your hometown. We are adopting Nikos and Ireni as our extra set of grandparents for this easter! haha. Honestly, Stavros, Lydia and I are already booking the tickets and can't wait!

And all this happened in the first half hour after leaving our rooms.

Then they drove us into town to catch the bus to Aegina Town, where the ferry departs from. Just as we are pulling into town, the bus goes by and our driver flags it down for us and we hop on. After a crazy bus ride up and down hillsides at a break neck speed in a normal sized city bus we arrive in Aegina Town. First, we decided to get breakfast. Then we wandered around until our ferry came. The ferry ride back was uneventful but beautiful, as would be expected. Then we hopped on the metro to Monasteraki. At the stop right after Piraeus an elderly woman got on the train with a live chicken in a box. Stavros and I were incredulous, to say the least, at the site of a live chicken on a throughly modern metro system. The woman asked us, in Greek of course, why we were laughing at her. And we responded, in our broken Greek, no! no! Chicken! And then burst out laughing again, this time the woman joined us. She got off at the next stop, taking her chicken with her.

And now I am back in my room and about to go get myself some Souvlaki before I have to go to class.

Trip to Aegina Part II

As I sit on the balcony of my hotel looking at the sun setting over Aegina, I cannot believe my luck at being here. It is a perfect sunset, over the island, with the Saronic Gulf in the foreground. This island seems too beautiful to be real at times, and then I remember the strange things that have occurred since my arrival, and I am almost sure that it has all been some strange sort of dream.

After checking in and settling into our rooms, Stavros and I decided to explore the island. We left the hotel and wandered down the small road that leads to Agia Marina, the town we are staying in. The town is a 20-minute walk from our hotel. Along the way we climbed down the cliffs at several safe spots to check out the water and just generally explore. Finally we made it into town and decided we were starving. We found an open restaurant with a terrace that overlooked the ocean (as does most of the town) and sat down for lunch. We ate leisurely and VERY well. After our long lunch we decided to explore Agia Marina itself. First we wandered to their empty sandy beaches then down to the supermarket. We bought some chips and snacks for the hotel and decided to head back to the hotel.

We were wandering down the main street on our way to the small road that leads to our hotel when one of the ubiquitous four-wheelers that are rented all over the island buzzed by us. This one, oddly, slowed to a stop in the middle of the dead town, where we were the only people on the street and the man driving called out my name. Shocked, I turned around, only to see an old friend from the small town where I grew up in Florida who had moved to Boston and whom I had not spoken to in 4 years. Tim and I had known each other during the beginning of my senior year of high school and had really not spoken since. Randomly, he happened to be vacationing in Aegina for a few days before he returned to Boston, after a long stay with friends in Santorini. He was there with an ex-girlfriend for some reason, though no explanation was offered, and basically I am still shocked by the whole encounter. We spent an hour walking the beach and catching up, while both marveling at the deep randomness of our encounter. Finally, he had to leave to return his four-wheeler to the other side of the island where he was staying. Stavros and I then walked back to our hotel and fell asleep for the night.

Tuesday April 3

Today we started out our day much earlier, at 9am, for breakfast in the hotel. From there we walked into Agia Marina to try and find an internet café to no avail. After that we decided to visit the ruins on the island of the Temple of Aphaia, which was built in 500 BC to a goddess native to Aegina. It is a remarkably well preserved temple, as it wasn’t destroyed by the Turks and it is relatively new compared to many of the ruins in Greece. We took the local bus up there, about 15 minutes from the town center, and as we are getting off the bus 6 of the other people from our program are sitting at the bus stop eating their snacks before going into the temple. This was decidedly less random than running into Tim, but random nonetheless, as we were the only people who had wanted to go to Aegina when we booked the trip on Sunday. They were only here for the day though, instead of the whole 2 ½ day break like Stavros and I. We wandered around the ruins with them for a while, taking the requisite touristy pictures and then we parted ways, with Stavros and I continuing on to Aegina town.

Our first stop in Aegina was an internet café (where I wrote my previous post), as we both had not checked our e-mails in two days and were DELUGED with them. After an hour in a smoky, airless room we were ready for an outdoor lunch. So we decided to find a place with a patio outside overlooking the port. We happened to luck out ad find a reasonable, local’s hangout with amazing food and fresh octopus hanging from a string outside. We tried their amazing calamari, as well as fried zucchini, tzasiki, and feta cheese. After our lunch we bought ourselves Greek flag towels, to show off our Greek pride and so that we would have beach towels for our trip. (The Greeks can be a bit skimpy on linens, even in nice hotels, from what we have seen so far) Then we went on to the bus and returned to our hotel.

After returning we sat out on my balcony, eating the delicious pistachios that are native to Aegina, and trying complete our reading for our quiz on Thursday. We watched the sun set over the island, and now I am writing my blog entry into word so that as soon as I have internet access I can upload it, without having forgotten a thing. We are both planning on going to bed early tonight, as we want to get to see some more of Aegina town before our ferry leaves at 11am tomorrow, so we will be waking up around 7:30am in order to catch the bus by 8:45 from Agia Marina to Aegina Town. We’ll be there by 9:15 – 9:30amish and then we will need to be on board our boat by 10:30am. The boat should return to Athens by 12:05pm, so that we can make it class by 4:30pm with a large margin for error. We’ll see what actually happens though…

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Aegina

Alright, so for the moment I am going to skip over my trip to Napflio, since it is significant less interesting then the trip I am currently on (at least in my eyes, humans are way more interesting than ridiculous numbers of piles of rocks)

So, I am in Aegina, which is the island in the Saronic Gulf only 16 miles from Athens. Its considered an Athenian weekend/summer hangout but since no one is here yet because the season hasn't started the place is practically deserted. So, Stavros and I decided to come here to check it out and find ourselves Greek spouses. Well, we didn't actually decide to go until the day before we were supposed to leave and we just booked everything over the internet without much thought. So, on Monday morning we make it to the ferry OK, and after some difficulty manage to get our tickets from the ticket office. We board the ferry and promptly pass out on the benches for the entire hour trip. We wake up about 10 minutes before we dock and get to see some of the beautiful views of the Island. Once we dock, we realize that we have no idea where our hotel is in relation to the ferry. So, after some initial wandering, we decide to go to the port authority and ask them how to get to our hotel. The exchange goes something like this:

Stavros: "Pou Einai Kavos Bay Hotel," (where is Kavos Bay Hotel?)
Port Authority Lady: "Gibberish, gobbilty goop, incomprehensible greek"
Kara: "Ok. Milate Anglika," (Ok. Do you speak English?)
Port Authority Lady: Points down the hall

So Stavros and I walk down the hall and finally find someone who speaks English. So we ask her, how do we get to Kavos Bay? And she tells us that we should get on the bus to Agia Marina which is on the other side of the Island (which is only 12 kilometers wide) and then when we get there we should ask the bakers wife to call Kavos Bay and they will come pick us up. So we exit the Port Authority and decide to just grab a taxi and ask him to take us there, figuring that they will know how to get there. We grab a taxi just outside of the port authority and tell him we are going to Kavos Bay and he says, ok I'll get you as close as I can. Thinking I misheard him, we say ok, hop in the cab and head across the island at a break-neck speed on these tiny mountain roads. I am absolutely sure that I have gotten Stavros and I into a really bad situation that may end in death, especially since our cab driver shows no interest in looking at the road.

Finally, he stops next to this white and blue house and tells us, "This is as far as I go. Road no good." So we hop out of the cab and decide to go into the house to ask where exactly from here our hotel is. Apparently, this house/restaurant is owned by "familia" of the owners of Kavos Bay, because that is the ONLY word we can make out that this guy is saying. So he tells us, in English finally, to hop in his car and he is going to drive us to to "familia." So, we hop in this run down old blue Mercedes with this man who couldn't be a day younger than 95 and he drives us up and down what could be barely be considered a road until we reach our hotel. We hop out of the cab and are greeted by Nikos, the owner/manager of the hotel, where he says "Oh! We have been expecting you, right this way!" And he leads us down a white and blue hall to our rooms, which, from the looks of it are going to be scary. But when he leads us to our rooms right next door to each other, we see that we each have an incredible balcony that over looks the Saronic gulf as well as the whole town and the cliffs that comprise the whole island. It is probably the most beautiful thing I have ever seen in my entire life and the HUGE knot of worries that had developed in my stomach during the trip over finally begins to melt away. And that is just my first hour and 1/2 on this island. I have SO much more to say, but my time at the internet cafe is coming to a close so more will come tomorrow when I return to Athens.