We just spent a few days in Preveza, where we checked into
Greece. It is easy to see why employers
shun the Mediterranean and choose the Northerners. One giant cockup is a nice way of putting it. No s.o.b. knows what they’re doing, they just
make it up as they go. The Customs
Office uses handwritten ledgers and the old dot-matrix printers because they
still use idem paper!
They tie their files together with Legal Tape. Unbelievable.
We had to go there first to get a form, then take that form back across
the bay to the Port Police, who put a stamp on it, then take it back to Customs
who issued us with our Cruising Log.
Costs €30. Good for 50 ports and 6
months. Then we had to take that back
again to the Port Police and pay €15 for the harbour. They were busy telling a Canadian that he
owed them €866 even though he had his boat in the Cleopatra Marina for the
season, on the hard. He was pissed off
because no-one told him and also he didn’t have the money. I could see a plan forming in his brain –
Italy in an overnighter!
Then a Port Police lady tried to explain to me the “Tax” for
cruising in Greece. They tried to bring
this in years ago for everyone but the EU Commission in Brussels told them it
was illegal. So they dropped it for EU
boats but they kept it for foreigners because their governments didn’t complain. It is not written down anywhere, it is not
law, it is not regulation, it just “is”.
It is (for us) 12metres by 1 Trimester by €14.67 plus VAT at 23%, or
about €204 for three months. OK, so far
so good. I don’t mind paying that for
free harbours, waste disposal etc etc.
But then dopey tried to tell me that for the 2nd three months
the fee came to €866 and the calculation was the same but instead of 1
Trimester it is 2. OK, my maths is a bit
oldish but the total comes to €410 or something, not €866. She’d just finished arguing with the Canadian
and told him he owed €866 so it must have stuck in her mind. Apparently Customs collect this “unwritten
tax” when you hand back your Cruising Log. €70 a month to cruise through Greece
is ok by me, but not the €866 figure. If
that applies, we’re out of here before the 3 months is up and into Turkey.
Preveza was nice – lots of great simple restaurants in
little back alleys. Can’t get our
Vodafone to work – bought a Vodafone dongle (only €21 here) but the card
wouldn’t connect. However, it will
connect if I put it in my Wind Italy dongle (unlocked) and connect to the
Vodafone Greece 3G network. How does
that work?
Preveza is the mouth of a large inland type sea – goes for
18 miles (nautical) with towns and cities on it. Apparently it is full of sea life, with
dolphins, fish, turtles all over. There
are anchorages everywhere so we’ll probably come back this way and stay. A large-ish turtle came past the boat one
morning and had a look at us.
It is where Octavian, who became Augustus Caesar, fought
Mark Antony and Cleopatra in the battle that settled the Civil War that began
when Julius Caesar was assassinated. The
battle site where the galleys fought is where we motored in through the
channel. The site of the Battle of
Actium is just over the water way on the other side of the peninsula. You can see it quite easily from the town
dock. There used to be a ferry across there
(it’s only about 400 metres) but now they have a tunnel under the entrance from
one side to the other.
We walked around Butrint in Albania last week, along streets
that Julius Caesar himself walked in – they’re stone roads, only a few feet
wide, and they lead from the town gates to places he would have gone to, like
the theatre etc. Feels strange when you
stop to think about it. Then we were
tied up a matter of 200 meters from where Cleopatra’s royal barge was tied up
(Octavius was a few miles north)
In Preveza, there wasn’t much built in those days and the
armies simply camped out. Octavius built
a new city called Nikopolis to celebrate his victory and we went to that museum
yesterday.
The food in Preveza’s restaurants is simple and good. Greek salad is usually €5 and comes with a
massive thick slice of Fetta on the top and superb tomatoes. Always very nice, as the land around Preveza
is fertile and the locals know how to grow stuff. Another common dish is Beetroot salad, just
simple boiled beetroots cut up with olive oil and vinegar. The Grilled Fetta is very nice – it is not
crumbed or anything like that, it is just slices of tomato with chunks of Fetta
laid over it and put under the grill – it part-melts and the tomatoes heat
up. Very tasty.
It’s Pepper season now so these are everywhere. The Greeks stuff them with cheese (so do the Albanians) and then grill them so the cheese melts. Excellent. Meat is usually small chunks or strips cooked on an open fire. It is very easy to find stuff to like here. The Greek beers are excellent – Fix, Alfa, Fisher are all good. Mythos is made by Carlsberg and I find that a bit on the sweet side. My favourite is probably Fix. They do a Fix Dark, and there were some in the fridge, but this is summer so it can wait until winter. Last night we had dinner in “The Mermaid” or “The Captain” They didn’t seem to know what to call themselves. There was a traditional Greek band playing in the alley – two guys and a girl singer. It was very, very good music, and all the Greeks were singing along, even the ones who were just walking through on their nightly Passage. The Greeks call theirs a Perpato, the Italians call theirs a Passegiata, the English call theirs a Promenade, which they pinched from the French anyway. I guess the Australian equivalent would be Bog Laps.
We were on the Town Dock, side-to, and lots of people come
down to fish at night (some during the day, too). We were down below the night before last when
we heard an almighty roar that sounded like a huge windstorm arriving. The boat wasn’t moving so it wasn’t that and
we raced upstairs to see what on earth it was.
It was a massive school of sardines leaping out of the water onto the
dock – obviously penned in by dolphins.
There were thousands on the dock and people were grabbing nets full or
handsful or buckets full. This happened
three times in about ½ hour. The third
time they were around our boat and the sound of them hitting the hull was
deafening. Some things you wouldn’t
believe if’n you didn’t see them.
We left Preveza early and motored on down to the “island” of
Lefkas. It is only an island because
they’ve cut a channel through one part and stuck a bridge over it. It’s called the Lefkas Canal and it goes for
miles. There were about 5 of us
north-side waiting for the bridge to open on the hour. Southbound traffic has priority but the
idiots on the south heading north didn’t seem to have bothered to read their
transit rules and were charging up the waterway. I was in the lead of the southbounds and I
was not all that impressed so I just motored ahead and made them stick very
closely to their side of the channel. It
was a nice motor, with no wind, and we came out into the bay that has the
Island of Skorpio in it. Lots of yachts
(charter ones) doing laps to see it but we didn’t bother. The number of yachts here is staggering. The marinas are forests of masts and the
waterways are busy but not clogged, but it’s not July yet and also we are still
in Northern Greece. You cannot afford to
relax as we are used to, with both of us having a little lie down in the
cockpit for half an hour or so.
We arrived at our destination of Meganisi by about midday
and anchored with a line tied to the shore to keep us straight. Carol jumped in and swam it ashore and then I
hauled it tight on a winch. There were
probably about 15 boats in there, 8 or so swinging on the anchor and the rest
of us tied to a tree or a rock. Carol
spotted a discarded anchor below us in about 18’ of water. I was going to try to retrieve it, although
there must be a reason why it was cut free – maybe it’s stuck too hard? More likely it is off a charter yacht and
they simply didn’t know how to free it and cut it off. I would have liked it as we would then have 5
anchors. Our friend Dave Renoll (Captain
Dave of R&R Sailing School) says you can’t have too much chain and you
can’t have too many anchors. At $450 a
shot for the ones for our boat, a freebie would have been good. However, we swung south in the night and
ended up a long way from where it was and it was all too hard.
It’s a nice little anchorage – however, the round-island
road was about 50’ behind us and there was a wedding on. All over the Med, a wedding means a line of
cars with various ribbons on them driving nose-to-tail and sounding their horns
off. As this is a small island, they all
did two laps just for fun. And they
don’t ease up on the horns.
We played dominoes for a while and drank the last of the Sicilian
red. Opened a Calabrian red. Beat Carol in dominoes thanks to one and
one-only massively awful round she got.
We were level pegging for ages until the hand-from-hell turned up for
her. Finished dinner (veal cutlets from
Italy) with mashed potato. Fireworks on
at the tavern over the anchorage, with folk music and probably dancing, though
we couldn’t see it up that high).
So, how’s Greece you ask?
Well, they are nice sophisticated people who love a good time and east
simply and well. They are as pleased as
all getout when I tell them I have a Greek Great-great grandfather. (Patrioti?)
From Meganisi we motored on down intending a shortish day of
about 28 miles. However, out planned
anchorage had Katabatic wind pouring off its slopes and we couldn’t stop. We went from zero wind to 35knots in a
matter of half a mile.
So it was off to port and into the Gulf of Patras. We found our way into a tiny dredged harbour
called Kalydonos We were going to tie
to the town dock but couldn’t work out the depth so we stayed off and
anchored. Very pleasant except that
there is a mountain behind the town that is awe-inspiring. It is massive and it’s steep and it’s right
“there”. Any rocks come off, they drop
on town.
We motored again the next day to Aigio, a town that has seen
better days. There is a new commercial
wharf which has yet to be finished. The
ferry shown on the charts no longer runs.
The trains no longer run along the waterfront and the train sheds are
empty with a rock precisely in the middle of each window. We anchored tucked up tight inside the
tightest bit of the bay about 30’ from shore and rowed in. We first wanted to try to walk up to town but
it was designed to keep barbarians away and was a mile uphill. So we wandered along the bay to the yacht
club and back and found a nice little restaurant playing some delightful music
– Manos Hatzidakis – and we spent a pleasant hour or so there listening, eating
and having a beer and a wine.
In the morning we up anchored and off to just short of the
Corinth Canal, about 5 miles from the entrance to a place called Assos. No chance of getting in to the marina there –
some kids were jumping off the rocks at the entrance and standing up! So we anchored in about 12’ of water in what
we thought would be a pleasant spot.
However, the inshore was marshy and we were visited by mosquitoes
galore. Not a nice night.
At 8 the next day, we headed for the Canal. We called up a mile away and were told to
wait with the others gathered and almost at once all 7 of us were allowed
through. Good timing. The Canal is about 3.6NM long and takes about
45 minutes to transit as there are sections where you must go very slowly to
stop the sides falling in. At the
Eastern end, you tie up and go pay – for us, it was €203, which makes it the
most expensive canal in the world per mile, but what it saves in time is worth
it. We refueled and headed to a small
island 20 miles from Piraeus for what promised to be a pleasant anchorage but
turned out to be a little bumpy.
In general, from Albania to just shy of Athens was a very
easy journey, with lots of yachts north of Lefkas but barely a boat in sight in
the Corinth Canal end. The second last
day before Assos we saw only two fishing boats and two cargo ships in the whole
day.
We left the island and motored into Piraeus’ Zea Marina at
midday or so the next day. Met by a
chappy in a dinghy, who landed and helped us to dock, this was a pleasant entry
to one of the world’s great harbours – the AIS screen was lit up with over 50
contacts just in the port environs.
Piraeus and the islands up next…..
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