The island of Hydra (two hours south of Athens by hydrofoil) has one town and no real roads. There are no cars and not even any bikes. Zippy taxi boats charge from the brisk little port to isolated beaches and tavernas.
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Beasts of burden climb stepped lanes sure-footedly — laden with everything from sandbags and bathtubs to bottled water. Behind each mule-train works a human pooper-scooper. I imagine picking up after your beast is required. Locals like to tell of movie stars who make regular visits. Understandably, each evening ritzy yachts stern tie to concrete piers, off-loading their smartly dressed fun-seekers. The island is so quiet that, by midnight, they seem to be back on board watching movies. Sitting on a ferry cleat the size of a stool, I scan the harbor — with big flat screens flickering from every other yacht. The island once had plenty of spring water. Then, about 200 years ago, an earthquake hit and the wells went dry…a bad day for Hydra. Today Hydra’s very hard water is shipped in from wetter islands. No wonder showering (lathering and rinsing) was such an odd frustration. The island is a land of tiny cats, tired burros and roosters with big egos. While it’s generally quiet, dawn teaches visitors exactly the meaning of “cockcrow.” Cockcrow marks the end of night with more than a distant cock-a-doodle-doo. It’s a dissonant chorus of cat fights, burro honks and what sounds like roll call at an asylum for crazed roosters. With that out of the animal population’s system, the island slumbers a little longer. While tourists wash ashore with the many boats — private and public — that come and go, few venture beyond the harborfront. Leaving our hotel, I was heading downhill. Anne diverted me uphill and our small detour became a delightful little odyssey.
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While I had no intention of anything more than a lazy stroll, one inviting lane after another drew us up, up and up to the top of the town. Here, poor shabby homes enjoyed grand views, tethering tired burros seemed unnecessary, and island life trudged on, oblivious to tourism. Over the crest, we followed a paved riverbed, primed for the flash floods that fill village cisterns each winter, down to the remote harbor hamlet of Kamini — where 20 tough little fishing boats jostled within a breakwater. Children jumped fearlessly from rock to rock to the end of the jetty, ignoring an old man rhythmically casting his line. Two rickety woven straw chairs and a tipsy little table were positioned just right, overlooking the harbor. The heavy reddening sun commanded “sit.” We did, sipping an ouzo and observing a sea busy with taxi boats, charging “flying dolphin” hydrofoils connecting this oasis with Athens, freighters — castles of rust lumbering slowly along the horizon — and a cruise ship anchored like it hasn’t moved in weeks. Ouzo, my anise-flavored drink of choice on this trip, and my ziplock baggie of pistachios purchased back in town was a perfect compliment to the setting sun. Blue and white fishing boats jived with the chop. I’d swear the cats — small, numerous as the human residents of this island, and oh-so-feminine — were watching the setting sun with us. My second glass of ouzo comes with someone’s big fat Greek lipstick. Wiping it off before sipping seems to connect me with the scene even more. There’s a fun little tension between being “in the moment” and playing with my camera as the constantly changing scene calls for shot after shot. An old man flips his worry beads, backlit by golden glitter on the harbor. Three men walk by – each remind me of Spiro Agnew. As darkness settles, our waiter — who returned here to his family’s homeland after spending 20 years in New Jersey, where he “never took a nap” — brings us a candle. The soft Greek lounge music tumbling out of the kitchen mixes everything like an audio swizzle stick. I glance over my shoulder to the coastal lane home…thankfully, it’s lamp lit. Walking home under a ridge lined with derelict windmills, I try to envision Hydra before electricity, when springwater flowed and the community was powered by both wind and burros. At the edge of Hydra town, we pass the “Sunset Bar,” filled with noisy cruise-ship tourists and were thankful we took the uphill lane way back when. The next night, a brisk 15-minute walk rewarded us with the same Kamini harbor magic from the same woven straw seats — worry beads, romantic cats, Greeks good at naps and the busy sea…golden at sunset. Hydra — so close to Athens yet a world away — is a new favorite for me.
So glad you enjoyed Hydra, its one of my close to Athens favorites….another island favorite is Folegandros, a beautiful spectacle of an island…Just wish you would do a travel book on Greece, there is so much to write about–you seem to write a lot about Greece’s influence in the western world in your tour books and do not have one on Greece…logic (in the country where it was born)seems misplaced…..I would love to see Greece through your eyes……enjoy the rest of your stay in europe….
I have to admit that Hydra was my favorite stop on the tour. It was such a shock going back to Athens after this beautiful little island. I almost forgot how to cross the street nearly getting run over by a bus in the big city!
I wish you would include just a few pictures! It sounds absolutely amazing.
Hydra sounds lovely. A photographer’s heaven.
I liked reading this blog. Please do a blog about your visit at Monemvasia. Thank you.
Rick, because you like Hydra, here is more on Hydra : “Hydra had the country’s largest fleet in the early 1800s, and its daring captains built the tall, grey stone mansions piled on top of each other in a magnificent amphitheatre over the harbour. Artists moved in as the last sailors moved out; the first tourist trickle was sparked off by the scenes of Hydra in the film Boy on a Dolphin, staring Sophia Loren. The artsy posy tone that sets Hydra apart, like St. Tropez, Portofino and similar nooks, survives in spite of the hordes of day-trippers who haunt the sleek jewellers and galleris. At night, to the tinkling of glasses and the rhythms floating from the trendy bars, discos and clubs, Hydra comes into its own. … By the 1950s Hydra was a ghost town, until fortune’s wheel was oiled once again by the arrival of Greek painter Nikos Hadzikyriakos Ghikas, pioneer of the artists’ colony that paved the way for today’s glitterati”. from the CADOGAN book “GREECE” by Facaros and Theodorou.
I remember Hydra well-beautiful place-and your story about the water reminded me of how for 6 hours, our hotel had none! Such are some of the charms of island life-I would go back there in a heartbeat!
Rick, Did you ever think of a 7 day trip to Athens, covering three day trips from Athens….
1.Delphi 2. Nauplion and Epidravos 3. Hydra and 3 days exploring Athens…. This could be a lovely alternative for people who can’t get more than a week away….
Rick, I just loved this entry. I can close my eyes and just feel like I’m there. Greece has always been one of my “go before you die” places and now I think it just moved up a notch!
YES! Thanks for the pictures!
Great photos! Thanks!
Have you ever considered that it might be wrong to travel (especially to yet another country full of America Haters) while our troops and President are in harms way? The Greeks hate the US and by spending money there, you’re encouraging them. Additionally, what makes you think you have any right to slander the US or President Bush? The answer is that you have no right!
Great photos, thanks!
Who’s Spiro Agnew?
The Greeks hate us?????? Who would have known???? I did not find that to be true at all while visiting except for one man on Crete. Could a foreign tourist say that in this country. I would hope Americans would treat our foreign visitors as well.