Peloponnese Peninsular, Greece
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Nice evening view over the Kalamata Marina from Yachting Café |
Having
extracted ourselves from hedonistic marina life, we ambled down the Mani coast,
one the fingers of land that make up the Peloponnese Peninsular. There is no doubt that the scenery is
dramatic; GS snapping away at every rock or mountain that made a promising
picture. (Warning to all who suffer our slide show overkill, this year is
likely to produce yet another one.)
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Punting through the Caves of Diros |
We made the Caves of Diros (Pyrgos Dhirou) by
lunchtime and decided, given both the Guide & Pilot’s glowing reviews, we
would stop for the experience. By 2.30pm
we had walked and punted our way through 1500m of underground waterways and caves
brimming with ceilings of frosted stalactites – with obligatory commentary in
Greek…. We were permitted to walk through
some areas of these truly memorable caves, lingering at the exit, if only to
maximise time in natural air-conditioned comfort. In some of the caves, archaeologists had
found evidence of prehistoric settlement.
We could only imagine how surreal these caves must have been to them, invoking
mystery and magic. Is it any wonder that
nearby Cape Tainaron is home of the
mythical Gates of Hades? And of course,
where driven muscle man, Hercules captured Cerberus, to complete his twelfth
and final labour!
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WJ3 on the hook (behind the fishing fleet) Diros Caves |
With a nasty
swell coming into Caves bay we decided to round Cape Tainaron instead to seek
shelter in a well-protected and cute Porto
Kayio, meaning Bay of Quails. I’m
not so sure that any self-respecting quail would live in these strange, sparse
mountains but it seems that plenty of brothers do. From their perch high up, they must only
wonder at the worldly goings on in the four modest beach-side tavernas lining
the cove. And laugh, as the yachts at
anchor are pelted all night long by katabatic winds sweeping down from the
mountains.
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Porto Kayio (Quail Bay) |
Our next
stop was Elafonissos, an isolated island
with abundant clear turquoise waters and very little sea life. This did not stop an influx of visitors, winnebagos
and seasonal resorts. It’s high season
after all! An overnight stop here put us
well up with the ways of the Meltemi too, a wind system something ordinary
tourists don’t have to worry about. We
were up bright and early after one of us didn’t sleep well, to round fearsome Cape Maleas, whose reputation even
Ulysses feared. (Well, it did blow him
off course for some ten years!). We rounded
it in complete calm, waving at the brothers up high in their secluded monastery
and annoying local fishermen by going too close to their traps.
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Do you think the Brothers saw us waving? |
Our
destination was the rocky fortress of Monemvasia,
a Gibraltar-like natural fortress built by the Byzantines in 6th
c. We had great plans of climbing up to
Ayia Sofia with its reputed magnificent views over the countryside and Aegean
waters. Sadly, GS had taken the fast way
into the anchor locker, and in doing so had scraped a shin and twisted her
ankle. Walking was not on the agenda, so
Monemvasia was added to the growing “later list”.
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Monemvasia |
We reflected
on the mysteries of Greek weather systems, as allusive as mythological gods,
whilst holed-up in another small bay, firstly hiding from the Meltemi and then
setting up the riding sail (to prevent swinging on anchor) to counter forceful
katabatic blasts. All from different directions! Little
wonder then, we set off in the early morning calm for better shelter (and
provisioning) at Porto Kheli (or Heli or Helios… There are at least 3 or more ways of spelling Greek
names – bear with us.).
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This is water 20 feet deep (with various watery pug marks) looking down from the back of WJ3 at Elafonissos |
From:
Kalamata, Greece Lat/Long: 37:01.446N 22:06.327E Date/Time: 29/07/13: 0815
To:
Porto Kheli, Greece Lat/Long:
37:19.409N 23:08.975E Date/Time:
1/08/13: 1400
Time
Taken: 153.5nm (27hrs) Distance
(this year): 1971.5nm (316hrs)
Distance
Total (since 2008): 12796.5nm Weather: NE (day); SW perhaps (at night)
Fastest
Speed: 7.5kts;
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