Showing posts with label Greece. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greece. Show all posts

September 15, 2016

Eating Like Greek Gods

This post will be short on words and big on pictures. Because when it comes to food, a picture really is worth a thousand words, and wouldn't you rather drool over a photo than my boring descriptions?!



Grilled pork and french fries. Large portions, decent enough food, but a little pricey. 

Old Ithaki | Athens


Caesar salad, drenched in dressing. A little too much dressing for my taste. The picture does not do justice to the serving size; this could've easily been split between two people as an entree or between four as a side salad.

Old Ithaki | Athens


This was a #FoodFail meal, but I'm not sure whether to blame it on my finicky then-pregnant taste buds or the cook. The rice was crunchy and underdone, and the mushroom-chicken combo was just okay.

Taverna Karyatis | Athens



Hello, yummy seafood! Hubby enjoyed fried octopus with a rice pilaf on our first legit meal on the island of Thira (more commonly known as Santorini).

Restaurant Unknown | Oia, Santorini



Are you sensing a pattern of what my appetite was like during the first trimester? Light and healthy was the ticket for me, and this salad fit the bill. I mean, it's kind of hard to mess up a salad...

Restaurant Unknown | Oia, Santorini



Genuine Greek Gelato. 

Oia



Pita and tzatziki sauce.

Restaurant Unknown | Oia



More octopus for the hubby. Pregnant people can't have a lot of seafood, so my Greek experience was sadly lacking.

Restaurant Unknown | Oia



Lamb and rice pilaf delicousness for me. Two thumbs up for this meal!

Restaurant Unknown | Oia



A Greek salad for my last island meal.

Taverna Blue Sky | Oia



Souvlaki, tzatziki, and fries for hubby's last meal.

Taverna Blue Sky | Oia


I don't know about you, but I'm ready for some Greek food! 


May 06, 2016

Santorini, Take Me Away


It's been one year since we left for Greece.

One. Year.

Cue the sad face.

Greece was such a wonderful vacation, despite suffering from first trimester fatigue and nausea, and our time on the island of Santorini was the highlight by far. Most of our trips have jam-packed itineraries, but Santorini was different. We did a whole lot of nothing. And by that I mean we walked. Took pictures. Ate delicious food. And wished that we didn't have to leave. I think that's how the Greek islands are meant to be enjoyed.

But don't take my word for it; go find out for yourself!







Have you visited Santorini yet?

***

I'm currently a co-host for the #TravelTuesday link-up, and we're looking for a new anchor host! Are you a travel crazy, social media savvy, bigger than life, wanderlustin' writer?! If you're interested in being the new #TravelTuesday link-up host, please let us know!

Nominations for yourself or others will be accepted today, May 3rd, through Sunday, May 15th. A shortlist of nominees will be announced on Tuesday, May 17th, and a vote will open for all to participate in selecting a new host!



Minimum #TravelTuesday Host Requirements:
1. Love TRAVEL and have had an active blog for at least six months.
2. Be awesome (goes without saying, right?).
3. Able to commit to at least a year of being the anchor host. General responsibilities include: the generation of the link-up, promoting the link-up and participants on social media, and in all respects being the face and personality of the #TravelTuesday link-up.
4. Facilitate the nomination and rotation of co-hosts every three months as in the past.
5. If at the end of the year you are unable or unwilling to continue being the anchor host, you will be required to reopen the nomination and voting process of a new anchor host.

Please send your nominations (whether of yourself or someone else) along with a brief explanation as to why you/they would be a great #TravelTuesday anchor host to any of the three co-hosts listed below before Sunday, May 15th:

Diana: dianadegzz (at) gmail.com
Rachel: anestingnomad (at) gmail.com
Katrina: thriftygypsytravels (at) gmail.com

March 08, 2016

Athens Photo Fails


Here we go again! Time for another installment of photo fails - the awkward, the funny, and the merely not-so perfect. These photos are from our May 2015 visit to Athens, Greece.

I am a unicorn. A Greek unicorn.
... in which I contemplate a tree for some unknown reason.
A photo of taking a photo. #FirstWorldProblems

It's ok. I don't like the right side of my face either.

Say cheese! Or just stand there awkwardly. Same difference.

Nothing says "seasoned traveler" quite like striking a nonchalant pose by a random rock while sporting some snazzy shades.

Photo fail - where you try to get an artsy shot where the grass in the foreground is fuzzy and the temple in the distance is in focus.

"Hey! Let's take a picture of these random circular wheel-y things, but not write down what they are so we can never explain them!"

No photo fail here. I was totally creeping on my hottie hubby. ;)

Do you have some favorite photo "fails" from your travels?

Check out our photo fails from Prague and Paris!



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November 03, 2015

An Ill-fated Journey to Atlantis


The lost city of Atlantis may not be quite as lost as you thought. In fact you can visit a ruined city on the Greek island of Santorini (Thira) which may in fact be the fuel for the Atlantis legend. That is, if the public transportation gods of Greece don't thwart your best efforts to see it!

On our trip to Greece this past spring, Danny and I ventured from our home base of Oia on Santorini to visit the archaeological site of Akrotiri, situated on the opposite end of the island. The island of Santorini is a actually a live volcano, which last erupted in 1956, but famously erupted in 1646 BC, splitting the island into several pieces and likely causing the downfall of the Minoan civilization.

The island on the right is actually the volcano.
Akrotiri, however, was not obliterated by Santorini in the same way Vesuvius destroyed Pompeii. One can only surmise that violent earthquakes or some other premonition of doom preceded the eruption, as the archaeological survey of the site has revealed numerous household items but no human casualties. If only the Pompeiians had paid attention when Vesuvius warned them with earthquakes!

The last day of our visit to Santorini dawned cool and rainy, but that didn't deter us from waiting in the town square for the public bus to Fira, the capitol city of the island, in order to switch buses and continue on to Akrotiri. Estimates from the time-table schedule had us arriving in the ruins within 90 minutes, plenty of time to enjoy the site before catching a late lunch.

Ah, the well-laid plans of mice and men...

An hour later, the bus still had not arrived. By this time, the crowd of waiting vacationers had swelled to roughly 70 people, and we made small-talk with a recently engaged couple from the UK. Just as we were about to split a cab-fare to Fira, the bus finally arrived. The well-behaved crowd turned into a mob, elbows flying as each jockeyed their way towards the front of the group, any and all semblance of a proper queue flying out the window.

"I've been waiting for ten minutes! I'll be damned if I miss this bus!" said one lady. Try waiting for over an hour, I muttered under my breath as I rolled my eyes at her.

We didn't make it onto that bus.

Maybe disappointment jaded my opinion, but I found Fira
to be chitzy compared to Oia.
Fifteen minutes later, another bus arrived, and the scene replayed itself. However, this time we managed to make it on board. The bus driver packed the seats and aisles before pulling out of the square, leaving many people behind. Danny and I began to wonder if we even had enough time to make it to Fira then onward to Akrotiri considering that our plane left the island in under six hours. The apparent inefficiency of the public transportation had us worried.

Within an hour, we were deposited in Fira. And then we waited for the bus to Akrotiri. Six buses and an hour later, with no bus to Akrotiri having once showed despite the fact that a bus is due every 30 minutes, we officially gave up our idea of visiting the ruins. We wandered into Fira to find a bite to eat and meander through the town (quite uncharming in comparison to Oia) before returning to the square for a bus to Oia. Mercifully, the bus was only thirty minutes late.

So long story short, don't trust the public transportation on Santorini! Rent a car, a scooter, or hire a taxi. Heck, make the walk yourself if you have to! But our plans to see the lost city of Atlantis were foiled for want of a reliable transportation system.

Oh, well, better luck next time, right?


Well, there were a few charming things about Fira!

Have you ever had to modify or cancel portions of your itinerary due to transportation? We seem to have ill-luck with public transportation as we "enjoyed" a nail-biting delay on Mt. Vesuvius and then more delays on our train from Naples to Rome!



Linking up for #TravelTuesday!


October 11, 2015

Kitties of Athens


Considering my name is Katrina, should it be any wonder that I have an affinity for cats? Whether it's making a feline friend on Germany's Romantic Road or getting a leg bump from a Czech cat in Prague, I seem to find furballs everywhere I go! Athens is particularly renown (or notorious?) for all the stray cats, and this photo essay is unabashedly dedicated to a few purring beauties I saw there.

#Sorrynotsorry to all my readers who prefer dogs. Maybe some other time! And #sorrynotsorry that some of these pictures are less than artistic. Cats are not known to cooperate with eager photographers!

On the prowl
Athens' very own Grumpy Cat
"Don't mind me, I just hang out in ancient ruins all day."

"That's right. YOU cook for ME."
"This is my good side."

"I don't often stare into the distance. But when I do, I try to look as philosophic as possible."

"Na na na na naaa na, I can touch this and you can't!"

"Can I has a gyro pwease?"
Do you have an "animal problem" when you go traveling?