In Crete – Day 1

A young lady is now at the reception of the hotel. After check out, she advises us on good brunch places and kindly allows us to leave the car at the front parking, where she can keep an eye on it.

We bid farewell to a Venus de Milo replica, standing on a granite pedestal in the hall of the old-fashioned hotel. We exit to the warm and cloudy morning atmosphere. We face last night’s seascape, more detailed under the light of the day, where bathers are enjoying themselves in the water of Nea Chora beach. We stop at a café, where we can appreciate the scenery surrounded by two palm trees.

Breakfast tea, deliberations with the English-speaking waitress on how to order scrambled eggs (the closest match is called ‘strapatsada’ and contains tomato) and gradually we transition to a Greek and Cretan menu with home-made tzatziki and ntakos. Ntakos is oregano flavoured crumbled white cheese and tomatoes on soaked dried bread, which J. discovers she likes. At the end, two shots of tsikoudia, an aromatic local tipple, were offered and pleasingly consumed.

The seafront promenade which we resume our walk along, has a magical peaceful vibe. There are many cats, basking in front of the tamarisk trees, sitting on wooden chairs or keeping watch behind the corners. We joke, ‘a Cretan surveillance network!’. They are beautiful, and appear as if they amplify this calmness and stillness of the air. We sit at the edge of a park, with legs dangling over rocks in front of the Cretan sea. We climb on the leaning tamarisks, we absorb as much as we can.

Bracket fungi
Off-duty surveillance kitty
Community shrine under the tamarisk trees
Overlooking the Cretan sea

A shower forces us to shelter under a bus stop. Having passed the Venetian walls and being within the Chania Old Town, we decide that after a short stop and first introduction to the Venetian port, we’ll visit the Folklore Museum (‘Laografiko mouseio’). The museum is interesting and quirky. We love the laces display – the artist herself is intricately weaving the white cotton threads within the premises – and the Cretan poems on the walls. We also visit two churches, one Catholic and one Greek Orthodox – J.’s first ever visit to a Greek Orthodox church.

Chania’s Venetian port
Greek Orthodox church
Cretan answer to Thai pants
Lace

A supermarket visit and an evening drive on the slightly precarious Cretan roads lead us to the village on a slope above Kissamos, where we are staying for the rest of the holiday. Our hosts, an elderly couple, Y. and T., are eagerly waiting us at the front yard under the grapevine. “Yassas”, “ti kanete”, smiles, awkward silence – it is clear that I have to do some interpretation in the following days, which I don’t mind. After settling in the spacious villa, I drop off to a peaceful sleep, dreaming of cats, when outside there are claps of thunder.

In Crete – Day 0

October 2022,

“There’s a smell in the air”, says J. exiting the door of the plane.

I don’t have a strong sense of smell and currently trying to avoid negative thoughts about bin worker’s strikes. “The air is aromatic, but I cannot tell from what!”, she says.

After half an hour wait at the passport queue, we exit into the warm Chania night – time is almost midnight. “What are those bushes?”, she points forward. “Ah, oregano. That’s it! Your country smells of oregano and thyme, brilliant.”

The car hire guy is waiting patiently outside his booth and showing us how to bypass the fence – we accidentally arrived from the back side. He makes a good impression to J. “Polite and smiling. My first encounter with a Greek in Greece.” While handing over the car keys he warns us: “It is prohibited to use the car off-road. I will notice it, if you do.” We nod we understand and start.

The drive to Nea Chora suburb of Chania is easy, through bushy slopes. The young hotel receptionist instructs us where to park and wearily hands us the key to the room. The air in the room is a bit stagnant. J. states her interest to see the beach before she sleeps. So, even though it’s 2am, we decide to walk to the coast which is only three blocks away.

“Where are we?”. A few hours before we were watching from the train the cool undulating landscape and orderly cottages of Surrey, on the way to Gatwick. Now, we observe a vast sea, which begins at the edge of soft sand we squeeze under our feet, is disrupted by a row of rocks that jut out like teeth and reaches the faint outlines of peninsulas, indiscernible in number. The Mediterranean. Greece! A cluster of cats, munching outside a closed fish-tavern, provides extra confirmation. J. strokes a cat – we adore cats.

After many years, I return to Greece for tourism and not to see my family. 15 years since my last visit to Crete and J.’s first time in Greece. A special trip.

We aim for some autumn sun, and get to know the Cretan people and their island. What Crete had in store, we didn’t know. Some of it we couldn’t imagine either.