Saturday 17 September 2011

AUTUMN LEAVES


You can tell that Autumn has arrived at our village. The tree outside the house which had been completely pollarded on our arrival in March and burst forth into masses of long green boughs in the Spring to shade the front porch is now beginning to drop brown, dried up leaves on the roadway outside. The vociferous lady in the house next door is complaining loudly if I am not out there each morning with my broom! It seems that sweeping the front of one's house is the epitome of greek housewifely requirements and you are a very slack person if you leave it for a day or two (or even a week, I am ashamed to say) before getting out there with a besom, scoupithia (dustpan) and a garden hose on a daily basis to be able to show your face in society.

It is at these moments when I do not totally embrace village ideals and plead ignorance! However, this morning I was out there before the sun was too hot and doing my housewifely duty like a goodun'.

We tried to get to the beach without a motor today by catching the bus and walking down to the beach at Panormo for a lovely swim at the harbour beach. The way there was all down hill and we had a marvellous swim in lovely warm water. Later, we picked up a few items of shopping and made the long, hot climb back up the hill and flights of steps through the oleanders and tamarisk trees to the national road to wait for the 5.00 p.m. bus. Check out this view from the bus stop!



We had a half hour wait for the bus in blistering heat and a long trudge back up the track from the bus stop to the village, I thought that I did not want to be doing this very often! At some stage, having had to sell our English car, we will have to find some form of transport and sadly we do not have enough grazing land to install a donkey although, the prospect is enticing. However common sense prevails and we know that a donkey wouldn't get us down the road to Perama to pay our household bills.

Talking of bills, we are still doing regular battle with OTE the phone company who gave us a contract price for phone and broadband at 95 euros every two months (which we thought was expensive enough) and now continue to send us bills every two months for over 200 euros. What a total waste of time and petrol/bus fares/temper this all is! Every time they send a bill it provokes four visits to different phone shops and offices with a file of papers and noisy phone call arguments between all the people involved. Then there is the water bill - we are not sure how we seem to have inherited the two years of unpaid water bill from the people who owned the house before us so one way and another, K and I believe that we are going a long way to paying off the national debt from our fast diminishing bank account. There is still an extra tax to be added to the electricity bill in a “house” tax which every home in Greece will have to pay – so austerity measures are beginning to kick in – in a big way. On top of this, a hire car and the cost of petrol to make all the airport runs for recent visitors cost us dearly and we are on super-frugal rations for the next two months to try to balance the books.



It is just as well we had already laid in some stores laid in for the ensuing siege –and  our kindly friend Niko brought us some goodies this morning – olive oil, tomatoes, two kinds of cheese and 4 eggs – what a nice gift!

Greek children returned to school on 15 September and it is good to see the village school full of children and playground noise back again. The roads and beaches are also beginning to empty of the big crowds of tourists and it is getting much quieter and cooler in the mornings and evenings. The mountains and foothills are a lovely shade of pink and grey light at both ends of the day so K and I have just had a quiet after-dinner coffee and Metaxa on the roof where it is starting to get deliciously cool, come sundown. Yes, Autumn is certainly well on its way.


Saturday 10 September 2011

ROUND THE WORLD IN 60 DAYS

Picture of Hot Air Balloon ascent from Kate's balcony the day I left Melbourne


Finally free to sit down and put some thoughts on paper following my solo jaunt – round the world in 60 days! It was a bit of a whirlwind trying to take in parents and most of the children in one go but I have been very well looked after and am trying to wrestle with the strings of household duties now that I am back which K is reluctant to hand back to me!

Changing perceptions dictated that I was in observant mode wherever I went and was almost agog with the luxury of how our children live down under compared with the simplicity I have grown used to in the back waters of Crete. However, it was great to reacquaint myself with grandson number one who is asking 20 questions per hour and has very strong views about his world, to get to know grandson number two who is beginning to talk, chuckle, sing and pull himself up and around all the furniture and seems to be interested in all sorts of haunts hitherto unvisited by his older brother! I foresee challenging times ahead but lots of fun and jokes also.



As for newest grandson number three, he was still at the eating, sleeping, feeding all night stage so other than being cuddly and gorgeous and wishing I was closer, we can only revisit the many photos and video film I took whilst with them. However, I saw a reasonable amount of Melbourne in my ten days there and could see that it was a very cosmopolitan place where Kate and Grant are very comfortable until it is time to go home to New Zealand.
Driving to Piha Beach, New Zealand



The UK was quite sunny when I landed at Heathrow and I was glad to throw off my winter woollies and get back into cotton tee shirts again. It was good to spend time with my parents who are quite remarkable in the way they manage to carry on regardless of the difficulties life brings. It is hard being away from them and I hope that we manage to get the idea of using the computer to communicate better firmly established. It would be such a boon.

Panormo Beach in Crete


Back in Crete, the landscape had dried out over the hot two months I had been away; our two tomato seedlings planted out in April had taken over the entire garden and produced bags and bags of fruit – all ready for making preserves as soon as I got back. Various plants like jasmine and some creeper for the terrace had started to weave their way through the trellis giving us much needed shade and privacy which was good to see. We also had a houseful of visitors and more about to arrive and it meant that I had to put jet lag on the back burner for a few days. It was very nice to spend several very hot days on the beach and catch up on my aqua-therapy after two months of winter down under. Lazy lunches and happy conversations with our friends at our favourite taverna on the beach took up most of our time. However, now that our house guests have left, K and I have the place to ourselves and we are enjoying having a lazy Sunday breakfast of fried tomatoes on toast and being able to unwind without having to double think our routes around the house and the whereabouts of “too-hot-to-wear-really” dressing gowns!

Our kindly neighbours welcomed me back and mysterious melons and tomatoes appeared from nowhere by way of a welcome. We hired a car for a week to do all the airport runs involved and we plan to make the most of it and get all sorts of jobs done while we have it which are impossible without transport - so interesting outings like paying the water bill, buying an umbrella base and locating cream house paint await us. To think that we are missing out on cut-price OAP day at B & Q!