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Day trip to Greece


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Ready for launch!

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Day trip to Greece

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Sunday, Aug 19, 2007  13:12

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Yesterday we bought our tickets for a day trip to Kos, Greece, which is about an hour away from Bodrum by ferry. This morning we got up and out the door by 8am so that we could make the 9:30 launch. It's a complicated business going from Turkey to Greece. You have to do passport checks before you leave and when you arrive both ways. Since we were with a large group on a ferry, the whole process took much longer than I would have liked. The passport guys were very nice though and one of them in Greece was very pleased to have an Alexander at his station.

I know how tantilizing the prospect is of hearing about our adventures in Greece, but internet is out at home and I'm sitting by the side of the road between two cars grabbing a wireless signal from somewhere, so you will have to wait another day.

Monday: The 'net is back up at home, so I don't have to sit in the dirt--joy!

After we got out of the long passport line (the line for Europeans, by the way, moves much faster than the one for everyone else), we emerged on the quay next to the Kos castle which looks not unlike the Bodrum castle. Both belonged at various times to the Knights Hospitaller, also known as Sovereign Order of Saint John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta, Knights of Malta, Knights of Rhodes, and Chevaliers of Malta. They minister/ed to pilgrims going to the holy land.

We looked around for the tourism office for a bit, but had a lot of trouble finding it because the signs weren't clear and, shockingly, were mostly in Greek. Of course, we knew intellectually that there would be Greek in Greece, but we didn't really think about it until confronted with the signs covered in letters that look like Fraternity Row Gone Wild. So, we gave up the search for the office and started looking for a bank so that we could get some Euros. Before we found the bank we stumbled upon the park where Hippocrates' Tree sits. It is, according to local lore, about 2,400 years old and Hippocrates taught about medicine under its branches. We took some pictures and kept moving. After we found an ATM, our first purchase was a book about Kos which told about the extensive history of the place. Just in the last hundred or so years it has been ruled by the Byzantines, the Turks, the Italians, the British and, finally, Greece. The battles didn't do much damage to the place, but earthquakes have knocked most of the buildings down at one time or another. The biggest one recently was in 1933, if I recall correctly.

Euro and guide book in hand, we stopped for lunch and read about the island's history while we ate Greek food (gyros, Greek salad) and pork products (omlette with bacon) which we have been denied in Turkey. Nanny had retsina to drink. It's a wine drink with pine tar in it. Josh had freshly squeezed apple juice with quite a bit of pulp in it. They gave us some sort of complimentary apple cake with whipped cream with our bill. Lunch was expensive, but very tasty.

Since we finally had an idea of what we were looking at/for, we walked literally next door to look at ruins after lunch. We saw the ancient market, Pandimos Aphrodite's Sanctuary, the Great Basilica and Hercules' Sanctuary. The kids enjoyed scampering about in and on the ruins and we looked at some mosaics which were still mostly intact on the ground. Just outside of the ruined area were two churches. One was dedicated to St. John the Baptist and was the place where St. John the Boatswain was martyered. The other was named for St. George who created a school for poor boys. Both churches were just rife with cats and kittens. Kate took many pictures and left some money in a box for their upkeep. It has become somewhat of a tradition with her to name every cat we meet. She is pretty quick and creative with her monikers.

I had read that there was a little train that you could take for tours of the area, so we went in search of that. Our timing was good and it was just getting ready to leave when we found it. We hopped on and took a 15 minute ride through the town to the Asclepieion. It was one of several sacred hospitals where the methods of Asclepius were applied for the treatment of patients. He had a mind-body approach to prevent sickness and wasting and the most famous student of this Asclepieion was Hippocrates. The authors of our book maintain that while the German archeologist Hertzog is credited with the find of the Asclepieion, credit really should lie with a local man who had to use much persuasion to get Hertzog to dig in the right place.

We had a bit of a meltdown when we reached the Asclepieion and I had to buy smoothies for everyone. They have ice in Greece--which we really almost never see in Turkey. They were fresh smoothies and very nice, but set us back 20 Euro for the five of us. We sat in the shade, read about the Asclepieion and decided to look at it through the fence rather than to pay to walk around it in the sun. A bit of a cop-out, but we needed a break.

When the train circled back again it was time to head back to the dock. I raced over to a shop to pick up 3 postcards and stamps to send from Greece and two bottles of water for the trip home. Fizzy water is easier to come by in Greece than in Turkey. Also, we heard church bells instead of the call to prayer. There were many small differences between the two countries, just 7 or so miles apart. I wonder how many of them we noticed.

The ride home was uneventful. Since we had a pretty big lunch, we foraged in the fridge for dinner and watched the end of Superman 2 before going to bed.

Josh: I liked the style of the ruins there. It was shady and they didn't have any tour guides or guards, so you could just run and jump. It is its own language. There is a letter that looks like a triangle. Greece is a very nice place to visit. It's probably more recognized for being old than Turkey is. We study Greece and Rome at home, but we don't study Turkey. Both are very nice places to go.

Alex: Kos was fun. We went there and we walked around a little and me and Josh had race down the street for a while then we stopped to take a rest and to wait for the rest to show up. When they did, mom took a picture and we raced down. Then we walked a little more and we saw a mini train. We went on it. We stopped somewhere. The place was Asclepieion. In there was a smoothie shop. We each got strawberry. Mom and Nanny got orange and lemon. We saw about 10 little, cute kittens. I named one of them Black. At another place in Kos, before there, we ate lunch and it was very good. We went someplace else that was near there and we say 6 kittens and one cat. There was one yellow one that I named doughnut. And then there was sweetheart, larry, curly and moe.

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Table of Contents
1 - 20 | 21 - 40 | 41 - 60 | 61 - 79
Guest blog! | Nextshow all entries

61.Ephesus - Efes, Turkey Aug 10, 2007 ( This entry has 28 photos 28 ) ( Comments 1 )
62.Ephesus- day two - Selcuk, Turkey Aug 12, 2007 ( This entry has 22 photos 22 )
63.Bye, bye, Grandpa - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 12, 2007 ( This entry has 5 photos 5 )
64.Josh entry - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 13, 2007 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
65.Just a quick note - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 14, 2007 ( Comments 1 )
66.Batting cleanup - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 16, 2007 ( This entry has 16 photos 16 ) ( Comments 1 )
67.Pamukkale - Pamukkale, Turkey Aug 18, 2007 ( This entry has 25 photos 25 )
68.Day trip to Greece - Kos, Greece Aug 19, 2007 ( This entry has 12 photos 12 )
69.Hamam and impromptu birthday party - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 21, 2007
70.Nanny's last day with us - Yalikavak, Turkey Aug 22, 2007 ( This entry has 9 photos 9 ) ( Comments 1 )
71.Hangin' in Gundogan - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 24, 2007
72.Socializing - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 26, 2007 ( This entry has 3 photos 3 )
73."Baby day" at the beach - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 27, 2007 ( This entry has 5 photos 5 ) ( Comments 1 )
74.Another late night - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 28, 2007 ( This entry has 3 photos 3 )
75.Last full day in Gundogan - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 30, 2007 ( This entry has 6 photos 6 )
76."Oz-lay-meck" means I'll miss you - Bodrum, Turkey Aug 31, 2007 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 )
77.Last night in Turkey- Wedding in Ankara - Ankara, Turkey Aug 31, 2007 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 ) ( Comments 1 )
78.En Route - Munich, Germany Sep 01, 2007 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )
79.The Final Entry - Dulles, United States Sep 01, 2007 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )

Guest blog! | Nextshow all entries
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