Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Rock on the Pier

 








Last night I played at the Rock on the Pier concert in Finikounda, an annual fundraiser for the medical clinic, which well attended by local villagers and expat residents.

My Australian friend Ash (guitar) and English friend (Steve), who both live here, were the headliners, but I contributed a few tunes on the flute—a tough competition with an electric guitar and a 1500-watt PA.

It was also a time to mark the new season. Before the show started, the kids jumped over a bonfire on the beach—made from the dried Easter garlands—for good luck. Maybe the only country on earth where you incinerate children for good luck.

 



Three 60-something rockers, plied with tequila by 800 people who kept buying drinks for the band. I'll post the music videos after I figure out how to edit them down.








Two clips from Rock on the Pier ("Oye Coma Va" and "Low Rider"). Didn't have a pickup for the flute, just a mic. 







Monday, June 23, 2025

Change is a comin'

    




 

Early morning at Voidokoilia--nearly all to myself

Sfakteria--Where the Athenians beseiged the Spartans




 

 

There are places I remember, all my life,

though some have changed

 

Not for better but forever…

 

                                                             (John Lennon, “In My Life”)

 

This region, southern Messenia in the Peloponnese, is about to see an enormous change, wrought by the construction of a new four-lane highway linking Kalamata with Methoni—the latter just 12 km west of here. Parts on the Kalamata end are already complete.

The driver of this change is the Costa Navarino resort, a massive multi-billion-euro “project” that began multiple phases of construction just before my first visit here in 2007. It is the brainchild of a shipping magnate (since died) and his unbelievably wealthy family


 

The Palaiokastro ("old castle")


Worth the risk...


The Spartans held out here to the last man during the Peloponnesian War

Costa Navarino includes two premier PGA 18-hole golf courses; a full range of luxury hotels and villas; bottomless pockets on the part of the developers; a multi-millionaire clientele; and an iron grip on whatever happens in this region. The least expensive rooms are more than one thousand euros per night, and several are over 20,000 euros per night…Last year Yianni Antetokounmpo (of Milwaukee Bucks fame) was married there, and Jeff Bezos’s $400 million yacht, with Beyonce in tow, was anchored off shore. Sultans, kings, and other assorted royalty frequent this place.

The resort has swallowed up the once-lovely town of Yialova, on Navarino Bay, turning it into a bastion of extreme wealth and privilege. The developers, apparently not content with wrecking one pristine area, now have their eyes (and wallets) on other unscathed natural environments in our immediate neighborhood. 

Alas, all things change. As my mother warned me on her deathbed: nothing ever stays the same. Get used to the idea.


Adventure Run: Voidokoilia, the Palaiokastro, and Nestor’s Cave


Voidokoilia--from whence the Greeks set sail for Troy


One of my great pleasures in life involves lacing up a pair of running shoes and heading out into the great unknown. I've done this almost daily for 53 years.

This morning I was out the door at 6 a.m., heading west. I drove past Pylos and Yialova (now utterly surrounded by the Costa Navarino development, including a heliport) and arrived at Voidokoilia and Navarino lagoon. It is a magical place--especially without the hordes-- totally serene and still empty in the early morning.



 

I ran around the cove, made famous in Homer’s Iliad, then approached the Palaiokastro--“the old castle,” which is all relative, because the “new” castle, in Pylos, dates from 14th century. I stopped at Nestor’s Cave on the descent. Homeric legend tells us that Nestor’s cattle were hidden in the cave from a wrathful Apollo, as the king led his armies to Troy.

Matt Daimon just finished shooting a full-length epic on site (Odysseus will be released in 2026)—and is it ever a site/sight.

Here are some photos and a few videos of today’s run.


 


Pylos town and harbor on Navarino Bay










Sunday, June 22, 2025

Summer Solstice--Peloponnesian style

 







The summer solstice, the midpoint of the year, has crept up on us stealhily, as it always does. They say that the older you get, the faster time seems to pass—and that’s been my experience.

But for all practical purposes, summer arrived in the southern Peloponnese six weeks ago. It hasn’t rained appreciably since the end of March. And the bloom of spring has given way to the parchment of summer, with a chorus of cicadas that begins with first light and tapers off after midnight only to begin anew at dawn.

 

Exactly two weeks from now, I will do a slap-dash clean up of our little house, put away the bedding, take a last look around, then lock the door and head north to Athens.

I greatly miss my family and parts—but not all—of my life back in Downeast Maine. Still, in short order I will begin to dream about this place once again and lay my plans for a return next year. Each year my stay is a bit longer. And that’s a trend I hope to continue—if health, finances, and life circumstances allow—because I feel an intimate connection to this place: the region, its people, the house, the sea.

This Old House

 

Our oleanders in different colors




A lot of concrete for one day


Each year I try to complete another few projects that will transform this refuge into something more comfortable, beautiful, and enduring. For us and for the next generation of family.

I have accomplished one heroic, bureaucratic task—filing an official will with the court, so that our kids won’t face the misery of acquiring a Greek property when I’m gone—as well as a few house- and garden-specific projects.

The big project was fixing the driveway entrance, which winter erosion has made untenable. A drop of five inches from the asphalt road to the gravel driveway has wrought havoc to the front end of my Citroen C3. This was remedied in the past week with a cement mixer, 54 bags (40 kilo each) of cement, 14 cubic meters of sand/gravel, and hardworking Albanian father-and-son masons. Our house checker-plumber-naturalist Dimitri helped in the mixing process; my contribution was more limited; a bit of mixing but mostly the critical role of fetching coffee and beer for my tireless workers.

Now the approach to the house, off the main road, is safer and more uniform.

Next Year?

After twelve years of being “powerless,” next year’s big undertaking will involve either installing a solar array—which seems so intuitive but has its drawbacks, too—or applying for grid power from the power company.

The first option may cost less at the outset but more in the long run: there is the possibility of theft during our absence, plus the cost of replacing batteries, and the limitations of even a medium-size array: insufficient power for a heat pump (kalorifer, which doubles as air conditioning). Of course, this could be supplemented with a new two-stroke generator.

Power from the grid is also rife with issues, not least of which is a monthly bill when we might only be living here for two to six months per year. But the convenience, including the ability to make the house a turnkey residence (for friends and family), might obviate the up-front costs, which include installation of a least three or four poles from the nearest house.

This is all something to ponder on a cold Maine winter night.

 

Speaking Greek, Part II

Nearly everyone in Greece speaks at least rudimentary English—with German, French, and Italian in distant second place. Many speak English with greater fluency than most Americans, which is a pretty low bar.

So when American friends ask the question, “Will I be able to get around without knowing any Greek?”, the answer is largely Yes. Even most signage is now bilingual: street signs, menus, maps, and the like.

But if you own a house in Greek, or for whatever reason plan to interact with the long arm of the state (bureaucracy, police, construction workers, civil engineers, for example) then a facility with spoken Greek is nothing short of imperative.

I could not imagine going to the hardware store, the building supply yard, or the notary public without a basic command of vocabulary, necessary phrases, and Greek’s unique idioms.

Also: cursing. If you can’t curse in Greek, you have no right to be driving a rental car in this country.

 




One of my longtime habits, before heading out on a likely Greek-speaking junket, is to arm myself with relevant vocabulary. So, before going to the hardware store I’ll open my Greek-English dictionary and assemble a plan of attack in the form of essential vocabulary.

The hardware store? “screw driver,” “wrench,” “paint thinner,” “self-tapping screws.” The notary? “penalty,” “delay,” “fine,” “duplicate copy.” The butcher? “chops,” “minced/ground,” “frozen,” “gutted,” “lean.”

You get the idea.

All of these “new” words get added into my little notebook, and then are later transferred to my laptop file called “Greek vocabulary.” I am a visual learner, so this works for me. Say it, write it, then us it in conversation. A sure bet for practical memorization.

The Sea





The ocean temperature, just a few weeks ago, was “refreshingly cool”—our nearest shoreline is 22 kilometers away from the deepest spot in the Mediterranean, which upwells cool seawater from an astonishing depth of over three miles. Although the seawater temperature increases each day, most Greeks pride themselves on not swimming until late July or early August—which make the rest of us, who are less endowed with warm weather, laugh just a little.

The Germans and Dutch are accustomed to the North Sea and the Baltic Sea; and Downeast Mainers, living on the Bay of Fundy, know warm water when the feel it!

Running adventures


Venetian castle of Methoni



Ionian Sea: Steer right for Italy



Thie morning I drove to nearby Methoni--about 10 km west of our home--to run around one of this regions three Venetian castles. They date from the early Middle Ages and were a stopping-off place for the "liberators" [sic] of Jerusalem.

My daughter Evyenia and I are officially "registered" (as Greek dual citizens) in Methoni. I explained that this obligates us to defend the castle against invaders (the Persian hordes, European tourists, whomever...), high upon the rampart walls.

Keeping in mind one salient detail: the last time the castle fell to the besiegers, the male defenders were all decapitate and the women/children sold into slavery.

These days, it is a small price to pay for an EU passport.




Downeast Meets Near East

As different as this place is from our home in eastern Maine, there are also a lot of similarities—some good, others less so.

Both here and back home—though now the word “home” is open to definition--one’s personal safety from crime is nearly guaranteed. (Although the big exception, in both places, is driving or walking/running near the roadside). There are almost no crimes “against the person”—this is, assaults and other forms of physical violence—and gun violence (at least by comparison to the America’s murderous rampage) is minimal.


The air and sea are clean. Industry of any sort is more than 100 kilometers away. And the flora and fauna—here and in Maine—is exceptional for its variety and extent.

Every night we are surrounded by the cries of jackals—not much different than the coyotes of rural Maine.

People often help one another, expecting nothing in return. I like that about both places.

Resurrecting a 20-something metier

In essence, I was born to be a beach bum—but life has gotten in the way. Making a living, raising a family, and that incessant “doing” of American life has colored a primary aspiration: hanging out on the beach, reading, swimming, napping. Repeat.



 

Everyone’s a farmer



Organic remedy for ants--lime slurry (asvesti)



In this part of Greece, southern Messenia, everyone is a farmer. (Even those who might own a restaurant, a tourist bling shop, a bike rental business). People here are seemingly born with green thumbs and a decerning understanding of the natural world that surrounds them. Some of this knowledge ancient, or based on myth and superstition, which make it all the more real.

Here are a few photos from garden and nearby groves.

 

Rock on the Pier

This year I’ve been asked to join a few other aged rockers on the pier, for the annual village fundraiser. Our mixed-act concert benefits the small village medical center.

Since I can’t play flute and guitar at the same time—as part of the circus variety show—I have chosen the former for my 15 minutes of fame.



Aging, feral rocker

Here is a recent rehearsal for the big gig, with my Australian friend.












Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Nothing Is Easy

 

Just around the corner

Morning run and swim



For all the trappings of a 21st-century society—near universal high-speed Internet service, the full range of large-scale green energy production, myriad efficiencies left and right—much of the “third world” persists in Greek. Three weaknesses are found nationwide: solid waste, septic waste, and water. There isn’t a place that doesn’t suffer from some deficiency or other.

I much prefer the less pejorative “Ottoman-era bureaucracy” over “third world.” This becomes evident in almost any dealings with the Greek government, the civil service, or the courts. And, of course, it extends outward to aspects of daily life. Sometimes these deficiencies have an endearing quality, but usually they are just another pain in the kolo.


As a case in point: creation of one’s last will and testament, called a διαθήκη/diathiki in Greek. Were I to die (which I fully expect) without a written will, our little house and garden would be nearly unattainable by my next of kin, in this case my three kids. They would spend decades in court and thousand of euros in legal fees. I have put this off for years, but now I am determined to rectify this oversight.

So with some help and advice from friends, I drafted a will in Greek, which went through more than a few iterations. Corrected remotely by my Maine neighbor, Bill, a Greek linguist; refined by my poet-friend Niko; then finally vetted by my lawyer-friend Akis; and in the end printed in triplicate by my English friend Alf on his high-speed printer.


 

Stone work from 2022

Small is beautiful

I was joined in this venture by an old Finikounda friend, the recently former assistant mayor of nearby Koroni, where our house is officially entered into the town books, and two witnesses waiting in the wings. We visited the notary’s office in Koroni—on a sunny Tuesday morning. (Note: They are all sunny these days.) Koroni is located about 12 kilometers east of our house. After winding through a pass in the mountains, we arrived at Koroni, sitting astride the Gulf of Messenia.

Taygetos range beyond

The prediction of victory was, I soon learned, premature. After presenting the notary with clean copies of my corrected Greek text, she informed me that the will needed to be handwritten in ink before it could be processed. It would have been easier to have had the will blessed by a collection of monks or nuns. The good notary proceeded to hand me a pad of paper and a pen, and pointed me toward a free desk.

So we are now scheduled to return on Friday, with an official appointment, the two witnesses, and the handwritten will—which I accomplished later in the morning in the cool comfort of our little house.

 

--------------

 

Following the abbreviated visit to the notary, I offered to treat Dimitri to a coffee at one of the cafeneions on Koroni’s waterfront. It was getting hot at about 9:30 a.m.

 

Holier than Thou





Vive le revolution!



Serving and protecting--now and then

We sat at a little round metal table, with the standard cafeneion chairs, overlooking the Gulf of Messenia and the still snow-capped 9,000-foot peak of the Mount Taygetos range, which towers over Sparta and provides a stunning backdrop to a flat, cobalt sea.

Koroni waterfront

A bit of pork and tsipoura

No sooner did we sit than Dimitri announced: “I don’t drink coffee. It’s not good for me.” I ordered a frappe, medium sweet with milk; he ordered a small single-serving bottle of tsipoura, a volatile industrial-strength floor cleaner masquerading as an aperitif.

“Bring me a meze [appetizer] too, and a glass of ice,” he said to the server. The waitor returned in short order with out breakfast drinks, along with a platter of cold, cooked pork with sliced tomatoes and cucumbers. The classic breakfast of champions in these parts.

“To your good health, and friendship.”

 

------------------

 

 

I am guilty of robust beach reading under my trusty go-everywhere umbrella. This time it was a loaner book borrowed from my poet friend Niko: Anaximander and the Nature of Science, by Carlo Rovelli.

 

Pastel sunset

Made in the shade

Niko is an English-educated “private” scholar, with a passion for lifetime learning. That is, learning for learning’s sake.

Niko and I share a similar passion for the world of the mind--though his infinitely broader--which includes world literature, mythology, philosophy, history, biography, politics, and the arts. To find someone like this, in a little fishing village in the southwestern Peloponnese, was akin to finding a valuable pearl amid a mountain of oysters. He is a rare gift for a fellow traveler who is otherwise consigned to talking about olive harvests, football (“soccer”), politics, and the price of tomatoes.

 

A sensible person might ask, Who was Anaximander and why is he important for a 21st-century reader?

 

The mountain pass down to Koroni




A sixth-century bce Greek philosopher from Miletus, on the Ionian coast of Asia Minor (present-day Turkey), Anaximander set in motion a revolution in science long before Newton, Einstein, or Stephen Jay Gould. Among other revelations, he was the first to understand that the earth floated in space, that animals evolve, and that natural phenomenon—for instance, weather, earthquakes, and the like—were not supernatural events but a reality of the physics of matter.

 

The laws of nature and the phenomena of the natural world are an intriguing subject, even on a nude beach. And Rovelli, a physicist himself, skillfully conveys Anaximander’s contributions to our human understanding of nature.

 

Rovelli writes: “Its strength [i.e., that of science] lies not in the certainties it reaches but in a radical awareness of the vastness of ignorance.”


A field day for the honey bees



Wild thyme at the ocean's edge


 

Sadly, in today’s world, by executive if not cultural fiat, we are moving in the opposite direction. Or at least some of us are—with the US government itself as the chief protagonist in this decline.

 

The author of this volume continues in poetic fashion: “This awareness allows us to keep questioning our knowledge, and, thus, to continue learning” (Rovelli, 2007, p. xii).

 

In summer’s clutches

 

If you say something like, “my it has gotten quite hot,” the response everywhere is just about the same: “Well, it’s summer.”

 

I am now on my third pair of sunglasses in almost as many weeks. The others have succumbed to excessive heat and my penchant for dropping things.

Navigating the cliff--hubris is a Greek word



Our little red roof in the olive grove


New planting--fig tree



Road to Finikounda (2 km down, down, down)



Looking down toward Finikounda

Take a right at Venetian tower




Running to my favorite, exclusive swimming hole without falling





Once off the cliff, it's never too crowded...me and the wild boar