deeaa
Well-known member
Had a 9-day 'fall vacation' as usual at this time of year, we went to Crete. 3-4 hour flight only, but the difference in weather is quite a lot going from near the polar circle where at nights the puddles are nearly freezing over already, to what is by our standards full-blown summer of 80-90F temps constantly and seawater so warm you can spend whole days in it. Although for the locals it was the end of the season and some places were already closed due to that, it was a great trip.
Here's a few photos in case you're interested what Crete looks like. We rented a car for 3 days and drove around the island as well.
This is what most of the 'tourist areas' of Crete look like. Small streets lined with various shops and restaurants, literally for over ten miles straight. Probably hundreds of steak houses alone. Good, cheap food too.
My eldest checking out the stores.
The western end of the beach in front of the hotel - a little rocky at this end, nice to snorkel for fish etc.
A view towards the east from Platanias beach.
There's a LOT of friendly wild cats everywhere in Crete. You also saw quite a few dogs roaming freely here and there; anywhere you went, there'd be a dog or a cat sleeping on the bus stop bench or whatever. Literally had to push them away at times.
All photos taken with my cell btw. so quality especially in the dark isn't the best. Restaurants often had live dancing etc. like here.
One thing about the restaurants, virtually all restaurants end the service by offering free Raki (which is a clear drink that kinda tastes like Tequila and Vodka mixed) and/or Ouzo, the local sweet Anis booze which tastes a lot better. Often they brought on more and more, in hopes of keeping you there, I guess so that you'd spend more money hopefully, and to keep the restaurant full as the competition must be fierce as the season draws close, and people rather choose more occupied restaurants than empty ones to dine in.
A bit more normal street view from a 'big city' Chania, which used to be the capital and is the 2nd largest city in Crete.
There was not much evidence here of the mainland Greece financial crisis really; meanwhile in Athens there were molotov's cocktails flying and violent rallies with police firing tear gas. Quite peaceful here...
Looks much like any mid-eastern country.
Here's a few photos in case you're interested what Crete looks like. We rented a car for 3 days and drove around the island as well.
This is what most of the 'tourist areas' of Crete look like. Small streets lined with various shops and restaurants, literally for over ten miles straight. Probably hundreds of steak houses alone. Good, cheap food too.
My eldest checking out the stores.
The western end of the beach in front of the hotel - a little rocky at this end, nice to snorkel for fish etc.
A view towards the east from Platanias beach.
There's a LOT of friendly wild cats everywhere in Crete. You also saw quite a few dogs roaming freely here and there; anywhere you went, there'd be a dog or a cat sleeping on the bus stop bench or whatever. Literally had to push them away at times.
All photos taken with my cell btw. so quality especially in the dark isn't the best. Restaurants often had live dancing etc. like here.
One thing about the restaurants, virtually all restaurants end the service by offering free Raki (which is a clear drink that kinda tastes like Tequila and Vodka mixed) and/or Ouzo, the local sweet Anis booze which tastes a lot better. Often they brought on more and more, in hopes of keeping you there, I guess so that you'd spend more money hopefully, and to keep the restaurant full as the competition must be fierce as the season draws close, and people rather choose more occupied restaurants than empty ones to dine in.
A bit more normal street view from a 'big city' Chania, which used to be the capital and is the 2nd largest city in Crete.
There was not much evidence here of the mainland Greece financial crisis really; meanwhile in Athens there were molotov's cocktails flying and violent rallies with police firing tear gas. Quite peaceful here...
Looks much like any mid-eastern country.