Kretas Westen: Im Botanischen Garten (2), auf dem Weg zur Samaria-Schlucht, die Berge am Eingang der Schlucht, der Strand von Falasarna und das kleine Theater in der antiken Stadt Aptera.
Before we head back to Germany after a whole winter on Crete, we stop off in Kissamos. A small town in the very north-west of the island, which has a few beautiful corners in addition to its lively and strenuous thoroughfare. We stay in a guesthouse and buy our boat tickets at a travel agency.
The ferry is due to leave Kissamos for Gythio on the Peloponnese the following Sunday morning, arriving there in the early evening. The ship from Patras to Venice then will leave on late Monday evening. So we have the whole Monday to drive the 300 kilometers on the Peloponnese - and we don't have to go through the hustle and bustle of Piraeus. That's our plan.
But it's only Thursday, so we still have three days on Crete. We finally visit the botanical garden, which is located 15 kilometers southwest of Chania near the village of Fournes. Set in a hilly area, the garden is absolutely worth a visit with its abundance of Mediterranean and tropical plants, the lovingly arranged works of art along the path, the peacocks and other animals in a small zoo. In early summer, of course, there will be even more flowers than there are now in April, but there are far fewer people out and about.
And while we're in the area, we thought we'd drive a few more kilometers to the Omalos plateau and the entrance to the Samaria Gorge. The road winds its way high up into the mountains, there are hardly any cars on the road and we often have to wait until the many sheep slowly trot off the road. It is empty and lonely, because the imposing gorge is still closed, the entrance barricaded with fences and barbed wire. Here, at an altitude of 1200 meters, where hundreds of gorge hikers throng every day in summer, we are now almost alone - in the middle of the magnificent mountain world of the Lefka Ori, the White Mountains. The Samaria Gorge is open - weather permitting - from May 1 to October 15. It stretches for more than 16 kilometers between rock faces, some of which are 600 meters high, down to Agia Roumeli on the south coast. We have only done the slimmed-down version so far: early in the morning from Agia Roumeli northwards to the middle of the gorge, then back again before the hiking masses could swamp us. With this version, you have Samaria to yourself. But at some point, the classic north-south tour is also on our program.
We spend the last two nights on Crete in Kavousi near Falasarna. Falasarna, an important port town in ancient times, is now a seaside resort with a long, fantastic beach. And it is on this very beach that my cell phone rings on Saturday afternoon. A text message has arrived. A text message from the ferry company that our ship will not be sailing on Sunday morning. Maintenance work. We are pretty shocked, as we have not only booked a hotel in Gythio, but have also already bought the connecting ticket to Venice.
What to do? Fortunately, the agency in Kissamos, where we bought the tickets, is open on Saturday evening. And we can rebook onto a ferry that leaves Chania for Piraeus on Sunday evening. It costs a bit more, but it means we can catch the connecting ferry.
On Sunday we drive to Chania, visit the ancient city of Aptera nearby and are on the ferry in the evening. We set off at around 9pm. First the harbor gets smaller and smaller, then Souda Bay, then the whole of Crete.
Not a particularly nice feeling, whether after two weeks or five months. But we console ourselves with the thought: after Crete is before Crete.
Kontakt:
Michael Meinert
Tel. +49 175 515 53 59
michael.meinert@textbuero-meinert.de
Fotos: Falls nicht anders angegeben
Iris Heymann-Meinert
Michael Meinert