Ancona - eine interessante, typisch italienische Stadt (links). Man sollte sich die Zeit für einen Rundgang nehmen. An Bord der Fähren kann man sich durchaus wohl fühlen (Mitte). Der Hafen von Piräus - nüchtern, prosaisch, aber irgendwie viel mehr (rechts).
In Crete we need a car. After all, we want to drive around, see a lot, and rental cars are expensive. So only the ferry came into question for the journey. It seemed easiest to us to go by car to Ancona (Italy), take the ferry to Patras (Greece), make our way through Greece by land to Piraeus and then take the ferry to Heraklion. We booked the ferries in advance. Out of season, however, it should not be a problem to book directly in the ports. In Ancona there is a central terminal for this, in Piraeus the ferry companies have a kind of kiosks. Our ferry from Ancona to Patras took 24 hours (departure 1.30 pm), the one to Heraklion then a little more than nine hours (departure 9 pm). We paid a total of just under 660 euros (two people, one car, inside cabin). I definitely recommend a cabin. It is wonderful to sleep on a slightly rocking ship.
We took our time for the tour to Crete – Sunday morning left, Friday morning arrived – and stayed twice on the way to Ancona: first in South Tyrol, then in Ancona itself. The port in Ancona is well organized. There are signs for check-in and you get exact information where the ferry is. In Piraeus, on the other hand... But more on that in a moment.
On the way to the Greek port city, we had another overnight stay close to Corinth. At Hotel Cokkinis, quite good, a nice restaurant and a nice beach.
The last 50 kilometers to Piraeus are not the real joy: a lot of traffic, ugly industry, a lot of garbage in many places. And you really need a navigation system that takes you (in the best case) to the place in the port where the ferries to Crete depart. Then you "only" have to find the right "kiosk" and exchange your reservation for tickets.
By the way, there is a small port called Gythio in the south of the Peloponnese. From there is a smaller ferry to Crete, to Kissamos in the west. But unfortunately, it only goes once a week.
Kontakt:
Michael Meinert
Tel. +49 175 515 53 59
michael.meinert@textbuero-meinert.de
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Iris Heymann-Meinert
Michael Meinert