Organized bus tours - not really our thing. You trade independence for convenience. Or, as our friend Martin said: you're so cooped up. On the other hand: you can look out of the window and enjoy the scenery on the way, you can have a drink with your meal or later without feeling guilty. And you can snooze on the return journey. In theory, anyway. Above all, you don't have to worry about finding a parking space anywhere. If your destination is Heraklion and there are sharks and later even dinosaurs waiting for you, and you can even safely experience an earthquake, then you shouldn't hesitate.
So we arrive at the bus stop in Mirtos at 8 in the morning. The people who run the public library here in the village have organized the tour. On the program: visits to the largest aquarium in Greece and the Natural History Museum. An exciting program. Around 40 people, almost exclusively locals, travel with us.
Cretans are sociable people, so the atmosphere on the bus is great. The driver soon switches on the radio and the atmosphere gets even better.
1.8 million liters of water
In the "CretAquarium", located 15 kilometers off Heraklion in Gournes, it is quiet. In more than 60 water basins with a total of 1.8 million liters of salt water, live over 2000 sea creatures of all kinds. Impressive encounters with sharks and moray eels, stingrays and the beautiful but poisonous lionfish that enter the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal. Rendezvous with corals, starfish, jellyfish and seahorses, with fish of all sizes, shapes, patterns and colors, with everything that lives in the Mediterranean Sea. And lots of information, for example on marine pollution. The fact that some plastic bottles and disposable diapers are still around after 450 years is not exactly pleasing.
Quickly under the table
One of the attractions in the Natural History Museum of Crete, our second stop, is the earthquake room. A classroom with chairs and tables. We take a seat, those with back problems have to stay outside, and then we experience what happens during an earthquake. First a slight tremor, then stronger and stronger. The lamp on the ceiling shakes, the map on the wall swings back and forth and we are almost shaken out of our chairs. There are also tips: get away from glass panes and balconies, for example, it's best to lie under a table and hold on to it. Honestly, I wouldn't want to experience something like that in real life.
Afterwards, it is really relaxing to stroll through the spacious museum, look at Crete's animals (in stuffed form) and habitats, marvel at physical phenomena or optical illusions. Oh yes, the dinosaurs. Many of them can be admired in life-size, and some even move. Impressive. You can be glad that they are not contemporaries and could trample us or eat us in one bite.
After a stroll through Heraklion and a visit to the taverna, which is already our favorite bar there, we take the bus back to Mirtos. The atmosphere on board is relaxed and gets better with every kilometer. We know: Cretans are sociable people.
Kontakt:
Michael Meinert
Tel. +49 175 515 53 59
michael.meinert@textbuero-meinert.de
Fotos: Falls nicht anders angegeben
Iris Heymann-Meinert
Michael Meinert