No tourist has been here for a long time. Off the road, which from Tertsa into the mountains lies a former village in a sleeping beauty slumber. A few tiny stone houses, some still with their traditional roofs of branches, beams and clay and otherwise intact, some ruins, exposed to the weather without protection. But the walls are not only roughly built from found stones, no, here were skilled craftsmen at work, who have joined the beautifully hand-hewn stones to walls. In some of the cottages grow flowering bushes, the former paths are overgrown, enchanted. "Yes, and here is where I lived," Angela says, showing us this mysterious place called Skafidia, pointing to one of the buildings. In front of the door, now almost overgrown by a mulberry tree, a huge old millstone: "This was our table."
It has been a long time, almost 40 years, since Angela spent a few months here with other young people. Without much comfort, without electricity, but free. Water was fetched from an old well nearby. The Austrian-born, who today works as a hiking guide and has already been introduced in this blog (Through wild Crete, 07.02.2023), had decided at that time to stay on Crete.
There were several of these abandoned villages in the 80s, where a few young people from different countries lived together. Whereby village is a bit exaggerated. Settlements like Skafidia served as temporary quarters for the farmers of the area - when the olives or other products were harvested. In a time when there were hardly any roads and the way from the actual place of residence to the plantations was too arduous. With the construction of roads, this changed and the former seasonal quarters were discovered by dropouts.
For people like Angela, these were not forever accommodations, but for a certain time quite romantic - especially since they could spend the endless Cretan summers on the beach.
And at some point, it was time for a house with water, electricity and a washing machine - at least for most of them.
Kontakt:
Michael Meinert
Tel. +49 175 515 53 59
michael.meinert@textbuero-meinert.de
Fotos: Falls nicht anders angegeben
Iris Heymann-Meinert
Michael Meinert