16 June 2009
I saw it
On Friday evening, as our sons' visit to Corfu was nearing its close, we went en-famille to one of those favourite neighbourhood tavernas that Corfu so excels at providing. The sort of taverna where four people can eat their fill of grilled meat, salad, chips and retsina and still have change from 40 euros. In this particular case we chose "Strapunto" at the upper end of Kato Korakiana and we had just settled into our chairs when across the sky, slightly to my left, sailed - heading landwards - a large .......... well, here started my problem. What exactly HAD I seen?
It looked like a comet or a shooting star but it was far too large and far too low in the sky. It was also slightly greeny/blue with a bright yellow "tail". Since the whole sighting was over in a few seconds there was no time for me to say more than "Ooh, what was that?" and only one of our party had a slight glimpse of something out of the corner of his eye. Thank goodness he did, because I can't describe the disbelief of the others, and I won't attempt to explain the "crazy woman" gestures aimed in my direction!
I drew it on the paper tablecloth and tried to estimate its size, but as it appeared just over a hillside and disappeared behind some trees it really was difficult to quantify. In the end the conversation moved on and I dismissed the incident from my mind thinking only that maybe someone had been having a party nearby and that it was some sort of flare or impressive firework.
BUT ...the following day, answering a "Susanna, come quickly", I joined the others around the TV where there was a whole panel discussion about the "Sighting"! Nobody, as yet, seems certain what it was, but it seems to have been some sort of space debris, either natural or man-made, and it was seen in various parts of Greece, though the Mayor of the Kato Korakiana area was on the programme describing his own experience, so our particular location was obviously a good view point.
Vindication! Son with the rudest reaction at the time is now remorseful (a bit) and saying "I wish I'd seen it. Why did I pick the only chair that was facing the wrong way?"
I'm off to check the latest News programme to see if there is any more information!
Susan
This email was cleaned by emailStripper, available for free from http://www.papercut.biz/emailStripper.htm
15 June 2009
First cicada!
Always a milestone in my calendar, yesterday we heard our first cicada (14th June) as opposed to last year when it was on 18th June. In 2007 it was earlier (10th), 2006 on 17th and in 2005 not until 28th June.
Susan
14 June 2009
Dog disasters
We always used to have Labradors, usually two, to keep each other company. Then we didn't have a dog at all. Then we got the current monster (previously renowned for demolishing a 500 euro note).
I have always thought that he needed company and that this might stop him being so destructive, but husband always said one monster was enough thank you. However someone said the other day that they knew of a labrador needing a home, due to illness in the family of his current owners. To my surprise, husband told me to go and look at him. So I did, and fell in love. A 90% black labrador, with a white bib, in need of lots of love and attention.
A few days later I went and picked him up. Note, him. And of course that was the recipe for disaster. Two 'hims' vying for sovereignty added up to non-stop major fighting, with the poor little (by comparison) lab, mainly being the victim.
Since he also made the cardinal error of mistaking my husband for an intruder, he of course added to his sins, so husband, not being what you might call tolerant, insisted he be returned - a failed experiment.
I am still so upset. He is lovely - he sat in the car quietly, he came when I called him and he was thrilled to bits everyone time someone spoke to him or stroked him. He still needs a loving home, so if anyone has room in their house, garden and heart for a real sweetie - just get in touch with us!
Diana
10 June 2009
Water conservation
I am always trying to find a quicker, easier, less time-consuming way to water the garden, without using gallons of water in the process. Not an easy task you may think....
My washing machine is outside in the boiler room, so I decided to have a go at getting it to pump out onto the vegetable patch which is just a couple of metres away. This worked, so then I got a bit more ambitious and joined some hose pipe to the washing machine pipe using a very ingenious method involving bits of old copper piping. Loved-one is going to fall about laughing when he gets back to Corfu and sees my attempt at plumbing, but it works! Now I can water all the rose bushes, and I might even attempt another join and go a bit further. The best bit is, I don't even have to be here.
Sarah
9 June 2009
Life is full of coincidences

At the moment I drive to Town via a short cut down the mountain to Agios Yiannis (Marbella) to avoid one of the many sets of roadwork traffic lights. For the last few days I have seen a 'For Sale' sign on a lovely piece of land, and kept thinking that I should stop and take down the phone number.
Eventually on Thursday I did just that, and planned to call the seller later in the day. Before I could even think about doing so, Sarah called me to say that someone was on the phone with a piece of land for sale in Agios Yiannis. As soon as he began to describe where the land was located, light dawned and I asked him if his phone number was the same as the one of the sign. And it was! Coincidence no. 1.
Then he asked me if I 'was Spiros' wife' - a fairly usual question in Corfu, but anyway, yes I am Spiros' wife. Next question, do we have a cousin Vasilis who lives in Vienna. Yes. Turns out that this gentleman is the koumbaros (best man) of one of our cousins and he had been meaning to call me for some time about the land but had only decided to do so today. Coincidence or telepathy?
Diana
7 June 2009
Just what Corfu needs

I read an interesting article in Saturday's Daily Mail about a new machine called a "Jetpatcher". The newspaper suggests it may be the answer to Britain's pothole crisis and could save councils millions of pounds in compensation claims.
The hi-tech machine has a long tube which pumps out tar which is then compressed into layers. Apparently it takes only five or ten minutes before it starts to dry and can be used on potholes up to 15 yards long and a foot deep.
This seems to me to be a wonderful business opportunity for someone here - the Jetpatcher only costs 140,000 pounds sterling, and would surely be in great demand on our island.
Sarah
3 June 2009
How nice to be small
Last month, the Daily Mail ran a very nice piece on Corfu property, headed 'A Greek Treasure - there's little sign of the market slowing in Corfu' and a piece saying that interest in our nice little island does not seem to have diminished at all, in fact people keep on buying, and prices are steady!
Contrast that with a Telegraph article on Dubai 'disaster' a few days later, where the property market is apparently in freefall, with developers welching on agreement to build properties, yet buyers are committed to pay the balance of deposits - even though it is unlikely they will ever have a property to show for their money.
Today I was in conversation with an English finance professional who said he had just returned from Spain 'where everything seems fairly dire', so it seems we have to thank our lucky stars that we are 'small and beautiful'!
Diana
2 June 2009
Parking at Corfu Airport
Long time residents of Corfu will know that we have only recently seen the introduction of parking charges at the airport.Whilst recognising that it was extremely unusual to be able to leave your car, completely without charge, for extended periods within walking distance of the check-in desks (some people have been known to leave their car in October and return to collect it in May), we locals still resent the new charges.
In the winter months the parking restrictions are still reasonably "elastic" (or "Greek") in that you can leave your car opposite the arrivals hall and nobody seems to object. Now that summer has arrived things are very different. Friends recently went to England for a week, and having left their car on the roadside just before the airport, returned to find a parking ticket on their windscreen. The fine was for 80 euros, but a reduction is usually allowed for prompt payment, so although it hurt a little to pay out 40 euros, the pain was lessened when they realized that the parking fine was less than the car park charge would have been for the relevant number of days. Guess where they will park next time they go on a trip!
Susan
30 May 2009
Men only?
Husband has gone on a "jolly" with some old schoolfriends. They are spending several days near Mount Olympus followed by a visit to Mount Athos in the north of Greece, a spectacular peninsular entirely given over the the Greek Orthodox church and a selection of huge, ancient and stunningly beautiful monasteries.
Mount Athos - Aghio Oros - is designated "Men Only" and the only way the female sex can take a look is from a helicopter or caique trip around the shore line. We have long argued - I mean discussed! - the rights and wrongs of this policy. I disapprove in principle, in the same way that I don't like women being excluded from the inner sanctum of all orthodox churches. You see all these little boys running about during church services, disappearing behind the altar into the holy of holies and coming out again, but if I were to want to see what was there I would be sent away, as would my tiny granddaughter if she were to fancy exploring in that direction.
Is it right? I can't justify the exclusion. According to husband, the monks in Mount Athos need to be able to do their work, pray, and live a totally religious life away from the distraction of the opposite sex. Well, okay, I can see that a bikini clad tourist might be inappropriate, but what about nuns? Surely they should be allowed to share the beauty and live the experience as well?
Susan
28 May 2009
The wonders of statistics
Listening to a local Corfu radio station a few days ago, they were discussing the 'crisis' of tourism in Corfu. All the usual culprits got a mention - lack of infrastructure, lousy roads, rubbish in Corfu Town etc. etc. But the conclusion was that in fact things were not all that bad because statistics prove that we will have a greater 'footfall' of tourists this year.
This, I understand, is represented by all the cruise ship clients who arrive at the airport mid morning, are bussed to their ship and after one or two weeks arrive back in Corfu, perhaps go on an excursion to Paleo, maybe spend a few hours in Corfu town and then leave! At most they might buy a cup of coffee and the odd souvenir - not exactly a great event for local people involved in tourism to get excited about. Still, it looks good on paper, and I suppose the passenger tax at the port contributes to something somewhere.
Diana
27 May 2009
Maybe we can look forward to a reasonable summer after all
All winter people have been saying, 'This is going to be a terrible summer.' Maybe it is, and certainly the resorts have been quiet so far, but yesterday we went to collect clients from a hotel in the south of the island and one of our friends who works there said that although May was fairly disastrous, as of yesterday the numbers have increased substantially.
This seems to be reflected all over the island. Down in Agios Georgios yesterday there were quite a lot of people around. Our own apartments were virtually full from our Scandinavian office from their opening day last week; our house with a UK tour operator although not booked until tomorrow (thank God, because it wasn't ready) is now booked straight through to October; and private villa bookings seem to be good. I also spent some time last week trying to find a villa for clients at the end of June and many properties were already booked - so let’s hope that after a late start, things will be bearable after all.
On the estate agency front things also do not seem too bad, with many previous clients deciding to buy after a couple of visits to view and consider, and many new clients arriving with lists of properties and a definite intention to buy. We are seeing clients from a variety of countries, some admittedly arriving hoping that Corfu has turned into a 'bargain basement' for prices, but still staying to buy even when they realise this is not the case.
O course, there will always be some 'bargain' properties, but generally, good properties at a reasonable price will achieve a sale, even if it takes some time, which in its turn shows that in the medium to long term, property in Corfu is still a safe and valid investment – as well as being a very nice place to holiday or live!
Diana
26 May 2009
Gruesome discovery

Last week, exhausted after watering our villa's garden, I decided to spend a lazy half hour on one of the sunbeds which were tidied away in the barbeque area. The sunbeds were stacked up in the corner, and behind one of them was this bird's wing. Close inspection revealed that it had been recently killed but the rest of the body was nowhere to be found.
It was a big wing, as big as my two hands, so the questions are, what kind of bird was it, and more to the point, what animal caught and killed it?
Sarah
25 May 2009
A variety of OTE rants
If anyone has tried to get through to our office or the shop and cannot - none of our phones work. The shop went first. The fault was reported and finally an engineer came (the OTE lady said she forgot to notify anyone the first time) and told us we needed a new phone. Lorraine showed him, with another phone which we know works, that it is not the phone, it is the box or line. He sat down, broke the display bed, said that it was definitely our fault and left. At this point the office phone stopped working as well. Two days later they told me the note on the shop phone problem says 'need new phone'! They said the repair would be done 'urgently'. Still no phones.
Secondly, I called to order a phone line for some clients who had just bought a house. They took all the information, said it would be put in hand and 'no I didn’t need to do anything else'. A few days later they went to check the area/line etc. and called to say the phone would be installed in two days. No phone. Two weeks later Lorraine rang and was told there was no record of any request. (So how come they went up to the house - telepathy?) The ladies came to town specifically to fill in bits of paper and were told again, no record. The next day OTE called me and said they were going up on Saturday AFTER 10 am to put in the phone. At 8 am the engineer rang to say he was there - and the phone was installed. Since there is apparently no paperwork perhaps they won't ever get a bill!
Third rant.I bought ADSL internet for our house in Halikouna, last August.The phone promptly stopped working so it never got installed. Today, with the phone finally working, I tried to install it. The paper requested me to enter the code number and password, and gave me the code but not the password. So I rang them and the engineer said you have to use the password you had with your first installation. It then transpired that because we had an installation at our own house from about 15 years ago, this was not a new connection but a second one. How many people would have kept to hand an original code - plus the fact that the information on the paperwork is all wrong, even the phone number, therefore the original code does not even apply!
Therefore I have to jump through about a million hoops in order to correct their mistakes and my clients won't have internet. I used to think OTE were easier than DEH but now I think not.
Sarah
23 May 2009
Alternative Panigiri

An "Alternative Panigiri" is being held at Triklino Vineyard, Karoubatika, this weekend. Ther's something for everyone, including children.
Saturday's programme includes exhibitions by the Corfu Quilters and three photographers, and the launch of the "Neuromantics" CD composed by Raul Scacchi, and sung by Kaliroe Raouzeou at 9.30 pm. Amazing video projections accompany each song!
Sunday highlights include sessions on the Creative Arts and Writing inspired by Corfu (6.30-7.15 pm and 7.30-8.30 pm), as well as the exhibitions. From 9.00 pm to 10.00 pm there will be a performance by the Karagiozis Shadow Theatre. Finally from 10.00 pm until late, there's live music, Greek, Blues etc.
In addition there will be all sorts of other festive activities.
Susan
18 May 2009
Welcome back to the Avra Hotel
Many years ago, in the 1940s, one of the first hotels in Corfu was opened by the Spinoulas family. The Avra Hotel became universally well-known and even featured in a book called 'Around the World with $20'! Recently refurbished, it has been re-opened by the Monro family - Andy, Sarah-Jane and Jamie - who are planning to keep up the 'family tradition' and warm welcome.
The hotel is in the village of Benitses, about 15km south of Corfu Town, in an ideal location just across the road from the beach and close to the shops, bars and tavernas in the centre of the village. It offers twins, double and family rooms - and of course a great welcome! The Monros have many years of experience in Corfu, (in fact Sarah Jane is one of the partners in Corfuhomerentals) so you can take advantage of their knowledge of the island.
Diana
17 May 2009
Dassia office moves (photo to follow)
Our office in Dassia has moved - but just how do we tell people where we are?
We used to say that we were opposite the Corfu Chandris Hotel, near to the flashing overhead traffic light. We have only moved two doors along, but we are no longer opposite the hotel. Telling people looking for us that we are between the Drunken Duck bar and the naked statue doesn't quite have the same ring to it, does it?
Sarah
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)