Tuesday 12 February 2008

Snow Going Back

Unlike the Eskimos, the Greeks don't have many words for snow. In fact, they have one - χιoνι (heeonee).

Translated literally, it means: "Where the hell did all this white stuff come from?"

So, my partner Penny and I left England in the snow and arrived in Greece in the χιoνι. That was nearly four years ago, when we nursed our heavily laden and rather elderly Volkswagen camper van all the way to Mani, where we rented a house while we looked for a smallholding to buy.

The last part of the journey was alarming in the extreme as driving a camper van on icy mountain roads was a bit like being trapped inside a curling stone without having someone in front of you with a brush (curling, incidentally, is a sport which I once heard described as 'housework on ice'). Nobody in the Stoupa area, where we were staying, could remember the last time they'd even had so much as a frost, and ice was something you put in your ouzo.

Penny has always had a reputation for being a bit of a jinx on the weather. In fact, before we left, several people wondered whether they would eventually pick up a newspaper and read: "Greek Tourism Industry Collapses - English woman responsible for worst weather since records began". Fortunately, the weather improved and we sent our first gloating emails to friends and family back in the UK.

For instance:

Dear all-of-you-shivering-in-the-cold-back-in-dear-old-Blighty,

As it's too hot to do much outdoors, I thought I'd come in and write to you about our early impressions of living in Greece ...


Some good things we've noticed about Greece so far:

  1. People seem to want to give you things for free. (Supermarkets often have signs saying: "Get one free, and while you're at it you may as well have a couple more for nothing to save you the trouble of coming back again". At least, we think that's what the signs translate to.)
  2. You can get petrol for about 50 pence a litre and rather good wine for about 70 pence a litre.
  3. Wherever you are reading this, the weather is much better in Greece than where you are.
  4. Garage labour charges seem to be less than 10 pounds an hour.
  5. You can buy a 16-bedroom house with 9 bathrooms, an Olympic-size swimming pool and 200 acres of land for 12.50 pounds. (Actually, that bit is not really true but some of them do come with free gifts.)
  6. Bazookas are incredibly cheap (see 3 below).

Some bad things we've noticed about Greece so far:
  1. A tin of Heinz Baked Beans costs about as much as a tin of Beluga caviar.
  2. You can't get mature cheddar cheese anywhere.
  3. They have snakes, scorpions and all sorts of other wildlife that seem intent on stinging, biting and/or strangling you at the slightest opportunity.
  4. If you order a coffee, it comes in something the size of an eggcup with 27 heaped teaspoons of Extra Strength Gold Blend and hardly any water, so you have to chew it rather than drink it. (In some places, you can order your coffee 'pre-chewed', but we haven't tried this as we suspect that the proprietors might be exploiting immigrant workers.)
  5. The alphabet is very odd.

Some things we've noticed about Greece but aren't yet sure if they're good or bad:
  1. Elderly people flag you down and demand to be given lifts - sometimes to different countries.
  2. Kitchen work-surfaces here are several inches lower than in the UK. This means that anyone over 5'3" gets a backache doing the washing up. Apparently, this is because Greek men never cook or wash up. (Penny says this should go in the "Bad Things About Greece" section.)
So, as you can see, the reasons for living in Greece far outweigh the reasons for not living in Greece. OK, so it's only by one point so far, but it's early days yet. Statistically, therefore, living in Greece is a "good thing".


(c) Xerika, Februry 2008

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Rob
(I hope I have not blown your cover).

I enjoyed your blog, and have just retired:
m.parr@shu.ac.uk

...glad to see you survived fires.

Best wishes, Mike

Xerika said...

Hi Mike,

Great to hear from you and thanks for the comment.

You've retired??? But surely you're nowhere near old enough.

I'll email you properly soon.

All the best,

Xerika (Who's this Rob guy? ;))

Security Camera System said...

I think I want to go to Greece. I like the fact that they have cheap gas and wine. Thanks for sharing your insights of the country:)

Xerika said...

Hi, Security Camera System, and thanks for commenting.

Greece really is a great country and not just because of the 'cheap gas and wine' that you mention.

It also has its bizarre side, which I'll talk about here from time to time when I get the chance.

Best wishes,

Xerika

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Hi Xerica!

I live in Thailand, and the Thai word for snow comes from an ancient Sanskrit phrase that translates, roughly, "I have no frame of reference to understand what you're talking about."

Xerika said...

Bailish, thank you for that.

That is an absolute classic!

Unknown said...

Hey Rob ! just wanted to say that i'm really glad to have met you and Penny,that we have become friends and sometimes hang out at Tom's Irish bar in the village of Raches. I truly think that the two of you have been very brave - and i really admire that - to have made the decision to sell off all of your belongings in the UK and come and live in a place thats not even on a map - and i don't mean Greece but the specific area - and harvest all those olive trees. So, from a fellow hobby farmer who has come from Athens 3 years ago and is also trying to harvest olive trees - although a third of yours - may i say " Yiamas Rob and Penny " as we are the true fighters.

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