Monday, 22 June 2015

A Week in Corfu

We were walking past a Travel Agent in Saltash when we saw an advert for a week in Corfu (or Kerkyra) for 178 pounds per person.  That was air fair and accommodation.  So we found ourselves staying in Sidari in the north of the island in the Monika Apartments,
 It was a two hour and forty minutes flight from Gatwick to Corfu which, whilst being part of Greece is very close to Albania
Sidari is approximately an hours drive from Kerkyra town (and airport)
Thanks to Google Earth for the maps.
 The Monika Apartments in Sidari

Looking along the beach from the Monika Apartments towards Sidari
The road from Kerkyra to Sidari climbed up over the mountains to Sidari. This is a view from the road through the Olive Trees towards Paleokastritsa.  

We firstly toured down the eastern side of the island from Sidari to Pelekas.
 We passed through little villages and Olive Groves, some with distant views of the Ionian Sea and  occasionally past picturesque ruins.

 Just down the cast from Sidari we came to a village called Agios Stefano.  Confusingly there is another Agios Stefano on the western side of the Island
 We found a great coffee shop there!

Just inland was a picturesque village called Dafni  with great views

The resort of Agios Georgios is not far from Dafni.
Not far from here is the coastal castle of Angelokastro which dates back to the 143th Century.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelokastro_%28Corfu%29
The village of Lakones is perched high on the hill with two or three restaurants with a magnificent view over Paleokastritsa and the surrounding coastline

A view of the coast from the road entering Paleokastritsa
A view of one of the beaches at Paleokastritsa
 Looking along the beach towards the Monastery at Paleokastritsa
A view of the Monastery
 Just a little further down the East Coast is a village called Pelakas.  Just outside the village is a lookout o the top of a mountain called the Kaisers Throne.  Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany bought a Palace not far from Kerkyra Town on the west coast of Corfu in 1907 as a holiday house.  Apparently he liked to come here to watch the sunset.  It has fantastic panoramic views, this one looking across the island over Kerkyra Town towards the north western end of the island.
My Mum, Viv, enjoys the view.
We took a drive down the North Western coast of the island past the point which is the closest point to the mainland, in this case Albania.  On the way we passed the small town of Kassiopi.  This headland is the site of a Byzantine fort later occupied by the Venetians.
Not far away is a delightful village confusingly called Agios Stefanos, but not to be mixed with the other village of that name we visited earlier!  
 This is the closest point to Albania.  In fact it is so close, my mobile phone suddenly decided it was in Albania and I got a few welcome texts from Albanian Telcos!
The bay appears to be popular with yachtsmen from around the world.  I spotted one yacht sporting the Australian Flag there
There is another very fine coffee shop there right on the bay.  This photo shows a yacht getting under way with the hydrofoil ferry that runs from Kerkyra Town to Albania speeding by in the background.

Not far down the coast is another dramatic view across the straits to Albania.  One of the Villas that Gerald Durrell wrote about in his book "My Family And Other Animals" is not far from here.  That book is a great memoir of an English boy growing up on Corfu.
We took a day cruise from Kerkyra Town to two small islands to the south of Corfu - Paxos and Antipaxos.  As we left the ferry terminal we passed by the two magnificent Venetian forts that dominate the city of Kerkyra.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Fortress,_Corfu
And this is the newer fortress.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Fortress
 We passed down the southern coast of Corfu, past the resort of Kavos
and then the southern tip of the island.
Our first view of Paxos was the entry to the little village of Lakka in the north of Paxos, and then down the west coast of that Island
 The eastern coast of the island has many sea caves, some of them quite large
Trip boats sail right into one of them

 One of the guide books I have read suggests the the Greek Navy hid one of their submarines in one of these caves during the second World War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_cave
The main town is Gaios which is very much a tourist town and is the hub for cruise boats
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paxi
The quayside
the main square.

We had a great week in Corfu and flew home to Gatwick.  On the drive down to Saltash we stopped off for lunch in Winchester, the ancient capital of Wessex, and later, of England.
In the Main street of Winchester looking towards one of the medieval gates
 and down to the Buttercross
 We had a great sea bass lunch in this Italian Restaurant
Winchester Cathedral
https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Winchester_Cathedral
The Statue of King Alfred the Great, one of the greatest Saxon Kings.
http://www.royal.gov.uk/HistoryoftheMonarchy/KingsandQueensofEngland/TheAnglo-Saxonkings/AlfredtheGreat.aspx


No comments:

Post a Comment