Cruise:Athens

Thursday, August 31

We slept in until 7:40 (even after the alarm rang at 7 am) and had just enough time to grab some wonderful poached eggs Florentine in the Da Vinci dining area and then meet our tour at 8:45. We were on a tour for the Acropolis and then a few hours of time on our own. Our bus did a short drive around Piraeus, which is the port for Athens. We basically just drove around the port looking at the expensive yachts parked there. The bus then took us for a drive around Athens. Our first stop was the 19th century Olympic stadium, which was the first Olympic stadium of modern times. It is a long oval shape and the entire stadium is made of marble. This is where the Olympic torch begins and ends for each of the games. Each location for the modern Olympics was carved into the marble at the front of the stadium.

The all-marble Olympic stadium

We then drove around some other sights like the ruins for the temple of Zeus, and then made our way to the Acropolis (it means top of the city). To say it was crowded is a gross understatement. It was an absolute madhouse of tour busses and people complaining about the climb they were about to face. Luckily we had wonderful clear weather.

The Acropolis

The climb up wasn't as bad as expected although the marble steps had the potential to be very slippery. Our guide's name was Aphrodite (no kidding) and she did a good 30 min story telling session on top of the Acropolis. We learned all about the current structures and the destruction that had taken place on the Parthenon. We had a while to walk around and take pictures. The Parthenon is truly amazing in construction, design and longevity. There are not straight lines used in the construction of the Parthenon. It appears as though the columns are straight but the slight curvature actually makes up for the natural distortion from our eyes. They were pretty smart. Picture taking was difficult because of the number of people on the Acropolis. We were thankful to have the digital camera with the video display as well as the wide-angle lens so we could fit more in the pictures.

Parthenon

Theater, still used for concerts

Jill and Parthenon with wide angle

This picture doesn't even show how crowded it was

Kind of a typical shot of Athens : temple of Zeus, city around it and mountains in the background, hidden by smog

These are the famous columns made to look like women

The main entrance to the Acropolis

Back on the bus we drove around some more while Aphrodite pointed out the university, which is all neo classic Roman style in architecture. We were finally dropped at the Plaka, which is what we were looking forward to. The Plaka is an area of streets that have vendors, restaurants and more. It's where you go to see and be seen. We navigated the Plaka using our internet guide Matt (we had found a great guide to Athens on the internet). We had lunch for about $13 each with Greek Beer, Greek salad, mousakka (Greek shepherds pie of sorts), and souvlaki (lamb skewers). It was all good but too much food. We met another couple from the cruise that was sitting next to our table at lunch. They had done this exact same cruise last year except in the opposite direction (Spain to Turkey.)

Lunch in the Plaka

We then found Brettos just down the street. This place is the oldest distillery and makes what is supposed to be some of the best Ouzo in Athens (think Greek Sambucca). Since neither of us like licorice, we found it a bit hard to choke down. Keith ended up drinking both of the small shot size glasses while Jill drank both complimentary glasses of water to dull the taste of the tiny sip she had. Keith was spacey the rest of the afternoon. We bought a small bottle of Ouzo to bring home for the novelty of it (anyone visiting us is welcome to have as much as they want!!), as well as a bottle of Greek olive oil.

Brettos

Thankfully, the Greek vendors were nothing like the pushy Turkish vendors so walking the streets and browsing was a pleasant experience. We found Byzantino, a jewelry store recommended by our internet guide Matt. They have some truly amazing museum quality jewelry in Greek styles. We were surprised to see the couple that we had just met from lunch. The wife had bought a necklace here last year and had to come back for a bracelet to match. The museum quality handmade items being way beyond our price threshold, Jill found two rings with the "Greek key" style. One ring is plain gold and the other is gold with white sapphires. Of course we also had to buy a pair of earrings to match.

With not much time left, we walked the streets some more and bought some natural sponges, more olive oil, and a tin of olives. Back at the passenger terminal we spent what we had left in drachma on a bottle of Greek wine and a phone card to call Chris and check on the dogs at home alone. Back on ship, we changed into swimsuits and found some deck chairs. The pool being too cold, we opted for the hot tub and then read books on deck. The sail-away from Piraeus was impressive since the port looked tiny and the ship huge. We sailed past other cruise ships and ferrys on our way out of port.

Sail-away from Piraeus

This nights dinner was a Greek theme with baklava for dessert. We ended the night with a hypnotist show but only a couple of the people on stage ended up hypnotized so it wasn't terribly exciting.

Day At Sea, Friday, Sept 1

We slept until 9 am and were happy not to have a tour to catch, and then read in bed until almost 11 am with a gentle rocking from the 4-8 foot seas. We got up for lunch and ended up at a table with Carol (one of our dinner table companions) and another couple (mid/late 30's) that had done a lot of cruising. They had some amusing stories to tell so it was a nice lunch and a good change of pace from the usual boring people we got seated by for lunch. (Your lunch table is a potluck of people depending on who walks in the dining room at the same time as you). We shared a bottle of wine with Carol over lunch and had the excellent linguine with seafood.

Following lunch we went to the art auction for free champagne and to check out some of the art for sale. Following the art auction we went to a wine tasting in the Botticelli dining room. Are you getting the idea here??? Needless to say it was nap city after that. We both slept about 2 hours, waking just in time to shower and dress for dinner and the second formal night. Jill wore her tailor made blue/green silk dress (Keith was tuxing it again).

Jill in the Thai silk dress

The picture taking lines were long so we were slightly late for dinner. We both had veal cordon blue as a main course. Gravlax for starters and salmon pasta (excellent as usual) for the first course. After dinner we went to the Billy Vader comedy show in the Princess Theater. It was fun watching him make fun of the annoying cruise director Keith Cox.