I received an interesting message on MySpace yesterday. Here it is:


Geia sou! My name is Niko, I'm a Greek musical artist from Nashville, Tennessee.
I’m writing to share my music with you! 20 mp3’s for free, no strings attached!
My dream is to share my music with the world but especially with Greece because it is the land of my roots! I love Greece - its land, its people, its culture.
Simply go to NikoOnline.com to download all 20 songs, absolutely free! All I ask for in return is that if you like the tunes, put them in your mp3 player or computer and share them with all your friends! Help make my dream come true!
If you’d like to be updated on when I’ll be performing live in your area and other exciting news, I invite you to sign up on my email list at NikoOnline.com Efkaristo, and say hello to beautiful Greece for me! Niko
P.S. If you enjoy my music, Please send me a friend request. :)
P.P.S. This photo was taken on Santorini last summer...

I liked the first song that I played, but not the second. Let me know what you think.



For this post I could repeat word for word what I wrote on this date last year about last nights fun beach party.



Except I managed to get a photo of a boy fire jumping by just clicking my camera automatically every few seconds.


This photo of a friends boat I am posting because it may give perspective to our house location. The blue dome seen on the skyline is the same one seen from our veranda.
It is photographed often. Here is one of my favourites from last March.


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Today I was transitioning between chores (read relaxing on the internet) and in my StumbleUpon network discovered a great site showing birds and other wildlife from Greece.

It is by wildlife photographer Panos Oikonomou.




See more photographs

This is one of Pano's photos of a hoopoe. We saw one from our veranda two years ago.

I just recently discovered StumbleUpon and am really enjoying it.

The large photo is one we took of a wierd rock formation in a remote part of Antiparos.

Read about the Aegean Wildlife Hospital on Paros.

Truly nothing noteworthy has been happening. Is that good or just boring?


The weather is getting hotter, day by day. I mention this because it is normal to have a few days of heat wave in June and this is the first normal thing about this year's weather. Like most other places it has been abnormal lately.


O.K. That is enough excitement for one post. Better luck next time.



These two pictures are of our local Piso Aliki beach.
The water is now comfortably warm for swimming yet still cool enough to be refreshing. Water temperature is more a function of the wind than of the sun--because it is always sunny.




I am just now reporting on an event from last March:
The Acropolis was formally proclaimed as the pre-eminent monument on
the European Cultural Heritage list of monuments. Even the French Culture Minister said
"this is the birthplace of the European civilisation".



This week the organisers of the New Seven Wonders of the World indicated that the Acropolis was currently in first place as the most significant monument. This is among public online and telephone voters and there are still about 24 days before the winner is announced on my birthday. See my previous post.


As I have said before it would be a crime against humanity for anyone to come to Greece and not see the Parthenon and visit the Acropolis.

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Photo from Greek Landscapes, a great photo site.


This is the name of a new magazine that is doing a very high quality job of showing off the best of all the Greek islands, large and small. Many local writers and photographers are contributing their best work to tell the real story from actual experiences.


That includes Karin and I in the newly published Summer edition. I write an overview of Paros and Karin writes about Joyce's Lemon Cake and the many ways we have developed to use abundant lemons, recipes included.


With us in the Summer issue are Kythira, Skiathos,Alonissos, Corfu, Crete and more.

The Spring issue included Thassos, Naxos, Lefkada and Crete.


This is a glossy, printed magazine published in the U.K.. You can learn about subscribing on the web, however, at


The news just gets better and better for ease--and hopefully cost--of flying to Greece.
Continental Airlines has just made a major announcement of daily non-stop flights between "New York" (Newark's Liberty International) and Athens. This New Jersey hub will connect to 230 additional destinations.

Newark Liberty International Airport

You can tell they are serious because the press release talks about reducing to four flights per week during the slow winter months and returning to seven flights in March 2008.


Also recently Air China said they would begin flights from Beijing to Athens via Dubai and fly direct if and when traffic warrants. Greece officials have recently been courting the growing Chinese tourism trade.


Including earlier announced new flights by other airlines--some of which are direct to island airports--more flights mean more visitors from more places. Maybe even enough that the ferry companies will be motivated to schedule better connections or the Greece government motivated to force Olympic Airways to become efficient. No, that is too unrealistic.

I have posted several times about various flotsam and jetsam that we have picked up on the beach. This recent news item, however, will cause me to be even more watchful of what floats in.

Hashish bricks wash up in Peloponnese
Port Authority officers confiscated 77 packages, 1 kilo of hashish each,

that washed ashore in the Kalo Nero beach in western Messinia,
Peloponnese, southern Greece.
The authority was notified by local people who found the first 6
packages. They were all damaged from being in the water for
several days. An investigation is underway to determine their source.

(ANA)

Update: About a week later they found a satchel on Crete with several more bricks in it.
I am guessing Greek island beachcombing has really picked up.

So many photo opportunities get away from us. Here is one that didn't.
We had just passed a marble cutting factory on the right and noticed their discard pile to the left. As we got closer we saw the small herd of goats sunning themselves in the late afternoon. They found us interesting to watch as well.




Riding the back roads into the isolated valley that holds the ancient Temple of Demeter I felt I was living a scene from countless movies that I saw as a child. We were the explorers searching for the treasure that was not visible to mere passers by. Then we found ourselves in a hidden valley lush in vegetation and at its center a magnificent temple.

It was quite interesting. This site is maintained by the Ministry of Culture so it has explanatory descriptions as well as a museum.

Update: Whoops, forgot this:
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While I am at it, check out AuctionAds. It's new but has the great potential of eBay.


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