The Scottish Mail on Sunday

My new way of exploring the rosier

- By Elinor Goodman

AFTER a week in Cyprus, I came back smelling of roses. My clothes, my shoes, even my books were gently infused with the scent as a result of a bottle of rosewater breaking in my luggage. Still, it could have been worse: had I been in Cyprus a week earlier, I might have come back smelling like a donkey.

As a single traveller, I often plan my holidays around festivals. The weekend before I arrived in Cyprus, there had been a donkey festival in a village outside Limassol. Donkeys still roam wild on a peninsula in the north east of the island, but in the south they have largely been replaced for farm work by machines.

One farmer, though, has accumulate­d 172 long-eared, pale-nosed beauties. Mares are used for milking, and he makes products under the inevitable brand name of Cleopatra.

The blurb says that the milk is an anti-ageing agent, so had I gone to the festival I would have no doubt filled my suitcase with donkey soap and moisturise­rs.

I stopped at the donkey farm on my way up to a mountain village. The arrival of spring, known as anthestiri­a, is celebrated across the island. Some large resorts have big parades but I headed for Agros, where a century ago a local teacher set up the Pupils Associatio­n for the Disseminat­ion of the Rose Bush, with the aim of starting up rosewater production.

The result today is that 25 acres near the village are covered with a blush of deep pink Damask roses. But the scent is very short-lived, and to make rosewater the plants have to be picked at dawn. So visitors are invited to get up a 5am and join the pickers.

In truth, I didn’t make it up the mountain until after dawn, but when I got there, the village street was full of people demonstrat­ing the various uses for rose petals. One woman stirred a great vat of rose and honey soup, thickened with flour, which was surprising­ly delicious, while a man showed how rosewater is distilled. I bought a large bottle and it was this that broke in my luggage.

 ??  ?? FLOWER POWER: Gathering petals for the production of rosewater in the village of Agros
FLOWER POWER: Gathering petals for the production of rosewater in the village of Agros
 ??  ?? RICH HISTORY: Stavrovoun­i Monastery in Larnaca, the highest on the island
RICH HISTORY: Stavrovoun­i Monastery in Larnaca, the highest on the island

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