Calgary Herald

GREECE’S IDEAL QUAINT ISLAND

Car-free Hydra charms visitors with its laid-back vibe, writes Rick Steves.

- Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

The island of Hydra — less than two hours south of Athens by ferry — offers the ideal Greek island experience, and doesn’t even require a long journey across the Aegean.

It has one real town, no real roads, no cars, and not even any bikes. Water taxis whisk travellers from the quaint little harbour to isolated beaches and tavernas. Donkeys are the main way to transport things here. These sure-footed beasts of burden, laden with everything from sandbags and bathtubs to bottled water, climb stepped lanes. Behind each mule-train toils a human pooper-scooper; I imagine picking up after your beast is required. On Hydra, a traffic jam is three donkeys and a fisherman.

Hydra (pronounced EE-drah) is hardly undiscover­ed. In 1956, Sophia Loren came here to play a Hydriot sponge diver in the film Boy on a Dolphin, propelling the little island onto the internatio­nal stage. (A statue honouring the film sits just outside of town along the coastal path.) By the 1960s, Hydra had become a favourite retreat for celebritie­s, well-heeled tourists, and artists and writers, who drew inspiratio­n from the idyllic surroundin­gs.

The late Canadian songwriter Leonard Cohen lived here for a time — and was inspired to compose his beloved song Bird on the Wire after observing just that here on Hydra. To honour the expat poet, the town is naming the street in front of his house after him. Not that street names mean much — locals ignore addresses, and few lanes are labelled. Expect to get lost in Hydra … and enjoy it when you do.

Today, visitors only have to count the yachts to figure out that Hydra’s economy is still based on the sea. Tourists wash ashore with the many private and public boats that come and go, but few venture beyond the harbourfro­nt. Locals, proud of the extravagan­t yachts moored for the night, like to tell of movie stars who make regular visits.

Little Hydra, which has produced military heroes, influentia­l aristocrat­s, and political leaders, is packed with history. Rusted old cannons are scattered about town, and black, pitted anchors decorate squares. Hydra also has a few small museums, including a historical museum and a wealthy shipping magnate’s mansion.

But while the history is somewhat interestin­g, the beauty of Hydra is in relaxing at a cafe and aimlessly wandering its back lanes. Once, I decided to head uphill from my hotel, and my small detour became a delightful little odyssey. While I had no intention of anything more than a lazy stroll, one inviting lane after another drew me up, up, up to the top of the town. Here, shabby homes enjoyed grand views, tired burros ambled along untethered, and island life trudged on, oblivious to tourism.

Although Hydra’s beaches are nothing to get excited about, there’s no shortage of places to swim. The one swimming spot right in Hydra town has steps that lead down from the sidewalk to a series of small concrete platforms with ladders into the sea. And a few decent beaches lie within a pleasant, easy walk of town: Mandraki Bay, Kaminia Castello, and Vlychos. Distant beaches on the southweste­rn tip of the island (Bisti and Agios Nikolaos), really get you away from it all, but are best reached by boat.

As sunset nears, I head for the rustic and picturesqu­e village of Kaminia, which hides behind the headland from Hydra, about a 15-minute walk along the coastal path. Kaminia’s pocket-sized harbour shelters the community’s fishing boats, and its taverna, perched on a bluff above, boasts my favourite, irresistib­le dinner views on Hydra.

Sitting on the porch with a glass of ouzo and some munchies, I watch the sun dip gently into the Saronic Gulf.

At twilight, I walk back to town along the lamplit coastal lane, under a ridge lined with derelict windmills. Back in town, I settle on a ferry cleat the size of a stool, scanning the scene. Big flat-screen TVs flicker from every other yacht. All the high rollers seem to be back on board watching movies. I observe the pleasant evening routine of strolling and socializin­g. Dice clatter on backgammon boards, entreprene­urial cats seem busy, children chase soccer balls, and in a low-profile corner, a tethered goat chews on something inedible.

From the other end of town comes the happy music of a christenin­g party. Dancing women fill the building, while their children mimic them in the street. Farther down, two elderly, black-clad women sit like tired dogs on the curb.

Succumbing to the lure of a pastry shop, I order some honeysoake­d baklava. I tell the baker I’m American. “Oh,” he says, shaking his head with sadness and pity, “You work too hard.”

I answer, “Right. But not today.”

Little Hydra, which has produced military heroes ... aristocrat­s, and political leaders, is packed with history.

 ?? PHOTOS: RICK STEVES ?? Travellers can linger in tavernas and cafes along Hydra’s harbour, where humble boats and luxury yachts bob in the stunningly blue water.
PHOTOS: RICK STEVES Travellers can linger in tavernas and cafes along Hydra’s harbour, where humble boats and luxury yachts bob in the stunningly blue water.
 ??  ?? There are no cars on Hydra, so baggage-laden visitors may need to hire a donkey.
There are no cars on Hydra, so baggage-laden visitors may need to hire a donkey.

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