Meteora—it's not for flip flops!

in #travel6 years ago (edited)

The next place on my and @martibis' Greek adventure was Meteora. This was actually something we found out about from steemitworldmap. Hey, what a useful website. Some cool people must be working on that project! Although there are a few Meteroa posts pinned to the map, a couple of weeks before our trip @marymik23 made this post so it was fresh in our minds.  

Basically, Meteroa is a bunch of cool looking rocks with monasteries on top of them. Millions of years ago it was all underwater, so a combination of water and geological fault lines running through the area made them look like this. I'm sure my geologist mates would be better at explaining the process, but Facebook seems to be shadow banning my posts so I doubt they'll even see this, let alone offer a technical explanation.

So many buses, so little time

Now, you'd think getting here from Delphi by bus would be relatively straight forward since it's a reasonably well-established tourist route. At least half of us leaving Delphi were going to Kalambaka (the town below the rocks). But no. You have to change buses about five times so it ends up taking up most of the day. It's not overly complicated, but it is annoying and adds quite a bit of unnecessary journey time.

We arrived in Kalambaka late afternoon and checked into El Greco Hostel (along with a few others from the bus), where we got a free welcome drink and the guy told us where the good places to hike to for sunset views are. 

I liked this hostel except everyone smoked. At one point I had to leave the roof terrace cos it was like a fucking chimney up there. I was forced to go sit in our room with the Kiwi chick who I'm pretty sure was the only other non-smoker in the place. We had a good five-minute rant discussion about this. Seriously, what is it with Europeans and smoking? Why??? It's gross. And you stink. And you're probably going to die from some preventable lung disease. Bah! 

He's gone walkabout to Kalambaka!

Well, since I'm now totally sidetracked, Kalambaka sounds like an Australian Aboriginal word, doesn't it? It just sounds cool. I like saying it. "Oi, where you going? Kalambaka mate."

The internet says it's of Turkish original meaning 'powerful fortress' but I'm pretty sure the dude at the hostel—who is a local—said it means 'nice views' or something to that effect. I guess either definition works.

Views from and of Kalambaka. 

Middle right: Holy Trinity Monastery.

Getting back to the main story

After finishing up that day's Travel Digest, passively smoking a dozen cigarettes, and drinking our free glass of wine, @martibis and I headed off up a mountain. It was a good 30–40 min hike up to the closest monastery, Holy Trinity. 

This wasn't the best spot for watching the sunset, but @martibis and I had the place to ourselves, which was great for taking photos. It's good we went up on our first evening too, cos the next day was raining so we would have missed out on any sunset if we'd waited.

Holy Trinity Monastery.

Since neither of us had any battery left in our phones we headed back down the unlit path before it got dark. Being lost in the forest with no light source was not overly appealing. At least to me. 

Obviously we stopped for wine when we got back to town. Once again, this place was run by a weird, little old Greek lady, but the wine was €1 or something and it was quite good.

Sunsets and wine.

Come for the monasteries, stay for... the monasteries

The next day we did the hostel's half day walking tour. This was really good since it was based on tips, making it very affordable for backpackers. Plus the dude from the hostel was awesome. The only downside was this one girl who trying to save money or something by not doing laundry—even though it was only €3—stank of BO. There was no way her t-shirt would have passed the sniff test when she put it on, so I don't know what she was thinking by wearing it. Anyway, the mission of the tour became to always walk in front of her.

At their peak, there were 24 monasteries. Now there are seven, although one just recently opened so most websites still say six. The rest were destroyed in various battles and revolutions and World War 2. Or they were abandoned cos the monks got a bit lazy and they became too hard to get to. 

Why did they build them on top of mountains? First, isolation, since monks don't like people. Second, to be closer to God, since monks like God. And there was a third reason but I've forgotten. Million dollar views maybe? Workout benefits? I don't know.

Top left: St. George Madilas cave. Top middle: monk jail (cave).

Ypapanti Monastery is the one that's recently reopened and has the best story. The Turks tried to bomb this one a bunch of times but kept failing cos the Greeks could see them coming across the plain. So, the Turks hauled a cannon up the mountain opposite and finally blew it up. A cross now marks the spot where the cannon was. 

A cool monk also lived here—Papaflessas—who later became a pirate, and then formed a rebellion against the Turks. He escaped death a bunch of times, which really pissed the Turks off, so in the end they tricked him with a false white flag. Once he was captured they tied his limbs to a stretching machine or horses or something and then yanked them all off and he died. His statue now sits atop the mountain near the cross.

Ypapanti Monastery

Next up was the Monastery of Great Meteoron. It's the largest one and a museum. All the tour buses go here.

There is a room full of skulls for some reason, and we learnt that Greek monks like making wine, unlike the Belgian monks who like making beer. Obviously the moral of this story is monks are boozers. 

From here, you can easily see the Holy Monastery of Varlaam. 

Top left: the Monastery of Great Meteoron. Top right: Holy Monastery of Varlaam. 

Bottom left: monk cable car at the Monastery of Great Meteoron. Everyone else has to take the stairs.

Next, we walked back down towards the town stopping at a hidden cave on the way. While I was posing for this shot I was having a bit of a freak out as there was a big drop on the other side.

Tortoises live in the forest and were just walking around, as they do. Most people on the tour thought they lived in water but that's turtles you idiots. Tortoises are land-dwelling creatures!

Caves, views and locals.

The last two monasteries we saw were Rousanou and St. Nicholas Anapavsa. However, the only ones we went in were Ypapanti and Great Meteoron. I think seeing them from the outside is better anyway. The only one I don't have a photo of is St. Stephen’s. This one is east of the Holy Trinity Monastery and we should have gone up there on our sunset walk since it wasn't covered in the tour, but we didn't know that at the time. You can see it from the town, I just don't have a photo cos it was too far away. 

Left-right: Rousanou Monastery, St. Nicholas Anapavsa Monastery, and two monastery ruins.

Vegan food

Even though Kalambaka is bigger than Delphi there weren't any dedicated veggie restaurants on Happy Cow. There was a decent sized supermarket next to hostel which had alpro chocolate desserts, but that was about it in terms of packaged foods. Obviously you can get Greek salads, fava beans, etc. in restaurants but we didn't go to any since travelling with @martibis was the budget part of my trip. I pretty much survived on bread, salad, and chocolate desserts while I was here. 

It's all over red rover

The next morning I woke early to get the 5.50am train to Athens. Thankfully, the station was only a two-minute walk from the hostel. However, this meant saying goodbye to @martibis the night before since there was no way he was getting up that early. When I asked him later if he heard me leave, the answer was no. Hopefully I didn't wake the others in our dorm up either. 

I had a good time travelling with @martibis so I hope we get an opportunity to travel together again in the future.

Thumbs up or thumbs down?

Thumbs up of course. This place was TOTALLY AMAZING. Well, except for all the smoking backpackers but they'll probably be dead soon.

Check out this post on steemitworldmap.

!steemitworldmap 39.705133 lat 21.625124 long Meteroa d3scr

Previous stop, Delphi

Next stop, Athens


Footer by @ryivhnn

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I just couldn't resist!!!! 😂😂
3DJuaKC.jpg

Lol! Brillant. Now we're all together.

Gorgeous post, choo! I love this one very much~ the text you put are very easy to read and I feel as if im travelling alongside, and the pictures really help~ I love how down to earth your style is, very friendly, very accessible, very lovely.

The monasteries in this post in particular are so unusual and amazing, makes me feel like the world is larger than i thought it was! Gorgeous feeling~

Thank you for putting these travel blog posts together~ I am one who benefits heaps from such entries since I am a terrible traveler myself (one that keeps postponing everything ever because i hate change to my daily routine)... (yes, i know i am a dummy)

XD

love u, choo <3

Thank you Spidey. I love this comment. Only one more to go though sorry. Then I'm out of material until my next trip.

WOW visiting there must have been such an experience, places liek this I wonder how they got all the supplies up the mountain to build the MOnastries

I feel like the hostel dude told us. Pullies or something. Sherpas. But I can't be certain. Regardless, it would be hard.

Ohh yes its amazing what they managed to achieve back then

Ha I think the Balkans are the worst for smoking. And I can handle the smoke but they are mad for it. I remember buying a packet and they would say big or little. Meaning did I want a carton like everyone else buys cause they are only equivalent to 10Euro.

Anyway this place looks stunning to visit and very photogenic. Worth the fire bus swap over.

Although you were gone for such a short time you did alot of stuff.

Lol, big packs or little packs. Not seen that before. I'm guessing they don't have health warnings and grotesque photos on them either?

Yes, it was totally worth all the bus changes. It was definitely the highlight for me.

This place looked amazing Choo! My favourit’s part of the post would have to be the girl with the terrible BO 😂 and of course the scenery. Look forward to the next stop 👍

Thanks Harry. I try to add random amusing tidbits to keep it interesting so it's not all "I went here, and did this", blah blah, snore.

I reckon you should be a narrator for the Horrible Histories series :D

Such a very cool, awesome, fantastic experience!

If it wasn't for the super-long bus ride, the smoking, and the climbing I might have put it on my bucket list, lol.

Lol. I don't know what that is, but it sounds funny.

Nah, this is one of the best places I've ever been to in Europe. It should totally go on your list.

Based on a series of books by Terry Deary, "Horrible Histories" informs kids of historical events while being stuffed full of blood, battles and black humor. Each episode features sketches representing a selection of different eras and civilizations throughout history. (copied from the imdb blurb)

You can find clips on YT, they really are a great giggle.

I suspect I'd have to take at least a year to travel to all the places I'd want to see on my 'trip of a lifetime' as my bucket list grows. :D

Your pictures are Crim worthy too, Choo, make them bigger! 😉

Love the two sunset pics of yours and Martibi's

💗

They're not. But thanks for saying so.

I like the collages. Scrolling through heaps of photos that take ages to load just annoys me. Plus it makes my photos look less shit if the focus is not just on one.

Ah, this is beyond awesome! I never thought I'd read about a cool monk, but here we are... Steem is amazing. So many of these photos are just spectacular, that first one is so good! I want to go to there.... (except I'd probs stay forever).

Why thank you! Yeah, that monk totally rocked.

Well it's a worthy place of staying in, if you had to choose somewhere Ninj.

Kehehe even if they’re dead soon, the new bunch of smokers would replace their place.

So much interesting monasteries that you visited, unexpectedly a bit boozy and a bit gory too. If they’re boozing a lot, they’re probably snogging too XD.

-upvoted-

Well, let's hope the kids today are smarter than the millennials, who should actually know better.

Monks snogging each other? There's a twist.

Wow. Such gorgeous scenery. That monastery on the rock is unreal. Really great post Choo! Thanks for taking us along with you on these adventures :) Much love - Carl

Thanks Carl. And if you had a hand in my curie approval!

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