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Church with the Corinthians

Today is our last day in Greek, and we were picked up early by Manos for a private tour of Corinth, which is about an hour and a half away from Athens. The drive west was absolutely breathtaking, as we followed the coast nearly the entire way. We stopped to take a picture at the Corinth Canal, then made our way to the Greek Orthodox Church of Corinth, where we went inside and witnessed a real Corinthian service. We’re going through the book of 1 Corinthians at Bayou City Fellowship right now, so I was nerding out the whole time. We drove through the city looking at ruins, then rode up to the top of the highest mountain where we walked through the fortress that protected the Corinthians for thousands of years. Next was the wine tastings – my favorite. Our favorite place was Palivou Estate, where the wine tasted like magic. We bought the biggest bottle (against my best traveling/luggage-weight-limit judgement) of their award winning Ammos Reserve. After the tastings, we went to the ruins of the Mycenaens. The cave we entered was built in the 12th CE B.C., which is ancient. We headed for a late lunch after seeing the tomb of Agamemnon (in the movie Troy), then trekked back to Athens, winding along the water. Exhausted after lots of walking, we’re packing and getting ready for Paris, as our flight leaves at 6:45 AM. The City of Lights on Christmas Eve – my dream come true!DSC_1799

Sasha’s meal is cooking on the fire behind him…DSC_1765

I love this countryDSC_1769

Mycenaen ruins – built over 3,000 years ago
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Because we were tired of regular, boring posesDSC_1758

Merry Christmas – we bought the barrelDSC_1745 DSC_1731 We had to stop the car because of sheep crossing…
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Our favorite wine at Palivou Estate
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Looking down on Agememnon’s cave at the bottomDSC_1718

Atop the Corinthian FortressDSC_1705 DSC_1706 DSC_1693

The Corinthian Church – loved experiencing this!DSC_1694 DSC_1683

The Corinth Canal

And finally – the Parthenon

Our final day in Athens proved just as busy as the others, as we visited the last of the “must sees.” We ate lunch at Thanasis, which was the most Greek restaurant so far, and the meal was absolutely delicious (see pictures below). If only the house wine in the states tasted this good! We entered the Kapnikarea Church in the Monastiraki area, where we paid tribute to the living and the dead in true Orthodox manner. Afterwards, we walked up to the Parthenon, which is truly breathtaking. It was very cold and windy today, so we stopped by Piazza Duomo for coffee (Sasha went Irish, naturally). Then we walked another 2 miles (uphill, oh heavens) to the highest point in Athens – Mt. Lycabettus. We were winded when we got to the top, but it was worth it for the views. We drank tea and coffee at the restaurant, then rode the funicular to the base and wandered through the Kolonaki area on the way back to the hotel. Another amazing day – wine tour in Corinth tomorrow!
DSC_1567Sasha, loving his Greek beer, ready for the most authentic meal yet at Thanasis
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The spicy green peppers proved too hot for my darling (a true Semple “man down”)

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The most beautiful Greek salad everDSC_1585

Amidst renovations of the Parthenon, with his man purseDSC_1578

An amazing view of Athens from the AcropolisDSC_1615

We finally made it to the Parthenon (but almost didn’t for the third time…)DSC_1610

Sasha with Mount Lycabettus in the background – our next challenge – which we conqueredDSC_1609

Greek history everywhere you look – such an amazing cityDSC_1606

A wet and windy day doesn’t damper our traveling spirits 🙂
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A lot bigger than you think – a true Kodak moment
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I loved the Turkish flag pic so much, I had to…
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The entrance to the AcropolisDSC_1646

Deep thoughts atop Mount Lycabettus (we climbed up more than a mile, as we didn’t see the funicular – oh boy)DSC_1673

My wilderness man at the restaurant on top of Mt. LycabettusDSC_1669

City as far as you can see
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St. George Church on top of Mt. Lycabettus (highest point in Athens) – destination wedding?
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Wind like you’ve never felt before

And finally, two iPhone pics:

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5 o’clock somewhere – Irish coffee time

Oh, Us? We’re Greek too.

Today’s pace differently dramatically from the first five days. We woke up late (quite a treat after many 5am starts), then walked to Avocado, which is one of the top 5 best restaurants in Athens and is a vegan/vegetarian spot (Sasha is an angel). It was absolutely, 100% delicious. We ordered falafel, a quinoa dish called Ahimsa, and the Forest Burger for Sasha – all amazing. We got a vegan chocolate pie, which tasted like heaven. Afterwards, we hauled over to Hammam, which is a relaxing bath massage place that was highly rated on Trip Advisor. The reviews were not wrong – this was one of the best experiences of the trip – my favorite massage to date. We felt so calm and relaxed after and sat sipping Chai (tea), while talking to a local Greek woman. The people here are so friendly and are helping us with our Greek. So far we’ve mastered hello (yasus), thank you (elfaristo), and please (parakalo) – not sure about any of those spellings! We wandered through Monastiraki, where Sasha got a gyro and I bought one of my Greek best friends a little gift, then I went into H&M. It is infinitely better in Europe, so naturally I had to get a few items. We drank some Greek coffee and wine at Lucafe after, then watched Greek people ice stake at the center of the square. It is obviously not their sport (see picture below) – we had a few giggles about that. After a 2 mile detour to get to dinner (woopsies), we ended up at Manh Manh – another top Trip Advisor spot. The meal was delicious – we have yet to be dissatisfied with food. Thank goodness we walked 8.8 miles today (Google mapped it out), or else I’d be very worried about my new clothes fitting when I return to the states. Hitting the big Athenian monuments tomorrow before our wine tour to Corinth on Sunday!

PS One highlight of the day was being mistaken as Greeks on multiple occasions. Sasha concluded that we are both actually Greek. I’m from the city of Kappa Alpha Theta and he originated in Tau Kappa Epsilon.

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It was so good, I don’t even consider him being a “good sport”DSC_1522

Quinoa and veggie sausage – what more could I ask for?
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The well-worth-it Hammam BathDSC_1525

Drinking his tea – he’s obsessed
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Relaxed and clean post massage/bathDSC_1536

About as far from Avocado Vegan Restaurant as you can get!DSC_1538

This man is my gyro (beard and all!)DSC_1539

Home sweet home!DSC_1547

Apparently Greeks are not ice skatersDSC_1564

Stumbled upon this stadium on our walk back to the hotel

Opa! in Athens, Greece

We arrived in Athens around noon, bought metro tickets, then realized the metro workers were on strike. Go figure – only in Greece! It was a pain at first, but then we realized it was just “typical Greek,” so laughed about it and hopped in a taxi (a nice yellow Mercedes CL500!) to go the hotel. We ate at the nearby Oroscopo for lunch and had a baked feta cheese appetizer that was to die for (see picture below). Afterwards, we walked about a mile and a half to the Acropolis to see the Parthenon, which was already closed so we took a bunch of pictures from the base and went to the Acropolis Museum, which is a must see. We ate dinner at Strofi, which overlooks the entire Acropolis – absolutely stunning. They served us complimentary kefi, which is a Greek liquor. Our meal was amazing – Greek salad to start (of course). Sasha had a craving for frozen yogurt, so I googled it, thinking we’d have little luck, but we found one a mile away. We walked to Yogolicious – real Greek froyo – unparalleled anywhere else. We found ourselves in the Monastiraki area, which is totally hustle-and-bustle. Lights, people, music everywhere – we loved it. We have heard mixed reviews about Athens, but it’s truly one of my favorite cities in the world.DSC_1387

Baked feta cheese with fresh tomatoes – we had to have this as our first Greek appetizer – it was heavenly!
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Guards protecting the President’s house (with pom-pom shoes on)DSC_1409

This is my trademark: climbing trees in foreign citiesDSC_1424

Sunset on Athens
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The cliffside view of the Parthenon – going back today for pictures and viewing!DSC_1463

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In the Acropolis – at the base of the ParthenonDSC_1482

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Strolling through the streets of the Monastiraki area at night was amazing – lights, people and Christmas music!DSC_1509

Above is the real Greek frozen yogurt shop we found when wandering home. And a few photos from my iPhone:photo 1 (8) photo 2 (8)Strofi, where we ate dinner, had a rooftop room with the most amazing view of the Parthenon. And deadly Greek liquor (complimentary – geez, thanks!).

Opa!

I’ve always wanted to go to the Greek Festival in Houston, and when one of my best friends, Patrick, said he was interested in going to, I was elated. The weather was perfect (apparently 80 degrees – felt hotter), the music was lively, and the wine (oh the Greek wine!) was delicious. So much so, in fact, that Pat and I drank the whole bottle  while sitting on a shaded section of the curb, catching up on life. I cannot wait to go again next year – I’ll probably go at night so I can listen to the live music.

 

And my favorite (on Instagram) – our empty bottle! Opa!