Wednesday, 21 May 2014

A new year – and new disasters


Not many photos because they are all places we have been to before, so pictures are in previous postings.

We flew to Athens on Wednesday 30 April and stayed with Lena for two nights before taking the bus to Kranidi and then got a taxi to Kilarda on Friday morning. Mia Hara was covered in sand from the Sahara, but otherwise was as we had left her.
We had sent a box of bits and pieces to Kilarda by Parcelforce, but just before we left home we learned that it had been returned from Germany because it contained illegal liquids and aerosols. We thought we had sent it by road, but it turned out that Parcelforce flies things to Greece from Germany, which was why it had been checked. We had booked it through Parcels Please who were very good in dealing with the problem, arranging to send it instead by DHL, though DHL would not take aerosols. We decided to send it to Leros, rather than have to wait a week or ten days in Kilarda for it to arrive. When the parcel got home Andrew and Becky took out the aerosols, repacked it and sent it off again, but it meant we were without a lot of things we needed for maintenance and repair, so we decided to head off for Leros as soon as possible. It got to Leros in four days – it turned out that DHL also fly things to Athens. When we collected the box we found that it had been opened and DHL had opened the box inside containing a new water pump, but this time had resealed it and sent it on its way.
Over the winter we had bought a new propeller, a Brunton’s autoprop. I had intended to fit it myself, but when we got the mechanic in the yard to check the shaft it turned out that when we fitted a new shaft in Marmaris last year they had replaced the 1 ¼” shaft with a 30mm shaft and turned the end to fit the old propeller, so the shaft needed to be re-turned for the new prop to fit. The mechanic then found that the shaft was bent, so we needed a new shaft. This probably explained why the new engine had been so noisy when under load. When we got back the job was done, with our beautiful new prop on the new shaft.
Over the weekend we cleaned and polished the outside of the hull till it was like a mirror, except that all the little scratches and blemishes showed, and got things cleaned and sorted below. On Friday night we ate at the excellent giro place in Kilarda for a quick cheap meal. On Saturday night we went into town for dinner, planning to go to the fish restaurant we had been to last year, but the place and the one next door were both empty. As we walked back we saw that some people were eating in a little place with no sign and no menus outside, which we had thought was a bar. We went in, but all the tables inside were reserved so we sat at a little table outside. Before we could order, the owner started to bring us an array of delicious starters, eventually asking if we would also like some horta and grilled sardines, so we ended up having a superb and very cheap dinner.
In the meantime, Simon thought that he had lost a wallet of euros, which he could not find in his bag. We called Helena and Lena to see if he had left them at home or in Athens and checked Heathrow lost property, but no sign of the money, so on Monday morning Simon had to cycle up to Kranidi to get some cash to pay the yard (and some paint for the anchor chain). Kranidi is up a long hill that gets steeper and steeper so, despite just having ridden the Pennine cycle ride, he got off and walked up the last bit. 
Kranidi
On the way back Simon stopped off in Lidl to stock up, filling the enormous Brompton bike bag with goodies. He surprised Lin by picking her a big bunch of wild flowers, which lined the road. The spring flowers are beautiful, though coming to the end of their short lives.
On Monday we finished all the jobs that had to be done in the yard and decided to go back to the little restaurant for dinner, only to find it packed full of Russians, who had arrived on an enormous flotilla. We went instead to the pizza/pasta restaurant, that is normally empty but tonight was also full of Russians.
We have really got to like Kilarda. It is a quiet, very friendly little town, untroubled by tourism, though it looks as though a lot of Athenians have holiday homes      on the hill behind the town, so it is a bit busier in summer. There is a good supermarket, a baker, a laundry, several butchers and fishmongers, but no hardware store and the chandlers in the yard is a bit limited.
On Tuesday May 6 Simon found the missing money – he had forgotten that he had put it away in a safe place. We launched at 3 pm. They have a very efficient system in the yard, by which a trailer lifts both boat and cradle and drives down to the lift, driven by radio control.

Once at the slip, the slings are put round the boat and it is lowered into the water (you can see our beautiful new propeller).
Once we had checked that we were not sinking and the engine started, we motored across to anchor off the town to get everything ready to leave. We set off early on Wednesday morning, amazed at the difference the new propeller and shaft made as it was much quieter and we made at least one and a half knots more than with the old propeller. 
After about a mile Lin noticed a smell of burning and saw that the engine was overheating. We dropped anchor.  Simon went down and found the boat full of steam/smoke. He had left the stopcock on the cooling water intake closed when he had been servicing the seacocks! He opened the seacock, replaced the shredded impeller and we set off again, only to find the boat still filling with smoke and overheating. Simon now found that the return pipe for the cooling water from the anti-syphon lock was split, probably when they fitted the new shaft,  and water was pouring into the bilge. We sailed back to anchor in Kilarda bay again. Simon cut the end of the pipe and refixed it. When we restarted the engine smoke still billowed out – Simon looked in the engine room and realised that the hot exhaust gas had melted the water lock-muffler so the exhaust and cooling water was just filling the engine room. He rowed ashore to see if the chandler in the yard had a replacement, but they only had a cheap Greek muffler which was much too big and said that they did not deal with Vetus, though they had Vetus equipment in their shop. Back on the boat Simon phoned Vetus in Piraeus and they promised to deliver a new waterlock the next day.
At 10 on Thursday morning Simon phoned the courier in Krainidi and they said that the waterlock had arrived and would be delivered to Kilarda in the afternoon. Instead, Simon took a taxi to Kranidi and picked it up. He fitted the new waterlock and we were underway by mid-day.
We motored round the corner and down the Hydra channel, with the little wind there was going round in a circle so that it was always more or less on the nose. 
We had decided to anchor in a little bay at the Eastern end of the Hydra channel, ready to set off for Serifos the next morning, but the wind was getting up and Lin decided that we were a bit exposed, so we upped anchor and motored up to Poros. We tried to anchor in Monastry Bay, but the anchor dragged twice in the thick weed when we put it under load, so instead we motored past Poros town and anchored just short of Russian Bay.
We left Poros early on Friday morning in a good northerly breeze, which steadily increased as we sailed across to Serifos, blowing at 35 knots, gusting to 39, for the last bit of the passage, with 3 metre waves. We covered the 60 miles in eight hours. We were zipping along, but the problem was when to get the sails down, particularly as the lazy jacks, which hold the sail in place when you drop it, had come undone on the starboard side, so the sail would be difficult to control, and the wind direction gauge had gone haywire, making it more difficult to hold the boat on the wind when dropping the sail. We hoped to get the sails down in the lee of Serifos, but the wind there was even stronger. We wound up the genoa, though with the strong wind it rolled so tightly that we ran out of furling line, leaving a bit of genoa still out, and we motored into the wind into Livadhi, the port of Serifos, with the main flogging, waiting for the wind to drop. The wind didn’t drop. As we approached the shore we decided we had to go for it. Lin kept the boat head to wind and the mainsail came down cleanly, though two battens had sprung and the main had torn in two places at the leach when it was flogging. Having tied up the main, we had to deal with the genoa because it would be difficult getting on to the quay with some genoa still out, and we didn’t want to anchor in the bay because the holding is very bad in Livadhi. The only thing to do was to unfurl it and try to furl it up again less tightly in a lull in the wind. Having managed this, we got ourselves stern to the quay on the leeward side, with help from those already there and immediately got down to repairs.
The wind dropped overnight so that on Saturday morning there was no wind at all. We set off early and motored uneventfully to Skhinoussa, where we arrived at 3 pm. We were surprised that Skhinoussa harbour, which had been jam packed when we were last here in August, was completely empty. 
Simon went up to town to do some shopping and brought back another bunch of spring flowers.
We had dinner in the taverna, to use his wifi, and went to bed.
We left early again on Sunday morning, again with almost no wind, and motored to Levitha, arriving about 3pm to find half a dozen boats already there. We picked up a mooring boy and went for dinner at the farmhouse, where  Lin had a delicious lamb stew and Simon some rather disgusting fish. They told us that the projected wind farm may not go ahead because the estimate of the anticipated output had been cut in half.
On Monday morning we left Levitha at 7 am to motor across to Lakki on Leros, arriving at 10, having completed a passage of 210 miles. Before we went onto the town quay Simon lowered the outboard to put it on the dinghy and the carrying strap broke. Fortunately it did not detach completely from the outboard, so it did not sink into 60 metres of water.
Getting back to Lakki was like coming home. All our friends in the shops and cafes greeted us enthusiastically – they had all got through a warm wet winter. Tacis the grocer’s dad, who had been in hospital in Athens with heart problems when we left last year, had had a triple by-pass and looked ten years younger.
First thing to do was to go over to Evros marina to collect our parcel from Simon and Christiana, but the outboard would only work, spluttering, on full revs with the choke out. Simon had to restart it about twenty times on the short trip across the bay, but got there and back with the parcel so that we had all the bits and pieces we needed. When he took off the carburettor the next day it was clogged up with muck. 
We had a week in Lakki, going out to dinner twice with Simon and Christiana, once to To Petrino in town (fantastic steak) and once to Milos, over in Agia Marina (fantastic seafood). Other nights we ate various pasta delicacies we had got from Lidl. On Wednesday we went into the marina, because it was forecast to blow from the south overnight and we would be better sheltered there. We were surprised to find Kiriakos still running the marina (he agreed it must be the longest he had ever held down a job) and Aggiris was back from Germany, where he had not been able to find work, for the summer.
We met some really nice and interesting people in Lakki, a couple from Brisbane, who had just bought an ex-charter boat; a climber from Nottingham, who had bought a small Vancouver on a whim last year; and Archie and Liz, retired teachers from Shetland, in a She 36. Their stories brought home just how far Shetland is from the rest of the UK – their nearest cruising ground is Norway. Liz had only been to London once, for a day 40 years ago, and was very apprehensive about their next visit in the summer – how would they be able to find their way around? We tried to reassure them.
We did a lot of cleaning, maintenance and repairs, all of which took far longer than expected. Simon spent a whole day trying to fix the chain counter. It had shown ‘Sensor Failure’, so we had got a replacement sensor, which Simon fitted, but it still said sensor failure. He checked all the wiring and connections, finding all was OK, and concluded that the problem was in the handheld unit so gave up. Simon also refitted our water filter under the sink, requiring great contortions to get at it, and then had to deal with all the leaks from the piping that he had created (the last one is still to be fixed – Lin is not too happy!). Over the weekend Simon went up the mast to rig the inner forestay (for the storm jib) and to check out the failed wind gauge. It turned out that the connector of the gauge had just come loose. Once it was tightened and aligned it went back to work.
Sunday May 18th was local election day, with a hotly contested election for mayor. Apparently the existing mayor is a bit of a populist, while our friends in the shops and cafes wanted his opponent to win, to bring changes to Lakki, while others told us that the existing mayor looks after people, but his opponent would only look after his rich friends. The incumbent won a narrow vote.
We left Lakki on Monday May 19th for Partheni. On the way up the alternator regulator cut out, with a high alternator voltage warning. We moored on a buoy and went into the boatyard to get a spare impeller and get a quote for the yard for next year. While he was away a French boat came on to the buoy next to us and asked to borrow our dinghy so they could get ashore to collect their new dinghy from the yard. When they brought the dinghy back we both went ashore and as Irene had offered us a reasonable discount, we took a 12-month contract from the end of June, when we go home for ten days.
When we got back to the boat it was only about 3.30 so Simon suggested we go further north. In his hurry to leave he forgot to lift the dinghy on the davits. As we accelerated out of the mooring there was a loud clunk – the dinghy had flipped over and the oars were floating away towards the shallows. After a delicate recovery operation, to avoid running aground, we got the oars back and set off again. After about a mile Simon noticed that the battery voltage had gone to 17.8 volts, without the regulator cutting out. We gingerly made our way back to Partheni bay, hoping the batteries would not boil, and anchored in the bay for the night. Lin, as usual, had been right. We should have stopped there in the first place. The problem was sorted out easily enough – when Simon installed the new batteries the cable through which the regulator monitored the batteries had fallen down the side and he had not attached it. The regulator thought the batteries were dead, so kept jacking up the alternator voltage. Once the cable was attached, all was well – for now.
There was no sun, with heavy cloud cover, and we were moored between the naval base and a steelworks, but still the surrounding hills, still green from the winter rains, and the mountains of Kalimnos behind were in the evening light. As Christiana had commented, we are so used to all these places that we rarely notice how stunningly beautiful they are.
We left Partheni early on Tuesday morning, beating up to Arki in a light wind. After a couple of hours we decided to motor the rest of the way, to be sure of getting a place on the quay. We tied up on the end of the quay and went to see Nicholas and Carolina, who had returned from Poland with Alexandr/Alexandros at the end of April. We had not seen them all since we had left Arki at the beginning of August last year so it was great to catch up. Simon spent most of the rest of the day trying to fix the leaks in his botched installation of the water filter, which has so many joints that when you fix one, another starts to leak.
On Wednesday morning, after a bit of housekeeping, we went for a walk round the headland at the entrance to the bay, past the lighthouse

and up to the remains of the fourth century BC watchtower.

Sunday, 6 October 2013

End of season

On Tuesday September 17th we went to Marathona beach for the afternoon - Lin got a lift with Mick and Hilary while Simon cycled down.
On Wednesday 18th we took Hilary, Mick, Rosa and Fleur for a day trip to Moni. Fleur borrowed Charlie's lifejacket.
Mick felt a bit queasy on the way down, so as soon as we got to Moni everyone but Simon went ashore to the cafe and to swim. When we got back to Aegina we went in our usual place on the town quay, where they were already preparing for the Pistachio festival, which opened on Thursday evening. We went up to Mick and Hilary's for dinner on Thursday night, but it did not look as though we had missed much in town.
We set off early in the morning of Friday 20th September with a bit of a north wind and motor sailed past Poros to a quiet anchorage on the north coast of Dhokos, a sparsely inhabited island north of Hydra.
 By the evening the clouds rolled in.
 Next morning we sailed across to Sabateki, where we had heard there was a new harbour with free water.
 We got on the new quay, but there did not seem to be any free water.
On Sunday morning we motored the few miles up the coast to Tiros, where we were meeting Lin's cousin Simon, his wife Suzie and their son Oliver in the evening. They recently sold their house near Tiros and were now staying for a week in the Golden Beach hotel on the beach at the other end of town.
On Tuesday we took them out for a sail.
At first there was no wind, but as soon as we turned back the wind got up, reaching 20 knots before we got back. Although it was his first time sailing, Olly helmed the whole way and turned out to be a very competent (and enthusiastic) helm. We encouraged him to chase up sailing courses as soon as he got home.

We set off for Khilada on Thursday morning, to be ready to lift out on Friday. We first anchor just off the Frankthi cave, which was continuously inhabited from, at least 30,000 to 3,000 BC, when the roof fell in.

When Simon came a few years ago the cave was open and the excavation trenches remained. Now most of the trenches have been filled in, paths have been laid and there are excellent information boards, so it is more informative, if less dramatic. We then moved over to anchor in the bay

and got the genoa down, ready to lift in the morning.
We had a busy few days in the yard, washing, drying, cleaning and stowing ready to leave the boat for the winter. On Saturday Simon cycled to the neighbouring town, Kranidi, to get some cash and buy our bus tickets to Athens. He took the rough back road through meadows and olive groves, which was very attractive, but led to a yard with guard dogs, one of which squeezed through the fence and attacked him. Fortunately he was able to give it a mighty kick just before it sank its teeth in so he got away with a scratch. He came back by the main road, which turned out to be no safer as he was again chased by guard dogs, but he managed to pedal fast enough to get away.
On Tuesday Simon, Suzie and Olly came over to have lunch with us in town and on Wednesday morning we got a taxi to Kranidi from where we took the bus to Athens. We stayed two nights with Lena in Athens, having dinner with her, Lena and Nikos on Wednesday, and flew home via Copenhagen on Friday, Kai's birthday.
That's it till next year!

Tuesday, 17 September 2013

New Visitors

We stayed in Vathi until Thursday 5 September. 
On Tuesday 3rd we were joined by Adrian and Tricia on Ptarmigan, whom we had last met in Agathonisi in July. Tricia had gone home for the windy sail up from the Dodecanese and Adrian had been joined by a friend, which made Lin feel very good at having done it herself.
On Wednesday we walked down the beach road

and across a rough path, past some ancient wells
to the ancient acropolis,
which is said to be that of ancient Methana, before it was destroyed by the volcanic eruption inj about 250bc and rebuilt on its modern site the other side of the peninsular. On the top was what looked the ruins of an ancient Christian basilica.

On Thursday we sailed down to Russian Bay, where we anchored in a little cove which we had all to ourselves. Simon went over to Galatas in the dinghy to stock up at Lidl. He wasn't sure exactly how to get to it, but vaguely remembered that Sue had said that you walked across a field to the road. He tied up the dinghy and walked through the remains of a soviet-style holiday camp to a small road, but could not see a path through to the main road, so had to walk back into town and then out again. 
Loaded down with beer, wine and spirits he tried in vain to find a path across, being chased off the only promising one by guard dogs, and struggled back into town, leaving the shopping on the quay while he went to fetch the dinghy.
We left Russian Bay on Saturday 7 September and motored up to Perdika, on the southwest corner of Aegina, which we had first visited with John Holloway, Elouina, Aiden and Anna Maive at Easter 28 years ago. Although it is much more built up outside and there is a new mole the harbour has changed very little, apart from now being clogged with parked cars, as you can see from these before and after pictures.
Becky, Aiden and Sam walking along the quay in 1985
and the same bit of quay, clogged with cars, today.
Looking across the harbour, towards our rooms, in 1985
and today.
We had a beer and some atherina (little fish) in the taverna where we stayed in 1985, where they claimed to remember us - surely we were not that memorable! It has been tarted up a bit since we stayed in the room with the balcony, now occupied by the owner's son.

Just as we were going to bed we heard loud shouting from down the quay - a Ukrainian skippered charter boat was trying to barge its way into the corner, the skipper shouting abuse at the mild Greek man whose small motor yacht he was pushing out of the way. 
We left Perdika early on Sunday morning, 8 September, and were lucky to get into Aegina on the town quay, in exactly the spot we had left the week before. We spent the rest of Sunday and Monday morning cleaning and tidying and shopping, ready for Dave and Sue Cox's arrival on the ferry on Monday evening. 
We hired a car for the day on Tuesday and drove over to the temple of Afaia, 
getting lost in the back roads and having to get out of the car to get it up a not very steep hill.
We then went down to Vagia, to have lunch with Petros, before driving over to Marathona for a swim, where we got stung for 14 euros for four loungers and two umbrellas. On the way back we got some new inner tubes for the IKEA bike and Dave set off for a ride to Marathona. He was gone for a long time - he picked up a thorn and had to walk back. The thorn had put a trail of punctures in the tube so we put in another new tube.
We left Aegina on Wednesday morning
and motored over to the anchorage on the southwest corner of Angistri, where we got the prime spot in the southeast corner.
On Thursday morning we escorted a French boat with a dodgy engine to Angistri town and then sailed (!) down to Vathi,

where we stayed for two days.
On Thursday evening we took an organised trip to the volcano with Dorothea, a Danish woman formerly married to a local Greek man, Theo, who owns the taverna at Kameni Chora, where he has also built a replica ancient theatre. We had walked up to Kameni Chora with Simon and Rachel a few years ago, thinking that this was the caldera, but now realised that the most recent crater, to which Dorothea took us, was about an hour's walk further on - thank goodness we went by minibus this time. 
We had a fabulous walk up the side of the volcano,
through woods dotted with cyclamen,
with wonderful views across to Angistri, Aegina and Athens.
We walked through the crater
to a dramatic cave,
 which was nice and cool after the hot climb (the cave is a constant 17 degrees all year round).
On Friday Dave, who is national chairman of the Cyclists Touring Club, so has a reputation to live up to, set off for a bike ride, making a circuit of the southern half of the peninsular.
He made it harder work for himself because he did not realise that the gear lever was back to front, so cycled all the way in top gear.
Meanwhile Simon, Lin and Sue went for a walk along the road to the anchorages further south,

before meeting up with Dave for a swim.
We left Vathi on Saturday morning and had a gentle beat up the channel,

before the wind died round the headland. After about ten minutes motoring a new wind came in and we had a fast reach across to Moni in a northerly force 4-5. Off Moni the wind blew even harder in the channel and Lin had to work hard to keep us on the wind, while Simon got the mainsail down.
We got onto the quay in Perdika, in exactly the same spot (and with the same neighbours) as we had had last week, in time for lunch. After lunch Dave went off for another bike ride, this time half way round Aegina  to Souvala and back. And although he could now change gear, he stuck to the coast road rather than haul over the mountains in the heat. In the evening we had the usual dramas as new charter boats arrived. A Dutch charter very predictably drifted across the anchors of a fishing boat and a small yacht. Once they managed to get free, they drifted back on again, cut off the anchor rope of the fishing boat and left in great embarasment. All the while a woman was walking round the deck, pulling on ropes with one hand while holding a three-month-old baby, with no lifejacket, in the other! Immediately after a Greek cruiser-racer with an open transom arrived, with two small children (about two and three) sitting on the transom dangling their legs in the water, again with no lifejackets. As the husband and wife busied themselves mooring the two-year-old was walking along the side-decks, unprotected by netting. We yelled at them 'the baby, the baby!' and fortunately she did not fall in - no deaths this time.
On Sunday 15 September we left early to get a space on the quay in Aegina, ready for Dave and Sue to leave on the Monday. We saw a few boats leaving, so presumed that there would be space, but the harbour was chock-a-block, with charter boats rafted three and four deep. We hung around for a while as the charter boats left and got a very good spot on the end of the pontoon on the outside of the harbour - much quieter than on the town quay and less likely to come under attack from charter boats - we hoped! 
Adrian and Tricia on Ptarmigan were on the cafe quay, which is quieter, but they had had quite a lot of swell. In the evening we had dinner in Kappos Etsi, the best restaurant in Aegina town, though only ranked 19th on Trip Advisor, where we again met Adrian and Tricia with their visitors. Dave came with Simon to register with the port police and to look at the Markellos tower, which was the Governor's residence when Aegina was the provisional capital of Greece from 1827-9.

On Monday morning, once Sue and Dave had packed, Sue and Lin went shopping and after lunch in  the fish market we put Dave and Sue on the hydrofoil to get to the airport and home.
An hour after Dave and Sue left, Mick and Hilary, who are spending a fortnight in a house on Aegina, arrived with Rosa and Fleur, though we did not meet up with them until the evening. Lin was a bit reluctant to leave the boat as the wind had got up and was on the beam. Simon reassured her that the anchor was hard in and that it was just a squall off the edge of a big cumulus cloud, but when we got back to the boat the wind had got up to 25 knots, gusting a bit more.
Just after we had gone to bed the boat shook and there was a harsh grinding noise. We both leaped out of bed, to find a large charter yacht, coming in late, had run over our anchor chain. Fortunately they got off before becoming inextricably tangled with the chain and they did not dislodge the anchor, probably only digging it in even harder. After hanging around for a while they went onto the town quay, banging into a small yacht as they did so.
So much for being safe from charter boats! On Tuesday morning Simon was just getting out of bed when he heard voices nearby. It was another charter boat, which had been thrown off the town quay to make way for the ferry. They asked if it was OK to come alongside and Simon said he would rather they didn't, so they tied up to the quay instead. When they left an hour later they had picked up an anchor chain and in trying to get off it reversed onto us at some speed, making a nasty scratch in our hull. Simon helped them get clear and they disappeared, with some apologies. To make us more secure, Simon attached our bows to a mooring line to take the strain off the anchor. Lin wanted to move onto the town quay because she felt we were more exposed on the pontoon, but Simon thought that, despite our experiences last night, we were more secure here, with the anchor very firmly in. Aegina is definitely a place where there is danger rather than safety in numbers at least two-thirds of the boats leaving on Monday morning pulled up other people's anchors!


Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Just chilling

The boys went home on Thursday August 29th and we were on our own for the first time in two months, which took some getting used to. We did the final loads of washing, filled up with water and left the heat and noise of Aegina town on Friday morning, motoring round the north of Angistri (no wind) to the beautiful anchorage in the southwest corner of the island. In the afternoon we had it almost to ourselves, but by Saturday morning it was absolutely packed with yachts, motor yachts and gin palaces coming down from Athens for the weekend,
though it was still remarkably peaceful (once we had asked our neighbour to turn down his radio, which had been blasting out the most god awful modern Greek crooning.
On Sunday we tried to find our way round to the next bay through the woods,
but the path petered out, so we went round in the dinghy to Aponisi, which had a cafe and taverna, packed for the weekend.
Most boats left on Sunday evening, so by Monday morning we had the bay more or less to ourselves again.
We motored down to Vathi, on the Methana peninsular (again no wind). Usually Vathi is very busy, but this time there were only a couple of boats in when we arrived. We made a mess of anchoring - the first time we had not let out enough chain and the anchor just came up through the soft mud, the second time the chain caught itself around a couple of big rocks, so Simon dived to clear it and we settled in next to Lillibelle, with its all-women Scottish crew of Christine, Margaret and Elaine.
 We had a light lunch and dinner in the taverna To Vathi, since we were using their wifi, but went on for pudding (galaktobureki) and drinks in Athena's taverna at the other end of the quay, with our new Scottish friends and Theo, who runs trips up to the volcano, getting to bed very late. We were woken about 3 in the morning by three big bumps. Lin went up on deck to find that our neighbours had also been woken by it. We decided in the end that it must have been a turtle coming in to explore the harbour and bumping its shell on our hulls.
On Tuesday morning we said goodbye to Lillibelle
and got back down to our odd jobs of cleaning and mending ready for Dave and Sue's arrival next Monday.