It's fourteen years since I wrote this account and forty two years since the main event happened. I could so easily have died that day but thankfully I didn't. When I first published this writing only three people commented. They were Robert Brague from Canton, Georgia, John Gray from Trelawnyd, Wales and Ian Rhodes from South Manchester. John and Robert are still active in the blogosphere but Ian appears to have hung up his blogging boots for good. Anyway, back to Greece. It was August, 1982...
Koumbara (aka Sunset) Beach, Ios
Once upon a Grecian isle... in the summer of 1982. First a flight to Athens and then a service bus down to the nearby port of Piraeus. It's where ferries embark for the islands - the Dodecanese, Crete, the Dardanelles, the Cyclades and the inner islands of Spetses, Hydra and Aegina. Greece lays claim to over 6,000 islands and islets but only two hundred or so are permanently inhabited and of those only around eighty have populations in excess of a hundred. Mimicking other islands, each of the sunny isles of Greece is like a world in itself.
I had been to Greece a few times before and considered myself something of a Grecophile. I loved the sharpness of colours against rich blue skies and placid seas, old weather-worn men and women dressed in black leading well-laden donkeys back from sun-seared fields, the sound of bouzouki strings under starry heavens, the taverna tastes of retsina and ouzo and that shadowy but palpable sense of an ancient culture populated by heroes and gods.
This time I was heading back to Ios in the heart of the Cyclades, between Santorini and Naxos. Our ferry floated away from the Greek mainland and soon the rhythm of gently undulating waves accompanied our ship's engine's continuous humming - lulling the majority of passengers into suspended states of animation. Rocky islets drifted by. Near Delos, two dolphins performed their acrobatics as an old lady poured sunflower seeds into my open palm. "Efharisto".
Hours disappeared and the sun's fierce Aegean heat began to diminish. By early evening, we arrived at Ios's only port. With hefty rucksack on shoulders, I dodged my way through the throng and headed purposefully out of the port and along a dusty track that I remembered would take me back to Sunset Beach with its lonesome taverna.
I made the beach as day surrendered to night-time in a blaze of glory and as luck would have it, I soon spotted a recently abandoned beach shelter. A low horseshoe wall of rocks had been roughly piled up with bamboo stalks and reeds making a roof. The front of this humble shelter was open, looking straight out to sea and the gold-crimson place where the sun had just sunk away. Crawling into my little "cave", I unpacked my sleeping bag and mat, found my electric torch and prepared to head back to Ios Town which peers down upon its adjacent port.
It was well after midnight when I returned, my belly full of stuffed dolmades, my head spinning slightly with the after effects of a full bottle of retsina. Before crawling back into the shelter, I lay supine on the beach looking up at distant stars, listening to musical Mediterranean waves lapping.
For three or four days, I would rise in the early morning and run out into the sea, swimming towards a lobsterman's bright orange marker float. The water felt cool after sleep and it sharpened my senses. Clinging to the plastic orange globe, I looked back at the shore where a few other beach dwellers were stirring and to the taverna with its whitewashed walls, concrete cistern and sun terrace with vines entwining to make a green canopy.
Word of Sunset Beach seemed to have spread because in late morning, invaders arrived from the town with their towels and snorkels, plastic bottles of water and rubber flip flops. Some claimed beach spaces close to my humble dwelling. Their conversations disturbed my peace and my concentration on "The Dice Man". I decided to go off exploring along the rocky north western coast.
Less than a mile from Sunset Beach, I peered down from a rocky promontory to the arc of a secret, unvisited sandy bay. It was no bigger than a goalmouth. Carefully I scrambled down the cliffs. My feet dislodged sun-baked rocks which tumbled down and once I had to grab on to a defiant thorn bush to prevent myself from falling.
Finally, I was down. Naked in my solitude, I swam out into the little bay where the sea was as clear as springwater, magnifying rocks and seaweed fronds way below me. I read and sunbathed. Swam. Read and sunbathed. Swam. I may also have slept before slaking my thirst by emptying the only bottle of water I'd brought there.
It was time to head back to Sunset Beach but I was weakened by swimming and sunshine. Try as I might to ascend the beach's enclosing cliffs, I could not find a safe way up. At one point I lost my footing and slid back a dozen feet. My heart was racing and after several futile and exhausting attempts to escape I began to accept that I was in fact trapped. Perhaps I could swim out in to the open sea but the currents were unpredictable and besides in my little day bag I had my passport, wallet and transport tickets.
The sun was on its way down again and the prospect of a thirsty night on that unvisited beach became a real prospect. Then I remembered I had a small circular mirror in my bag. I needed it for hair-combing and shaving. I chuckled briefly as I imagined myself, like a character in a "Boy's Own" adventure, trying to reflect the sun's last rays in order to summon help.
Then magically, perhaps five hundred metres off shore, a fishing boat appeared from behind the headland. There were less than ten minutes of sunlight left. I shouted and waved my shirt and then held my little mirror to the sun, subtly altering its position with small wrist movements. The fishing boat continued on its coastal voyage and for a heart-sinking moment, it seemed that they had not spotted me but then joy upon joy, the boat turned shorewards, silhouetted against the very last rays of the sinking sun. I was saved.
There were two old Greek fishermen on board. They spoke not a single word of English but my dangerous predicament was patently clear to them. They offered me water and I downed it with relish. They refused my offer of various drachma notes when they deposited me on another small beach just along the coast. This one was not surrounded by tumbledown cliffs and from it a little track led to the hinterland. I shook my saviours' calloused hands and waved as they continued their evening voyage and then, in fading August light, I wandered through sweet-smelling olive groves back towards Sunset Beach, elated that I was still alive.
Sometimes we get lucky and good people happen along just when we need them.
ReplyDeleteCertainly true that day - just ten minutes before the sun went down over the sea.
DeleteGreat story. Many people have been lured into a point of no return.
ReplyDeleteI guess I am like a cat with nine lives.
DeleteQuite the adventure, and yes, it could have ended very differently.
ReplyDeleteYour descpription of the days of beach-dwelling are so evocative. It wouldn't be something for me, at least not now that I am in my mid-50s, when I really do appreciate my creature comforts such as a hot shower every day and a clean toilet. But it sounds like it was the next best thing to Paradise.
I have slept on several Grecian beaches but I very much doubt that that will ever happen again.
DeleteThat was an adventure and a half. Now young men, and Michael Mosley, who died sadly, are getting lost within the rather bleak hot weather of Greece. The tourist world has changed so much.
ReplyDeleteFrom my experience, I can imagine how light-headed and weary Michael Mosley before his death, so close to help.
DeleteOh...shades of Dr Mosely ...
ReplyDeleteI was lucky. He wasn't.
DeleteWhat a trip! What a memory! I shall now always carry a small mirror with me just in case I ever need to signal for help. I jest of course, I don't travel. But a mirror could still be handy...
ReplyDeleteYou could also use the mirror to occasionally repair your cherry tomato lipstick Elsie.
DeleteWell, goodness me, weren't you lucky! I'm so glad you were rescued so we can have the pleasure of your blog-writing.
ReplyDeleteIf I had not been lucky, I would not have met up with you in your palace near Tauranga back in January 2012 - over twelve years ago now!
DeleteReminiscent of Michael Mosely and others this summer. Accidents can easily happen.
ReplyDeleteI felt I could identify with him in his fatal situation.
DeleteCertainly an adventure I can imagine not easily forgotten...! That kind of solo travel is not something that I would ever have felt tempted to try, even if back in my youth I was somewhat braver than I am now. (Never including rock climbing, though!)
ReplyDeleteI have been many places on my own Monica. Self-reliance and comfort in solitude are part of who I am.
DeleteWonderfully written, and a reminder that adventures can go terribly astray. The fishermen will never forget the guy they saved from the cliffs.
ReplyDeleteI am sure they are both deceased now but I still send them my endless gratitude.
DeleteOne can [almost] always depend on the kindness of strangers.
ReplyDeleteApologies to Tennessee Williams for plagiarizing or bastardizing, his words.
Another ten minutes and the sun would have been below the horizon. It was almost a miracle.
DeletePhew! That was close!
ReplyDeleteHow foolish I was that morning thought it not seem so at the time.
DeleteI would never have been bold enough to do something like that, Neil. A risky adventure!
ReplyDeleteGoing down the cliff "path" didn't seem all that risky in the morning.
DeleteWhat an adventure - one filled with beautiful scenery, danger, resourcefulness, a language barrier, the kindness of strangers, and a happy ending..
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading it Diaday. I think you enjoyed it which makes the very idea of a "reblog" seem worthwhile.
DeleteAnd you still don't believe in God!
ReplyDeleteI don't even believe in Tasker Dunham.
DeleteAh yes, I remember spending 6 weeks of the summer of 1979 sleeping on beaches in the Cyclades including on Ios. It was very much a student’s rite of passage at the time. To be honest, I don’t think I looked in a mirror all trip but thank goodness you had one and you lived to tell the tale.
ReplyDeleteA very well written adventure story. You were well prepared, having a mirror with you. Glad you had Boy's Own training and that it worked out. Your blog is fun reading and something I would miss if you ever stop. So don't, amigo! Gracias!
ReplyDeleteI do remember this post from fourteen years ago. I tried to find the original but couldn't. I think I commented at the time that you meant 'supine' instead of 'prone'. You were certainly a risk-taker. Still are, I would wager.
ReplyDeleteFourteen years ago you left a very nice comment. In fact there were two comments/ You suggested that I should compile a book of travel vignettes and title it "Once Upon a World".
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