Today was our prebooked tour with George the taxi driver that I saw recommended on a Facebook group for Athens travel and he did not disappoint. He arrived to our hotel at 8am on the dot and we packed our suitcases into the car and were on our way for the day. He said his goal was to make all our friends jealous with our beautiful photos. ha I told him I would need friends first. George didn’t really understand my English sarcasm…but we managed ha

After an hour in the car or so, the first stop we made was at the Corinth Canal. An engineering marvel that took 2500 years to actually achieve. This narrow straight of land is all that separates the Ionian Sea from the Aegean Sea and would save ships from having to sail all around the Peloponnese peninsula.

Rulers from 600 BC forward have had plans to dig a canal here…including 4 Roman emperors. Nero actually started the work but then had to stop to fight off an invasion and then was killed… so work stopped. It wasn’t until 1890 that this canal was actually created and ships could pass through it, saving 430 miles of sailing.



The older ruler to think about digging the canal was named Periander and after he consulted the Oracle of Delphi and it was recommended that if Apollo wanted the seas to connect, he would have designed them that way… he tried to resolve the problem by building the famous Diolkos. The Diolkos was a special road paved with slabs of limestone covered in wood from which ships greased with fat were pulled over land by oxen and slaves. Ships were loaded on special vehicles and were carried/pushed over dry land through Diolkos while the goods had been offloaded from the ships and were transported by pack animals. This idea was very successful because the ships of the era were much smaller dimensions than today. George took us by this ancient road to see what remains.















Back in the car for our next stop in wine country.



We chose the Bairaktaris winery on the recommendation of George and were given a tour.
















Having the equivalent of 3 full glasses of wine at noon made the cold rain better. ha We then continued on to the ancient site of Mycanae.
The Mycanaens were the pre-Greeks – at this site and flourishing as early as 1600 BC.
The first site we visited was the Citadel which is fortified by the Cyclopean walls and the main entrance being the Lion’s Gate







We took a quick drive over the to the Treasury of Atrius or the Tomb of Agamemnon – a beehive domed tomb from 1300 BC.





After this visit, it was lunch time – George dropped us off at a recommended restaurant in Nafplio called Bounos.





Afterwards, we were supposed to spend an hour walking around the town and seeing the sites, but it was still pouring rain, so we told George we were ready to head on back to Athens. He suggested he knew a spot were we could be out of the rain and get a great family photo – so we drove up to Palamidi fortress – a fortress built by the Venetians during their occupation in the 1600s- above the town to George’s secret photo spot.





George informed us that there was a taxi strike for today, people kept calling him to ask for rides and he had to say no. Thankfully, he did not cancel our trip since we had pre-booked.

We checked into a new hotel on the other side of Athens and said goodbye to George, but Norah wanted dinner… and looking there wasn’t much super close and walkable that looked good… but there was a sushi restaurant with a full 5 stars on Google… so we gave it a shot….and it was good!





Tomorrow morning we’ll rent our car and head out of the city to tour the north of Greece!

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