Sunday, 30 September 2012

2012 Summer Trip to Thrace



Here I am with a September blog entry in….. by the skin of my teeth!
This will be a short pictorial account of our July trip to Thrace, to Evros, my husband’s home area, right up in NE Greece, near the Turkish and Bulgarian borders.  It’s a trip dedicated to Rosie and David who couldn’t make it together with us ….this time!
 En route we see many herds of goats grazing in the parched pastures, sun-flowers still following the course of the sun but, by late summer, beginning to look a little full-blown.



 





So we head up north, through Macedonia, past Kavalla, into Thrace, on to Alexandroupolis – one of the many cities named after Alexander the Great. I love the fact that its lighthouse is so near the main road!
As we follow the river Evros north, I enjoy seeing the villages with their minarets; for me a lovely blend of the Muslim and Greek Orthodox communities, especially redolent of the time that H and I spent in Arab countries - in fact, we first met in Kuwait. I still hear the call to prayer with a touch of nostalgia!

                

 

                                  

     

                                     


We go past Didymoteicho, the twin-walled city as its Greek name explains, and on to Kofovouno, the village possibly named after the hollow mountain nearby, that is – with caves within it. 
Okay, so who took a pot-shot at the village name-sign??



We spend some time together as a family, catching up with relatives’ news. What I find particularly disarming is that, while they may not have seen you for months and months, after initial greetings of welcome, they will begin conversation with you  with the Greek “Allo?” or ‘So what else is new?’ as if just picking up where you left off in a previous chat! 

This time for me the theme seemed to me to be tradition: teaching grandchild how to plant seeds and tend the garden; passing on the cultural tradition of ethnic dance and costume, while celebrating on July 20th, the panagyri of the Prophet Ilias, to whom Koufovouno’s church is dedicated. The panagyri or celebration traditionally meant that the icon or even remains of the saint would ‘go round throughout’ the village for the locals to pay their respects. It always means a get-together for people from local villages and often from much further afield. In Koufovouno local people who work in Germany come down to observe the prophet’s name day at home. Thracean music has a lively rhythm and their dances are executed with great dignity – it’s hard to remain seated when the clarinet and bagpipes start to play!
    

 

      
 







It was fascinating to watch the storks, these wonderful birds that migrate annually from Africa to nest by the Erythropotamos River, an Evros tributary. Mama storks carry on the tradition and teach their young to fly. Below, after watching several maternal demo flights, baby stork can be seen testing out his wing-span. It took several afternoons before he managed to get his confidence up and leap from the nest.




 Here are some of the crops traditionally cultivated in the area: the cotton plants which look like beautiful rose bushes when in bloom, and garlic.
  About ten years ago at this time of year, the approach to Koufovouno reminded me of the final lines of Mary Campbell Smith’s poem, ‘The Boy in the Train’:    
‘For I ken mysel’ by the queer like smell, That the next stop’s Kirkcaddy!’
    
In Kircaldy you smelt the linoleum factory; in Kofovouno the pungent aroma of garlic drying in the village yards.
 Sadly now that market has been lost with merchants buying the cheaper produce from Turkey and China. This hot summer other crops had to be left to bake in situ as  the cost of seeds, fertilizer and electricity to water the fields  continue to rise unchecked, which means farmer outlay could not be covered by the price offered by local merchants. Local farmers simply cannot make a living.



Years ago when I was living and teacher-training in Athens, I remember observing a class where the teacher asked the students what crops Greece produced. When a child answered, ‘Oranges, lemons and olives,’ the teacher seemed well pleased – a very southern, agricultural perspective.
 Here I want to show you just a little of the wealth harvested here in the north.  In Macedonia tobacco is a prevalent crop and in late summer you see the leaves hanging out to dry in the heat.


 










                                       Sunflowers, too, provide seeds and oil for cooking.

 

When my niece, Jennifer, was little, on being shown a picture of my father-in-law’s fields of sun-flowers, she asked if he was very rich. It seemed to her tha he must be, to afford to have fields of flowers rather than ‘real crops’.  
 So, Jen, many moons on, with attendant and colour-coded insect, this basking beauty is just for you!    
  
 Finally, and at the expense of sounding like the ‘Milo/portokali’ speech from ‘My Big Fat Greek Wedding’, since I am on the topic of flowers and Koufovouno,    with deft thematic cohesion, let me recommend to you Greek speakers the blog on the village by Dimitrios Louloudakis  (whose surname could be rendered as Little Flower!)   - simply Google : ‘Koufovouno - Louloudakis’ – it’s fascinating.