Tuesday, 26 September 2023

 Stormy Weather

Greece hit the headlines in August and September due to catastrophic events of biblical proportions. Extreme heat over an extended period of time had left much of the country as one huge tinderbox and, despite regular warnings, wildfires raged throughout the country.  

                               

One of the most tragic events was the huge swathes of the Natural Habitat Dadia Forest in Evros – Z’s home area – which continued burning for two entire weeks since the sheer size and very high winds made access extremely difficult. Clearly Forestry Commissions country-wide need to drastically up their management strategies to clear forests of extraneous vegetation, to clear safety corridors within forested areas to prevent flame spread, and to ensure access for firefighters and their vehicles and equipment.

According to the UN Environment Program, both climate change and land-use change will contribute to wildfires becoming a regular feature. Even more tragic and horrifying is data provided by Earth. Org which states that 89% of wildfires occur because of irresponsible human activities e.g. lighting campfires, using malfunctioning equipment, discarding lit cigarettes and committing arson.

In the first week of September, followed the huge storm Daniel, leaving woeful destruction in its path. The National Observatory of Athens registered over 17,000 lightning strikes in its duration.                                                  


And then, of course, came the deluges of rain, particularly in the Pelion area which was hit with a fall of around 103 mm. Bridges and roads were destroyed or rendered impassable. Houses and businesses were destroyed, people remained without power, supplies and, ironically, water for days. The region of Thessaly was very badly affected: over 700 square meters were damaged in what is a significant agricultural belt. Below we see the extent of the flooding where only rooftops can be seen above the flood waters.                                               


Valiant attempts were made to rescue people stranded on their roof-tops, by boat and airlift. In all 200,000 animals are said to have perished, their decomposing bodies posing a further health hazard. The country, its people and economy are left licking their wounds for a long time to come.

                                     

And we were not without some drama, though comparatively unimportant. Early one evening neighbours sounded the alert that a nearby field was on fire and we congregated there in haste, bearing buckets, hoses and branches to keep the flames at bay.

                                             

Fortunately, the fire-fighters arrived very shortly and put the fire out. Suspiciously there was a single hay bale in the field that was burning and this was a place which had recently burst into flames. The result of a local arsenist or problems generating from the overhead electrical wires? We may never know. What was greatly disturbing was to see how quickly the flames could spread in an almost empty field and in only light winds. All too easily this could have become a conflagration putting our homes and lives at risk.                                           

 As I explained to the neighbours, as new arrivals we were hoping they would extend to us a warm welcome, but that was just a tad over the top! :o  May we all stay safe!


Tuesday, 19 September 2023

The Move

 We’ve just celebrated one month in the new abode. It’s been two months of intensity: sorting, clearing, packing and in intense heat. We’re extremely glad it’s over and that there are now very few items still to be extracted from packing boxes.

 It was interesting to sense the different stages of developing a sense of ‘at homeness’. The first stage was actually welcoming staying guests on day 3 of our move. :0 All credit to Melanie – niece resident in New Zealand – and her daughter, Katie, who braved our premises, and kindly turned a blind eye to mess. By then we had the basic infrastructures in place, so they were readily fed and watered but had to gingerly pick their paths to their beds! I was so pleased to learn that they placed Thessaloniki, her people and food high on their holiday ratings.

                               


The next stage was getting mechanisms in operation to give a sense of a house at work. So preparing meals, doing the laundry and an ironing made one feel more established.

A further milestone was hosting an ouzo-meze lunch for neighbours. We still haven’t got proper patio furniture but we did fine as the meal was a prolonged one! 😊 .

 This week the final stages of settling in were marked when we got our satellite tv connected and our wifi boosters in operation – the local area has a woefully weak signal.

To celebrate properly we invited our neighbours for dinner and Z was able to proudly offer them drinks from his new drinks-cabinet. He has wanted this for ages to house his rather large whisky collection.

                                 


Of course, we drank to two fine toasts:

Kaloriziko and slainte mhath - ‘may you settle in well’ and ‘to your health’!