(Usual waiver applies to grammar, typos, spelling as I'm posting via a small phone screen on the hoof π€, click on the pics to zoom in).
Thursday 28 May 2026
Landed at Heraklion airport at the same time as three SunAir charter flights. People were four deep at the luggage carousel. Outside the airport there was a row of charter company kiosks for people to meet their island charter rep, uh oh. Quite a culture shock after chilled out Alghero.
Landed at Heraklion airport at the same time as three SunAir charter flights. People were four deep at the luggage carousel. Outside the airport there was a row of charter company kiosks for people to meet their island charter rep, uh oh. Quite a culture shock after chilled out Alghero.
In amongst all the traffic you could still see the Veneitan boat yards where boats were hauled up and repaired. It's a shame they look so neglected and almost falling down.
There are lots of street cats that look silently at you, patiently waiting for a tidbit. The good thing is I did see water and kibble stations for the street kitties.
Tucked beside the Turkish pumphouse is a magnificent marble frieze which once was the base of a spectacular fountain.
The most famous one is the 1628 Venetian-style Ξorozini fountain (aka the Lions fountain). I saw a photo in the museum where all around the fountain was bombed during the German occupation but the fountain was untouched π.
We visited the calm and serene Cathedral of St Titus, 1869. This magnificent building started life as a mosque, including a now destroyed minuret, before being converted for the Greek Orthodox faithful.
Heraklion is a gutsy, gritty town that has survived numerous occupations and therefore is packed full of history, not least the history of the earliest occupants, the Minoans. The fabulous Knossos Palace is just 5ks from the centre and, after Athens, is the most important site for history and antiquities in all of Greece...more to look forward to π.


















