In what was a departure from our standard departure, we turned left on the world map this time. The Meru we hired for the early morning (or late night) flight – at 4.15 – had a neat hat tip – an ad for Santorini, Sobha’s version, that is! The driver was in an #F1 mood and we reached well in time, prompting us to take a little nap. That almost led to us missing the flight, and we just about made it!
Since we were in the middle column with no window seats nearby, the napping was continued on the first Emirates flight till it landed us four hours and a functional breakfast later in our other homeland – Dubai, which we were visiting for the first time. [no transit visa required, unlike Malaysia!]If not the sheer scale, a metro between two terminals was enough to wow us completely, and convince us even more of what we Malayalis are capable of, when we have Arab money and manpower backing us! 😉
For all the awesomeness, getting free WiFi, even for half an hour, was a tedious task which I gave up on. The Emirates  flight to Athens was at 10.05 and took us about 4.5 hours. Still stuck in the middle column of seating, nap time was replaced with in-flight movie time. I saw Up & Down, a Malayalam movie first, out of courtesy for where we were at, and then watched American Hustle! We landed at Athens at 2 PM in the afternoon (local time) and immediately faced Athenian Hustle in the form of a luggage trolley that cost 1 Euro! There seemed to be quite a few lottery sellers inside, making the place quite like a bus stand, but I could already imagine why they might be popular!
We had a long wait for our flight to Rhodes – about 5.5 hours, but between immigration, meeting our tour operator for all the vouchers and free wifi for an hour, time passed by quickly. After much research, I had decided to buy Wind Telecom data cards, but couldn’t find them at the airport. The Cosmote pack cost over 25 euros. I immediately felt a disconnect, and decided not to buy! At some point in time, we got hungry and chose Negroni from the range of options available for a first taste of Alfa beer and some souvlaki, watching flights go by.
The Olympic Air (recently acquired by Aegean) was tiny and reminded me of Air Deccan. The air hostesses wore a very chic uniform though. I also discovered the species who have been reading mutual fund disclaimers on Indian television ads – Greek pilots. And I’m told Malayalam is fast. Some peanuts and Coke and an hour later, we were at the Rhodes airport, located right next to the sea. Â This was around the time I discovered that I’d be carrying our luggage and could expect no help from drivers. When I asked for help, they looked at me like I was speaking Greek. Oh wait…
The drive to our accommodation – Atlantis City Hotel – showed us what seemed a calm, peaceful, idyllic town, with small well populated and commercial stretches. We wondered if we’d have to travel all this way the next day. It took us only 20 minutes to reach the hotel, and we made our way to the room in the tiniest lift I’ve seen. Wifi was available in the reception and dining area. The room itself was small, but functional and neat, with a little balcony overlooking the street. The location was awesome, and we immediately went out in search of the three restaurants we had shortlisted for dinner.
Agalma, though more difficult to locate, appealed to us more than the higher rated Kerasma and Tamam. (both were within 300m of our hotel, check this list for options) After beckoning us in, they proceeded to ignore us for a while, but were very apologetic when they brought the menu. I asked for a Cider and D chose the house wine. The cider was great and the wine was a little meh. AÂ Giouvetsi got me victory in the second round too as D wasted most of her salad. But in everyone’s defense, she was quite sleepy and the food took a long while getting to the table, accompanied by apologies.
The walk back to the hotel made me realise how utterly unprepared I was in terms of clothing choices. I thought 19-20 C was pleasant, and had an all-summer shorts+ tee sets packed with not a single jacket/sweater or even a pair of denims, and here I was, shivering! My nightmares, understandably, were about freezing to death and becoming history in Greece!
I see so many similarities between the way you planned this trip and I plan mine! plus the Blog Style is also somewhat similar – the detailing, names of the restaurants, photos of the meals, collages! and I sincerely hope that we visit Greece in 2015!
BTW my Cyprus Blog….check it when got some time…I posted the entire log in one link though!
http://cheguevaraontheroad.blogspot.com/2014/01/the-cyprus-chill-august-2013.html
And now the questions!
BTW Why didn’t you pre-choose your flight seats?
And one needs a Transit Visa to move from one terminal to another in KLIA? that’s strange!
When we landed in Cyprus got the same surprise of the paid trolley! I had no change so had to tug my luggage outside! while flying back I got to know that the Coin comes out when you lock the trolley back! which was another reason why I didn’t spend anytime finding a coin…the coin had to be a 2 Euros one…and I didn’t want to spend that money on a trolley 😉 but now I know!
And I am surprised that you didn’t research about the weather too 😛 or maybe you wanted a fake Puma jacket! 😉
You had the same baggage limit for Emirates and Olympic Air?
Choosing flight seats involves $, this was something we could live with.
KLIA didn’t require one when we passed by last year. The LCCT terminal used to require a transit visa, at least until the year before that.
Apparently, the weather surprised the Greeks too, they were expecting summer to have started.
20kg is what we usually take for intl.
that’s surprising! I haven’t paid any extra $ to select my preferred seats across a host of airlines including Emirates! maybe it is an ex-India flights restriction!