After nearly three years it was time to say goodbye to
Marmaris and Turkey. We said goodbye to
our neighbours Mary Beth and Karl with hopes to catch up in the northern
Aegean. Then early on April Fools we
cast off the mooring lines and set off for the open sea (well really coastal
cruising).
Sadly there was no sailing our first day out but we still
had a pleasant 4 hour motor to Bozukkale where we spent the night. The bay was totally empty. None of the restaurants were open and except
for a fisherman coming for a few hours it was just us and the donkeys and
goats.
Marmaris to Bozukkale |
We were up early the next morning to head for Symi and to
check into Greece for the next year.
As it was Sunday when we checked in at Symi and early in the
season, we only completed the immigration part of the three part check-in
necessary for when we enter a new country with our boat. There was absolutely no problems with my long
stay visa being in my damaged passport.
I am able to stay in Greece for a year. We then went to customs but
it was closed (though I don't think officially it was meant to be closed but it
was Sunday and not many tourist and it is Greece so the official had a long
siesta and stayed home). Then we went to
the port police (Coast Guard). Since the Coast Guard needs the customs
clearance before they can finalize the paperwork, they said we could finish the
check-in the next day and we should go and have a nice lunch and enjoy the
island. So we did and the food was heaven.
We were the only visiting boat in the harbour and were able
to moor along side, which was so much easier for us. Just so one doesn’t think all is beer and
skittles in this sailing gig, we returned from the sublime lunch to the reality
of unblocking the aft head (rear toilet). Not a pleasant job but it turned out
to be less vile than we feared. Much of sailing is boat repair in exotic
locations.
When we had finished with the plumbing, we stuck our heads out into the cockpit and
at the restaurant 20m away music was playing and a very happy woman was dancing
on the table to the joy of her friends who were clapping the rhythm.
We completed our check-in on Monday morning and did a bit of
grocery shopping to get those items that are not easy to get in Turkey or
expensive. As has happened every time we
shopped at Symi supermarket, the proprietor gave us a free bottle of wine. You have to love Greece - free wine, locals dancing on the tables and officials who encourage you to have a nice lunch and not worry about paperwork!
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