15 Mar 2016

Happiness is......finding two olives in your martini when you're hungry


Chestnut Grove
Our friends, Rob and Heaps, have recently swapped a life of bobbing for one of flat calm. We hopped on a plane to Greece to find out what life on land was all about. We met up with them at Athens airport, jumped into their hire car and raced south to Kalamata on empty roads. Apparently all the traffic uses the long way round rather than pay for the fast and plentiful toll roads. Kalamata lies on the Peloponnese peninsular in southern Greece and at the head of the Messenian Gulf. It is also renowned for its olives. The Peloponnese has always been a special area for us and we have enjoyed cruising this quieter part of Greece. It was strange not to be arriving by sea. Once we'd reached Kalamata we continued west towards the coastal town of Petalidi and up a bumpy track for the final journey to Chestnut Grove.



Heaps and her olive trees


Beating the Bounds


The boys hard at work with the chainsaw



Solar panels going up
Larger Kalamata olive and leaf on the left
The house is off grid so not much change from a boat. Just a lot more solar panels and a much larger generator. We had lots of fun outside making bonfires, chainsawing logs, and learning about compost heaps and of course, olives. We Beat the Bounds most days. Beating the Bounds is an English ceremony dating back to Anglo Saxon times. It involves walking the boundaries of the property beating the ground with sticks to establish its outer limits and ensure a good harvest. The grounds include numerous fig trees, a recently discovered lime tree (essential for the G&T's) and a large olive grove which produces olives of both the eating and oil variety. We are now experts at telling the difference between the trees. The Kalamata eating olive is plump, dark and from a tree whose leaves grow to twice the size of other olive varieties. Kalamata olives, which cannot be harvested green, must be hand-picked in order to avoid bruising. Looks like Rob and Heaps have their work cut out! They are already cooking with their own olive oil and no doubt come summer the vines will be bursting with grapes and the wine production will begin in earnest. 



View from the terrace over the bay


Local vines


View from the terrace down to Petalidi


The views from the terrace over Kalamata bay were stunning. The weather was a bit mixed but thankfully the mountains across the bay eventually showed themselves. We had a lovely week catching up with old friends and sharing their new found paradise.



The mountain tops finally show themselves!




2 comments:

  1. Fame at last ! Enjoyed every moment with our first visitors...always welcome Xxx

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  2. Hello there! Nice to read about your adventures. And great to see where your friends spend their time. We have made a deal with the Kalamata marina and will stay there for 18 months from this fall. Maybe we can help out in some way. Pelle says he is a wiz on the chainsaw.
    Now we are in Croatia, near Zadar, closing in on Venice as the weather permits.
    Happy sailing!

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