Tuesday, 28 April 2026

Tuesday, 28-04-26: day eight and home sweet home.

(written on Monday evening)
Morning, all.  The very last morning at the Mistral Hotel in Maleme, Crete, has dawned.  We leave at eleven, Chania bound, for the airport and then Gatwick.

There's one more outing to tell you about and that was our visit to the Botanical Garden of Crete.  They are around 18km outside Chania, at the foot of the White Mountains, so called because they are snow topped for most of the year.

Not the best photo, taken through the coach window, but you get the idea.

Here's some info.  It is a blog (and there are adverts, sorry).
https://creteinsider.com/botanical-park-and-gardens-crete/


It is such a very lovely place.  There's a 'Centre' with maps, a shop, food, loos, etc, and then there are the walks.  For a while the route is shared and then they split into a longer and a shorter walk.  The going isn't easy.  It is hilly, rocky, uneven and, at times, just a little bit scary, especially if one has any mobility issues.  Some of our group decided not to walk but to enjoy the views and chat from the café.  The rest of us did the shorter walk and felt very proud of ourselves.

I took some photos, of course, and, for once, my camera behaved itself.  Nevertheless, its days are numbered.

After a devastating wild fire (see the links for info), involving the destruction of so many olive trees, etc, Nature took over and things started growing again.  Most of the area was cleared but dotted around are some of the burnt tree stumps that were left as a sort of memorial.
Plenty of great views.
I didn't photo plant info but there were loads of boards with names, descriptions, etc.
I'd like this in my garden!
No idea what this is but it was so vivid.  The photo doesn't do it justice.
Dotted around were remnants of old buildings, art work and newer constructions to support wildlife.  
Some lovely inspirational quotes on marble slabs.
What's left of an old dwelling.
Plenty of insects, butterflies, birds, etc, and I spotted this tiny lizard sunning itself.
Crete is famous for its citrus fruit and I would dearly have loved to pull an orange from the tree but we had been told not to.
At lunch, dessert was chilled sliced oranges from their trees and, honestly, I have never tasted an orange quite so sweet and juicy before.  It was delicious.
There were different microclimates and, truly, at one point we could have been in an English country garden.
This was a cooling station.  Just before the end, after quite a steep climb, we came across this.  You sit on the bench, press a button, and get misted with cold water.  Not enough to get wet, just enough to refresh and cool down.  Perfect.
And, finally, right at the end, an amphitheatre.  It gave us a very welcome sit down to chat about the garden and the whole holiday.

That was the last excursion.

Come the evening we had the last cocktail, the last dinner (their own version of moussaka is to die for) and some Cretan music and dancing.

Now it is bedtime!



I'm now typing this early Tuesday morning (even earlier for you in the UK as we're two hours ahead here).  I'm pretty much packed with just last minute things to do, breakfast starts at eight, luggage outside our rooms at half ten and the coach arrived for departure from the hotel at eleven.

Thanks for following me on this holiday.  It's been an absolute blast, the experience of a lifetime.  The One Traveller group has been so lovely - everyone seems to have got on well and Heather and Marcela, the tour managers, have been the best.
But real life must resume.  I'm taking tomorrow to ground myself and get things back to normal and then I will pick up everyday life again!

See you tomorrow, back in the good old UK!!  xx



12 comments:

  1. What a great time you had! Thank you for the lovely travel log. I would have been sorely tempted to pluck one of these oranges too.
    Have a smooth and trouble free journey back. xx

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    1. Thank you, Annabeth, it was a straightforward journey home.

      I grabbed an orange from the bowl at Mistral Hotel and it was just as juicy and delicious as the one at the garden. Ripened on the tree in the Cretan sunshine . . . another fruit altogether from the ones we get here. xx

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  2. Thanks for sharing the photos of the gardens. Back to “auld claes and purrich” as we say here. Catriona

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    1. Yes, indeed, but I am so glad to have had some Mediterranean sunshine in my life. xx

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  3. Lovely x
    Alison in Devon x

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    1. Thanks, Alison. It really was such an interesting and lovely place. xx

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  4. Such a wonderful time. You have really made me think that Crete would be the perfect place to visit for our next holiday.

    God bless.

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    1. It's been wonderful. Simply wonderful.
      It's a long way for you but worth every single mile, truly. Well worth considering seriously. You would not regret it. But avoid summer - it can be very hot (not that that's unusual for you where you live) and teeming with tourists. Spring and autumn are still warm with plenty of sunshine and the mornings and evenings are pleasantly cooler.
      And the food - the traditional food, not the touristy food - is to die for!!
      xx

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  5. I'm glad you had such a lovely time. Thanks for sharing it with us. The plant that you couldn't identify is an Australian native, the waratah, and it is the floral emblem of New South Wales.

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    1. Oh, thank you so much. It is a very lovely plant, very eye catching and cheering. xx

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  6. What a fantastic garden and so much beautiful foliage! always get excited by Amphitheatres!

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    1. They are exciting, aren't they. So old and steeped in history. If only those stones could speak. xx

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