from €2,400* per person | 12 Days | Year-round |
Comfort accommodations
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Exertion level: 3
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Operator: Aegean Adventures |
24 people max
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The Northern Aegean is an area neglected by foreign visitors – one reason it is inviting to adventurous bikers. In Lesvos and Chios islands you will find an authentic local culture where the plateia (town square) dominates village life, elders still riding donkeys side saddle and old men sitting all day at the kafeneion (café) playing tavli (backgammon) and drinking dark Greek coffee (mavro) in doll-sized cups.
As Greece’s third largest island, Lesvos has almost 400 kilometers of paved road with minimal traffic outside Mytilini, the capital. It is the home of ouzo, that Greek spirit with a licorice flavor. You could easily spend the entire tour cycling here. But then you absolutely do not want to miss Chios, an island that has a retro-1950s feels to it from the moment you get off the boat and face the old Rex Theatre. Unique in the world to Chios is mastic, cultivated since medieval days and now enjoying an eco-cachet as an anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory resin.
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Locations visited/nearby
Greece, Europe
0 testimonials about this trip.
3 testimonials about the provider, Aegean Adventures:
-
Reviewer: Francie Johnston
located in
San Francisco,
California
USA
Our tour [on the Cyclades islands] was meticulously
planned and executed -- the islands, towns where we stayed,
cycling routes, sag support, etc. were terrific. It was logistically
very complicated because we always had to be back at a port at the
correct time to catch the ferry to the next island, but we never seemed
rushed or anything cut short.
-
Reviewer: Louise Taylor
located in
Olympia,
Washington
USA
Thank you for another wonderful trip [hiking in Crete], I think the very best. I will miss the whole
group, and of course Greece.
[her third trip with us]
-
Reviewer: Marcia Migay
located in
Thunder Bay,
Ontario
Canada
What a fabulous trip! 3 of the women I
train with are excited about the possibility of travelling to cycle
Greece together next year with your company. I'll let you know as we
discuss plans more! Thank-you once again for a fantastic trip. Your
attention to detail was so appreciated. You just spoiled everyone.
And I appreciated the opportunity to see a side of Greece most people
will never experience.
Special information
- This is a custom departure, meaning this trip is offered on dates that you arrange privately with the provider. Additionally, you need to form your own private group for this trip. The itinerary and price here is just a sample. Contact the provider for detailed pricing, minimum group size, and scheduling information. For most providers, the larger the group you are traveling with, the lower the per-person cost will be.
- Self-guided (includes hotels, maps, luggage transfer, etc but no guide).
Itinerary
Day 1: Mytilini
Take a slow loop ride along Mytilini’s southern coast. En route the Thilophilos Museum exhibiting this local folk artist’s work. There are inviting beaches along this route. Enjoy your time in the elegant port city of Mytilini ogling opulent 19th century mansions. Take time to visit the Roman era theatre which once seated 10,000 people.
Day 2: Molyvos
Heading north the road hugs the eastern seacoast with views of Turkey always in the distance. En route there are several important churches and monasteries that attract Greeks from all over. Don’t tarry because you will want to maximize your time in lovely Molyvos, visiting the seaside hammam Eftolou and exploring the Genovese castle.
Day 3: Molyvos
Five kilometers south is Petra alluring with its expansive sandy beach. Today you make a look that takes you to little mountain villages and eventually back to the sea at Skala Sikaminia, a charming fishing hamlet whose Gorgona Church is called such because the Virgin Mary is portrayed as a mermaid (“gorgona” in Greek”).
Day 4: Skala Eressos
Riding westward, the terrain dramatically changes from lively green to desert-y dry. One stretch looks like a moonscape. Low key and hip, Skala Eresso is one of the most alternative places in Greece: vegan restaurants, reflexologists and white kids with dreadlocks. In September there is a women’s music festival.
Day 5: Skala Eressos
You can hang out in Skala Eressos for the day or cycle west to Sigri. The town feels like the end of the world with its unobstructed western horizon. Sigri has a Turkish era fortress that’s intriguing to roam around. The ride’s big highlight is the fascinating Petrified Forest, with “trees’ millennia years old.
Day 6: Skala Kalloni
Bike through quiet villages stopping for frappés and spinach pies hot from the fournos (bakery). The Kalloni Gulf is known for water sports, birdwatching – migrations from Africa – and sardines (“sardelles”) with high mineral content. The town has sandy beaches and water sports like windsurfing
Day 7: Plomari
Cycle up to Agiassos, a mountain town boasting traditional arts and crafts. Next stop at n route stop at refreshing Karini Springs where artist Theophilos lived inside a tree. Yes, you can enter the tree and see where he slept! If Lesvos is home to ouzo, Plomari is its headquarters and you can visit various distilleries for tastings.
Day 8: Chios
Take time in the early morning to bike to Melinda a sea town with about six houses and an amazingly romantic beach. Heading back to Mytilini, you will take a boat at Perama to cross the bay and then cycle into the city. Now you have several options: 1) catch the afternoon boat to Chios and continue the tour, 2) catch an evening boat or flight to Athens for home, 3) stay all night in Mytilini to catch a day-boat to Turkey.
Day 9: Mesta
Chios town is noisy, chaotic, run down and funky and that’s why, ultimately, you’ll enjoy it. Depart for the countryside when you’ve had your fill of city life. You are now headed to the intriguing mastica villages (mastikachoria) whose mastica was once as valuable as silver. Pirate raids forced villagers to convert their medieval homes into fortifications
Day 10: Mesta
Spend the day cycling or hiking from one mastic village to the next. Olympi has a cave to explore. The most curious town is Pyrgi with homes, churches and buildings painted a black and white design so dazzling you will get dizzy walking through the town. Pygri is the reputed homeland of Christopher Columbus who islanders claim was from Chios!
Day 11: Kambos
Kambos is a neighborhood of 18th and 19th century Genoese mansions, pastel pink and red horizontal stripes with arched portals, Arabesque doors and grand courtyards filled with orchards and water-spouting cisterns. Despite destruction of many mansions during the 1821 massacre and 1881 earthquake, enough survive to enchant you.
Day 12: Departure
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