Day 4 - Port Spilia (Σπηλια)
to Ag. Eufimia (Αγ.
Ευφημια) on Cephalonia
Wednesday, September 29
Travel time: 6 hrs, Distance: 29.5 nm
Morning hike up to the town
Everyone was up at 7:30 a.m. We all wanted to stretch our legs
and walk up the hill to the town of Spartakhori. It was great to
walk up the hill to town. Mark, Laverne, Kevin, and Sue had started
up the hill before us. We waited for our turn to get water for the
boat and filled up with 30 gallons - €3. It rained for 15 minutes
while we waited.
In the early morning, residents are up walking to stores, sweeping,
and visiting.
We passed the rest of the Didimos crew enjoying coffee on a small,
second floor balcony of a cafe. Everyone was in a great mood. It
was sunny, warm, and not raining!
 
The views from town are spectacular. We had a perfect view of the island of Skorpios opposite the port. Skorpios was the private playground of Aristotle Onassis.

As we all walked back to the boat, a double rainbow appeared. We took this to mean good luck and fair winds ahead.

Our final stop before the boat was Mama's taverna to stocked up
on Mythos and club soda.
Leaving Port Spilia
We departed Port Spilia at 10:30 a.m. in light showers -- is this
rain going to end? What we do know is that it is sunny in Athens.
The rain stopped after 20 minutes. No wind.

We motored around the northwest tip of Meganisi island and down
the west coast to find the natural caves farther south. We were
looking for "Papanikolaos," the second largest cave in
Greece, rumored by the locals to be the hiding place of a Greek
submarine during the Second World War.
We found the cave, motored in close for a look, and then headed
east to Cephalonia island. Halfway to the island of Arkoudi (12
p.m.) the winds picked up, we raised our sails, turned off the motor,
and enjoyed the next 4.5 hours of sailing bliss.
Kevin sailed from Arkoudi to the strait between Cephalonia and
Ithaca. That leg took only two tacks. Winds 16.8 kts apparent, 11.7-16
true, boat speed 6-7.7 kts.
Mark took over and steered us wing-on-wing all the way to Ag. Eufimia.
Winds were 10-15 knots, which makes for challenging downwind sailing.
Boat speed 4-6.5 kts. Mark did a great job, never once getting close
to the "accidental jibe."
Cephalonia is the largest of the Ionian Islands by land mass, but only 300,000 people live there. The island is rugged and steep. On the island is the highest mountain in the Ionians, Mount Nero 5,200 ft.
Here we are following a boat into Ag. Eufimia.

In ancient times, Cephalonia formed part of the kingdom of Odysseus,
and here at least archaeologists have been able to find evidence
of the ancient sites mentioned by Homer.
Like most of the Ionian islands, Cephalonia has strong ties to Italy.
During the early days of W.W.II, 9,000 Italians invaded the Ionians
but never gained real control. The Germans landed on Cephalonia
in 1943 fought with the Italians and then shot the surviving 3,000
solders.
Earthquakes destroyed much of the ancient architecture on Cephalonia.
The 1953 quake demolished every town on the island, except Fiskardho.
We noticed on many of the Ionian islands that the rebuilding after
the numerous earthquakes has resulted in concrete architecture that
is very plain and has the sense of plainness.
Ag. Eufimia used to be the main port for the east coast. But after
the 1953 quake, the town was abandoned and Sami, to the south, became
the major port. Eufimia was then rebuilt.
There were a lot of boats in Eufimia, but no Tradewinds boats. And, the crosswind was 24 kts.
Great.
For our first mooring attempt, Kelli was helmsman. We didn't get
out enough anchor scope (the water was deep) and had a little disagreement
with a group of Germans on the boat we were going to moor beside.
In the melee, we were blown over their rode and hooked our rudder.
This not being a good thing, we worked carefully but quickly to
push the chain down hoping to keep it off the prop, and off the
rudder. Since the rudder is not built to take horizontal stress,
we were rather concerned. But we managed to free ourselves and pull
away from the other boats. Since the Germans were basically jerks
during this whole evolution, we moved down the line and tried another
spot. Not the best mooring, but we not the worst we observed. It
is tricky getting the bow to the anchor point and then back down
straight with crosswind. Good training, and no boat damage.
After awhile, a boat squeezed in along our starboard
side, after first drifting down on our bow. It turned out to be
a very friendly English couple double-handing on their second charter.
Everyone was learning "on the job."

We hung around and watched other boats mooring. Then we headed
out to explore town.
Kelli took these pictures for Doug, our house construction supervisor/foreman.
We had a similar, but less severe, issue with rock on the site of
our new house. Our excavation looked like the first picture. We
used a much bigger CAT with a hydraulic hammer. The entire area
looks to have this white rock subsoil.

Another boring Mediterranean sunset.

We had another great Greek dinner at a restaurant at the top of
the hill overlooking the harbor. By this point in the trip, we are
settling into Greek time and pace. We went to dinner late (8 p.m.),
enjoyed a leisurely dinner (3 hrs), and got to bed at midnight.
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