Friday, October 31, 2025

Peloponnesian Fugue 3: October 16-18: Mani Peninsula: Limeni, Areopoli, Gythio, Vathia, Gerolimenas (Laconia)

Sardinian Warbler Sylvia melanocephala

Cirl Bunting Emberiza cirlus

Cirl Bunting Emberiza cirlus

European Robin Erithacus rubecula

Willow Warbler Phylloscopus trochilus

Rock Dove Columba livia

Yellow-legged Gull Larus michahellis

Yellow-legged Gull Larus michahellis

Common Buzzard Buteo buteo

Peloponnese Wall Lizard Podarcis peloponnesiacus

Violet Carpenter Bee Xylocopa violacea

Hummingbird Hawk-moth Macroglossum stellatarum


Give me Collis Bird Guide afterworld...

Hills above Limeni


Tower house in Areopoli

Areopoli


Areopoli

Restaurant boss cat in Areopoli


Limeni



Which end is which...

Ghost town of Vathia

Downtown Vathia

Vathia

Vathia

Mistaking Buzzards for Corvids in Vathia

Gythio

Morning walk above Limeni

Morning walk above Limeni

Mani – the middlemost of the three southern-reaching Peloponnesian peninsulas. There is a scruffy pride in the Maniot history of feudal battles – inter-family disagreements that spanned decades and centuries. Battered tower houses still stand in most towns, once the site and target of these protracted campaigns. I read one account that described how the men of the opposing families would pile into the fortified tower houses and hammer away at each other with musket and cannon fire for months, while the women shuttled in food and ammo, untouched. Then, come autumn, they’d all put down their weapons and grudgingly help harvest each other’s fields, before resuming the battles where they left off when that was done. I guess this is what people did before the internet, eh? I kid, but I loved Mani - it was yet another spot in the Peloponnese where you could still clearly hear the dramatic footfalls of the past echoing off the cobbles. DRAMATIC ORCHESTRA HIT


October 16

While driving from Monemvasia to Limeni, a chunky falcon seen along the coast (Peregrine feel).

Two hours and 12 stray dogs fed later, we arrived on the southwest coast of the Mani Peninsula. In the hills above Limeni at our hotel, a motley crew of birds: Great Tit, Sardinian Warbler, Eurasian Blackcap, some unidentified Pipits (?) flushed from the side of a dirt road (I never went back as self-promised), European Robin, Rock Doves on the cliffs, and blobs of Starlings overhead. And, finally, a lizard - a lone Peloponnese Wall Lizard sunned itself on a path. You gotta love a lizard.

In cozy Areopoli, Jackdaws over town, and an encounter with a German guy with Swaros. He didn’t seem too keen to talk birds with me. Maybe he wasn’t a birder, who knows. Or maybe he wasn’t…German after all? DRAMATIC ORCHESTRA HIT

At dusk back near Limeni, the sunset was shared with European Blackbirds and Barn Swallows.


October 17

Morning In the painfully picturesque harbour village of Limeni itself saw a Common Kingfisher, mixed hirundines overhead, Grey Wagtails, and more European Robins.

The touristy town of Gythio was pretty quiet on the bird front, with Yellow-legged Gull, Grey Wagtail, and European Robin along the main harbour strip.

I looked everywhere for a Greek fisherman’s hat on the trip, with no luck. There was a large fisherman’s supply store in Gythio that looked promising, but it seems like Greek fishermen only wear crappy made in China camo boonie hats these days. If only they knew how much cash they could make from balding hipster tourists...

In the heights of the southern tip of the Mani peninsula, looms the ghost town of Vathia. It was a gloomy and rainy afternoon, which felt appropriate. It reminded me of abandoned fishing hamlets in places like Gageo Island and elsewhere in rural Korea – like people just got up and left one day and never came back, decades ago, newspapers still on the table. Common Ravens overhead added to the mood. I dismissed one circling bird as a Raven, but Evelyn insisted it was an eagle. On closer inspection, it was indeed a raptor (Common Buzzard). I was happy to be fact-checked – it reminded me to not be complacent, and I was impressed with her growing birding instincts.

Back at the hotel in Limeni, a Tawny Owl started up at 11:10pm.

October 18

A final morning walk in the olive tree hills above the hotel – birds everywhere in the scrub. Several Cirl Buntings, Eurasian Siskin and Hawfinch overhead, more Sardinian and Willow Warblers, Great Tit, Spotted Flycatcher, Eurasian Blackbird, and European Robin.

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Peloponnesian Fugue 2: October 14-15: Monemvasia (Laconia)

Blue Rock Thrush Monticola solitarius pandoo

Blue Rock Thrush Monticola solitarius pandoo

Blue Rock Thrush Monticola solitarius pandoo

Sardinian Warbler Sylvia melanocephala

Sardinian Warbler Sylvia melanocephala

Sardinian Warbler Sylvia melanocephala

Western Rock Nuthatch Sitta neumayer

House Sparrow Passer domesticus

House Sparrow Passer domesticus

House Sparrow Passer domesticus

Common Buzzard Buteo buteo (?)

The wreck of The Dimitrios

Monemvasia seen from the north



Medieval cobbles by night


Greek coffee - too small and muddy for my taste


Roof tiles incorporated into time-worn fortifications

'My' cat making itself at home

My kingdom for one of these things

Looking north from the old town clifftop

Old church up in Monemvasia's old town

Actual moment I got on the Sardinian Warbler

'Old town' Monemvasia


A quick thought on driving in the Peloponnese. I feel like I have levelled up my driving skills after surviving the trip – kind of like how you will never improve your Mario Kart skills always playing on ‘easy’ – but after playing on ‘hard’ for a week, you get much better at swapping paint with Bowser in the corners. The amount of terrifying blind curves and switchback roads became blasé after a while – as did the boy racers Tokyo Drifting around each of those corners (always a bloody Audi), taking up half of my lane in the process, while the tires of my trusty Toyota Something clung to the edge of the road inches from the sheer cliffside. Driving in Greece was definitely a constant adrenaline trickle, for better or worse. Every time I parked the car I felt like I’d gotten away with something (same feeling I got driving a motorcycle in Korea). That being said, the Greek roads were, with several bone-rattling exceptions, in much better condition that those here in Québec.

October 14

On the road in the morning: Jackdaw, Grey Heron, Common Buzzard, Magpies and Jays. Had a Black Kite near the wreck of The Dimitrios on Valtaki Beach.

This was en route to the medieval walled city of Monemvasia. Helluva place, that Monemvasia – very Game of Thrones. The fortress city is connected to the mainland by a narrow causeway (the 'single entrance’ referenced in the name Monemvasia), that one must walk across to get there – no cars allowed.

Once settled in the town, the cliffs were alive with the chatter of more Western Rock Nuthatch, as well as Blue Rock Thrush – these were the all-blue pandoo subspecies, which I never managed to catch up with in Korea (as opposed to the resident philippensis rusty-bellied variety).

Over the Myrtoan Sea, flyby Eurasian Shag and Yellow-legged Gulls.


October 15

Wood Lark and Sardinian Warbler heard at dawn. Never caught up with the former, but did manage to spot one of the latter at the top of the cliffs in the ‘old town’ section of Monemvasia towards dusk. Always fun to meet a new Sylvia warbler! Got good looks at the striking red eye through the bins, but the bird proved tricky to nail down with my knackered bridge camera.

Also up top were a dozen Eurasian Crag-Martin, a few Common Raven, and a Common Buzzard hovering over the cliffs, fully backlit (I thought it was something more exotic at first - felt bulky in the field with long 'fingers' - I was thinking Short-toed Snake Eagle. Some folks on an ID group were thinking Long-Legged Buzzard, Bonelli's Eagle, or Booted Eagle, but the majority went for Common Buzzard...).

Had quick views of a falcon zipping over the seaside cliffs near the upper old town. What struck me in the field was the pointy, elongated feel of the overall silhouette – the wings were long and slim (compared to a Peregrine), as was the tail. I’m thinking this was most likely an Eleonora’s Falcon, and I’m gutted not to have gotten better looks.

Brief looks at a Sparrowhawk over the same cliffs (Eurasian? Levant?).