|
Family
Actvities in Cyprus
The Shipwreck
When Akrotiri was an island and the salt lake a strait of shallow sea,
the coastline ran from the Curium to Asomatos. In places you shall see
the old cliff line. Then the Kouris and the Yermasoyia Rivers deposited
white chalk and dark speckled volcanic stones into the sea and the waves
shifted them southwards forming narrow pebble spits. These eventually
cut off the lagoon to make the Salt Lake and the marsh. Your New Year’s
constitutional takes you along the western shingle beach.
For a change, in this low-lying area, we look up at the rest of the
island. The views are expansive, out over the Slat Lake to chalk cuestas
backed by the great mount of Troodos. Further east you can see the
serrated ridges of Papoutsa and Madari above Agros, while seawards the
bold headlands of Curium make the edges of Episkopi Bay. For much of the
circuit the shipwreck is tantalizingly in view, and you will find it
hard to resist its siren call. With luck, towers of cumulus will
dramatize the scene without producing the threatened downpour. The sea,
dark blue on the horizon will lash the rusting hulk of the ship with
restless surf. Shore birds will screech and arrow low along the beach,
startled by your approach.
Drive out of Limassol from the New Port lights, passing through the
tunnel of trees to Asomatos. At the Phassouri Plantations turn left
through the Cypress and eucalyptus woods of the former marsh. Leaving
the woods, the Salt Lake is on your left, the futuristic outlines of the
radar station on your right. Take the first right onto a stony road
after the pylons. There is ample room here for parking.
You will see the wreck, peering over the skyline, but your route takes
you left to the squat outline of Ayios Georgios. Not the most
prepossessing of buildings it is nevertheless worth a look inside.
Little remains of the old paintings on the walls, but the projecting
wooden beams have been carved into the shapes of serpents and used for
hanging lamps.
From the Church continue as indicated on the map. A gentle incline takes
you up onto the former island of Akrotiri. Ancient oyster beds show the
marine origin of the rocks in this area. To your left the Salt Lake, a
shimmering mirage in the summer, will certainly contain water at this
time of year. Follow the second right, a weak track through low juniper
scrubland with scattered small pine trees. There is a hut and some goat
pens. Perhaps a friendly goatherd will invite you to photograph his
flock – or even pose him self.
There is a cross roads, soon after which you pass into more continuous
pines, inhabited by pied crows. For a short distance you follow the
fence line of the Akrotiri Base, before striking right onto a gentle
incline, where a beautiful umbrella tree invites you to take a break.
Now you are on high ridge of calcareous sandstone. Immediately in front
of you is a moonscape of old gravel pits. Though the elevation is not
very great the sea and mountain views are stunning.
Skirt left around the edge of the now defunct diggings and you will
reach a narrow ridge overlooking a wide sandy bay, backed by a mini
Sahara of dunes. The old ship is still quite distant along the shore,
and out in the bay, the tip of another wreck can be seen, almost ready
to submit to the persistent waves. The route now follows the pebble
beach for about half a kilometer, with loose going underfoot. Cusps mark
the limit of the most recent storms and the easiest walking is where the
waves have wet and compacted a fringe of dark sand. The wreck has come
to rest in an area where slabs of eroded conglomerate form the
shoreline. Its middle is gone and the surf sprays its rusting corpse,
slowly sapping its remaining plates.
From the ship a right angle turn tales you through the gravel workings,
where you will pass the remains of buildings and machinery now long
defunct. Just beyond the quarry is the church of Ayios Georgios. If the
weather is wet the diggings may become a morass of even a small lake. In
such an event an alternative route is indicated along the crest of the
ridge, or you may prefer to continue further along the beach from the
wreck and pick up one of the rough pebbled tracks that pass through the
quarry.
Other walks:
Limassol
Tripimenes Petres
Mathikoloni
St Mary of the Golden Caves
Korphyi
Vasa's Amazing Cliff Top View
Lophos
By the Windy Ridge to the Village of Goats
Ayii Sarandi
The Cliffs of Trachonas
On the Heights of Drousha
Akourdalia
Papoutsa
Troodos High Level Routes
Kilani-Perpedhi
Archimandrita
Kellaki and Prastio
Cape Greco
|