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Everything about Greece?


Travel Info
I am a student, and I plan to save up and go to Greece in two years after I graduate. Well, Ill only be 17 so mayby even later, but i want to know the cheapest way to get around greece. I live in california, and so far I havent found any flights there except for from new york wich I will not be able to afford to fly there first. I obviosly want to go to Athen, but i want to swim and see santorini, and some othere islands. Is there a cruz to greece? Where should I go? Where should I stay. and eat? I may be on my own so I would probably prefere to be with a tourist group that gives us some freedom? Basically Ill take any tips I can get!

Travel Tips
I went on a tour to Paris with a group called Ubiquity International - they have tours to Greece as well. Check out the website for information about the trips to Greece (they went to Athens and then sailed around the Greek Isles) last summer and this summer they are going to Northern Greece and Mt. Olympus and tracing the steps of Alexander the Great. There are photos from the trip to Athens last year: http://www.ubiquityinternational.com/htm...

You can check out the main website at: http://www.ubiquityinternational.com...

You can also e-mail the company director at info@ubiquityinternational.com for specific information. He has a PhD in Classics and has extensively studied Ancient Greek culture and Greek drama. He can provide more information.

Good luck and I hope you are able to make it to Greece - it is a wonderful place. Source(s): personal knowledge

Other Travel Tips
With well over a hundred inhabited islands and a territory that stretches from the south Aegean to the Balkan countries, Greece offers enough to fill months of travel. The historic sites span four millennia, encompassing both the legendary and the obscure, where a visit can still seem like a personal discovery. Beaches are parcelled out along a convoluted coastline equal to France's in length, and islands range from backwaters where the boat calls twice a week to resorts as cosmopolitan as any in the Mediterranean.

Modern Greece is the result of extraordinarily diverse influences . Romans, Arabs, Latin Crusaders, Venetians, Slavs, Albanians, Turks, Italians, not to mention the Byzantine Empire, have been and gone since the time of Alexander the Great. All have left their mark: the Byzantines in countless churches and monasteries; the Venetians in impregnable fortifications in the Peloponnese; and other Latin powers, such as the Knights of Saint John and the Genoese, in imposing castles across the northeastern Aegean. Most obvious is the heritage of four centuries of Ottoman Turkish rule which, while universally derided, contributed substantially to Greek music, cuisine, language and way of life. Significant, and still-existing, minorities - Vlachs, Muslims, Catholics, Jews, Gypsies - have also helped to forge the hard-to-define but resilient Hellenic identity , which has kept alive the people's sense of themselves throughout their turbulent history. With no local ruling class or formal Renaissance period to impose superior models of taste or patronize the arts, medieval Greek peasants, fishermen and shepherds created a vigorous and truly popular culture, which found expression in the songs and dances, costumes, embroidery, carved furniture and the white Cubist houses of popular imagination. During the last few decades much of this has disappeared under the impact of Western consumer values, relegated to museums at best, but recently the country's architectural and musical heritage in particular have undergone a renaissance, with buildings rescued from dereliction and performers reviving, to varying degrees, half-forgotten musical traditions.

Of course there are formal cultural activities as well: museums that shouldn't be missed, magnificent medieval mansions and castles , as well as the great ancient sites dating from the Neolithic, Bronze Age, Minoan, Classical, Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine eras. Greece hosts some excellent summer festivals too, bringing international theatre, dance and musical groups to perform in ancient theatres, as well as castle courtyards and more contemporary venues in coastal and island resorts.

But the call to cultural duty will never be too overwhelming on a Greek holiday. The hedonistic pleasures of languor and warmth - going lightly dressed, swimming in balmy seas at dusk, talking and drinking under the stars - are just as appealing. And despite recent improvements to the tourism "product", Greece is still essentially a land for adaptable sybarites, not for those who crave orthopedic mattresses, faultless plumbing, Cordon-Bleu cuisine and attentive service. Except at the growing number of luxury facilities in new or restored buildings, hotel and pension rooms can be box-like, campsites offer the minimum of facilities, and the food at its best is fresh and uncomplicated.
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