Through the Blue
  • About
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      • Andros
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      • Mykonos (Popular) ✈️
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      • Paros (Popular) ❤️❤️ ✈️
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      • Skopelos
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      • Limnos ✈️
  • Special Places to Stay
    • Athens (Central) – The Aeolian
    • Ios (Cyclades) – Sea Sound Beach House
    • Milos (Cyclades) – Villa De Viento
  • Insider Insights
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  • Travel Tips
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    • Trip Planning Tips for Young Families
    • Selecting Accommodation – Mistakes to Avoid 🏠
    • Practical Greece – Know Before You Go
      • Travel Tips

        Practical Greece – Good to Know Before You…

        Aug 04, 2025

        Travel Tips

        The Best Thing to Add to Your Holiday…

        Jul 19, 2025

        Travel Tips

        Selecting a Family Holiday Home in Greece? 5…

        Feb 06, 2023

        Travel Tips

        Driving in Greece

        Jan 30, 2023

        Travel Tips

        How to Plan a Sweat-Free Summer in Greece…

        Jan 29, 2022

    • Eating with Kids In Greece 🍉
    • Medical Help in Greece ⚕️
    • Don’t Leave Greece Without . . .
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    • Summer Packing List 👙
    • Travel Gear for Babies and Toddlers 🧳
    • Travel Toys for Toddlers 🧸
    • Beach Essentials for Families ⛱️
    • The Ultimate Kids Beach Holiday Adventure Kit 🪁
    • Gifts from Greece 🎁
  • About
  • Why Greece
  • Where to First?
  • Destinations
    • Family Favourites >
      • 2025 Roundup – Our Favourite Greek Islands with Kids
      • Andros
      • Limnos ✈️
      • Naxos ✈️
      • Paros ✈️
      • Sifnos
      • Skopelos
    • The Mainland 🚗>
      • Athens ✈️ >
        • Central Athens
        • Kifisia (Northern Suburb)
      • Thessaloniki ✈️
      • Kalavrita ⛷️
      • Meteora ⛰️
    • Crete ✈️
    • Evia 🚗 >
      • Chalkida
      • North Evia
    • Cyclades ❤️ (POPULAR) >
      • Andros
      • Ios
      • Koufonisia ❤️❤️
      • Milos ❤️❤️ ✈️
      • Mykonos (Popular) ✈️
      • Naxos (popular) ❤️ ✈️
      • Paros (Popular) ❤️❤️ ✈️
      • Santorini (Popular) ✈️
      • Serifos ❤️
      • Sifnos ❤️
    • The Dodecanese >
      • Karpathos ✈️
    • Ionian Islands >
      • Kefalonia ✈️
      • Lefkada 🚗✈️
    • Sporades >
      • Skopelos
    • Saronic Islands
    • North Aegean Islands >
      • Limnos ✈️
  • Special Places to Stay
    • Athens (Central) – The Aeolian
    • Ios (Cyclades) – Sea Sound Beach House
    • Milos (Cyclades) – Villa De Viento
  • Insider Insights
    • Bleecker & Love
    • Meet MAMAKITA – Family Travel Planners in Greece
    • Papa’s Grove’s Greece
  • Travel Tips
    • How to Select a Greek Island 🎯
    • Best Times to Visit 🔆
    • Ferry Travel 🚢
    • Driving in Greece 🚗
    • Trip Planning Tips for Young Families
    • Selecting Accommodation – Mistakes to Avoid 🏠
    • Practical Greece – Know Before You Go
      • Travel Tips

        Practical Greece – Good to Know Before You…

        Aug 04, 2025

        Travel Tips

        The Best Thing to Add to Your Holiday…

        Jul 19, 2025

        Travel Tips

        Selecting a Family Holiday Home in Greece? 5…

        Feb 06, 2023

        Travel Tips

        Driving in Greece

        Jan 30, 2023

        Travel Tips

        How to Plan a Sweat-Free Summer in Greece…

        Jan 29, 2022

    • Eating with Kids In Greece 🍉
    • Medical Help in Greece ⚕️
    • Don’t Leave Greece Without . . .
  • Gear & Gifts
    • Summer Packing List 👙
    • Travel Gear for Babies and Toddlers 🧳
    • Travel Toys for Toddlers 🧸
    • Beach Essentials for Families ⛱️
    • The Ultimate Kids Beach Holiday Adventure Kit 🪁
    • Gifts from Greece 🎁
Through the Blue

FALL IN LOVE WITH GREECE. AEGEAN ADVENTURES FOR FAMILIES.

Tag:

Road Trips

Destinations

Winter Holidaying in Greece: Surprising Kalavrita

by Lindsay Jan 04, 2024
written by Lindsay
Kalavrita ski center, Greece

A winter retreat with ski runs named after Greek Goddesses like Leto and Alkimini, Kalavrita is nestled in alpine prettiness a 2-hour drive from Athens. It also has plenty of family-friendly, off-slope attractions to offer.  


The idea of skiing in Greece may raise some eyebrows, but its soaring peaks harbour a clutch of winter wonderlands that are arguably as attractive as its cult beach draws. If you’ve heard of one, it’s probably Arachova. Locally known as the “winter Mykonos”, an apres-ski scene draws glitzy Athenians who swig cocktails to chase the cold away.

Equally close to Athens is Kalavrita. A cozy mountain village offering child-friendly activities connected with its natural beauty. From the village center, a ski center and school sits a 20-minute drive up the slopes of Mount Helmos. While there are no ski-to-door accommodation options here, ample parking is available. It’s a good alternative for late planners (like us) to otherwise overbooked, overcrowded, and heavily-priced Swiss or French Alp itineraries.

There’s more to Kalavrita beyond snow sports. Sitting in a National Park resplendent with geomorphological diversity, a cog train ride snakes through the vertiginous Vouraikos river gorge, then down to coastal Diakofto for a seaside lunch.  You can also visit a spectacular cave phenomenon with subterranean cascading lakes. In Planitero village, fish farmers set up tavernas by river source waters and grill fresh-caught trout to serve. And of course, there’s the mandatory Greek village square to explore, where stone buildings cluster around a Christian Orthodox church anchoring the main square.

WHERE TO STAY WITH KIDS

It’s always a good idea to stay close to main villages where supermarkets, cafes, tavernas and bakeries gather. In Kalavrita, more ideal perhaps, is slightly higher up in the restorative silence of the mountains, where the pine-scented air is especially crisp, and valley view vistas leave you feeling a little lighter each morning. Thanasis’ chalet set in the slopes of Koklos is a 7-minute drive from the main village. Drawn to the light-filled, wood-panelled cabin, his cosy mountain hideaway wasn’t just exceedingly enchanting, it was complete. Right down to a fridge fully-stocked with milk, eggs, bread, and other breakfast essentials.

Kalavrita Airbnb
A mountainside chalet dream a 7-minute drive from the main village

As we settled-in, the kids zipped from the basement playroom, out onto the verandah and its beam-slung swing, then wandered into the kitchen for snacks where they discover a magical cornflake dispenser. And the highest highlight? The sweetest dog Rhea that stands guard outside which they adopted for the week. This was their dream of the ideal Airbnb.

THE MAIN VILLAGE SQUARE

From our chalet in the mountains, we made easy trips in the mornings and evenings to cafes (Utopia for coffee and custard-filled bougatsa breakfast takeaways), the bakery, and tavernas. 

The main village walkway
Village walks in the main town.

To Spitiko was memorably delicious. Translating to “home” in Greek, in the warm, wood-clad enfolds of a small mountain taverna, it felt like that. Our meals were a beautiful balance of traditional with an artful touch of a talented chef to elevate. The highlight for me was oven-baked arni (goat), with melty breaks of flavour-filled fat between the meat. The children finished their rooster in red sauce and pasta with little coaxing. And if you have weaning toddlers in hand, gigantes is a giant bean tomato-based stew that works well for smashing into baby purees. We returned to take away meals for dinner at home the day after. 

In the heart of the square, Montana cafe-lounge seemed spacious enough to accommodate fidgety kids. Plunging into leather sofas by the fireplace, we wind-down with walnut pies, crepes and hot chocolate. 

ODONTOTOS TRAIN 

The Italian-built cog railway might be more than 120 years old, but it’s a modern, compact “Smart”-like train car that takes passengers on a slow chug around near vertical cliffs of the Helmos – Voraikos gorge. Following the river down to the Gulf of Corinth, the ride is scenic, but it’s also long. An hour each way, my 3 and 6-year olds were much less captivated by the magnificence of nature slipping by our windows, and quickly grew bored after the initial excitement of a train ride.

The train station in the village centre
The train station is in the center of Kalavrita’s village.

If you make the trip anyways, bring snacks to keep little ones busy. Other key tips: book your ticket online and in advance before showing up at the station. And when you do, keep in mind that it’s not clear from the seat plan that every two rows turn inwards to face each other. Select successive seat rows accordingly if you plan to sit together as a family. 

Kalavrita Train Ride Views
Scenic, but slightly boring for young kids.

You might also want to travel on a weekend. When we arrived in sleepy Diakofto on a Tuesday at 12:10pm, most of the village restaurants were closed. Quite a plight with little else to do before the return train departs at 3pm. Check ahead to make sure the taverna you plan to visit (our sights were set on seafront Kohili) will be open for lunch plans in between. But if you find yourself in the same situation as us, try Kostas grill. More of a meat place, but because his brother owns the fish monger a few doors down, we had a hefty kilo of calamari and fried barbounia (red mullet).

THE SKI CENTER

Rising up to 2,340m at its highest point, Kalavryta ski resort presents enough challenges for experienced skiers with 14 ski runs (including a black run) and 8 lifts. Its facilities are otherwise basic, including the requisite base cafe cum canteen for espresso hits and savoury pies. Ski lessons can be arranged for children from 3 years, while a snow fun park offers additional entertainment for the less adventurous. Undergoing a series of upgrades, a brand new cable car was also installed this year taking groups of 10 up mid-slope.

Kalavrita Ski Center
The new cable car ride at the ski center.

THE CAVE OF LAKES

In an astonishing 2-kilometer long cave complex in Kastria, a subterranean river has carved out remarkable sculptures within the 3 floors of its limestone walls. A steel pathway of crossings and bridges take you through fantastical stalactite and stalagmite forms, and over miniature lakes that fill over when the snow melts. It’s an easy walk even for a 3-year old. 

Inside the Cave of Lakes in Kalavrita, Greece
A steel pathway takes you through the Cave of Lakes.

Don’t skip over the museum at the entrance (it should really be your first stop). Nondescript on the outside, it surprises with modern, interactive displays within. There’s also a guide to take you through the exhibits.

Cave of Lakes Museum in Kalavrita Greece
Don’t skip over the easy-to-miss museum at the entrance to the Cave of Lakes.

PLANITERO 

A 5-minute drive on from the Cave of Lakes, the source of the river Ladonas springs from the lush grounds of sleepy Planitero village. These are the mountain forests of a storybook, where crystal clear waters gush through streams and rivers that sparkle under the dappled light of the winter sun filtering through walnut, plane and oak trees. 

Two tavernas have set-up fish farms around these springs, raising river trout, salmon and sturgeon that will jump from farm to your fork. Fish Farm is situated in manicured garden grounds that are also home to an unexpected population of swans and other domesticated fowl – a diversity of play pals for kids in tow. Rustic Planitero has a larger menu, including an impressive number of ways to prepare your fish. Baked in cognac-filled parchment, or roasted with almonds? The options are a salivating spread of flavour-dense dishes.

WHEN TO VISIT

The village gets decked out for Christmas from 13 December,  recalling the holocaust of 13 December 1943 when the male village population was exterminated by the occupying German army. December is early for snow if you plan to ski. Greece’s ski season typically runs from January to February, and is when the village is busiest. 

Jan 04, 2024 0 comment
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Destinations

Day Trip from Athens: Chalkida (Evia) with Kids

by Lindsay Jun 07, 2023
written by Lindsay
Chalkida's waterside promenade

Evia’s nondescript capital is not an obvious destination for tourists and Athenians alike. Its draw for us? Family-friendly attractions, relaxed seafood dining, and a lovely beach within an hour’s drive of Athens.


Last updated 15 June 2024

Gateway to Evia, Chalkida connects Greece’s second largest island to the mainland by two bridges on the island’s center. With its ease of access, why isn’t it more popular than it is?

Without the obviously breathtaking to draw souvenir-seeking crowds, it’s easily overlooked. And while I wouldn’t suggest it for first visits to Greece, it can be a good day trip destination from Athens, or as a stopover on your way north to Mandoudi port to catch a summer ferry to the Sporades.  

Here are five favourite haunts and activities with the kids in Chalkida:

1. WATERSIDE PROMENADE WALKS (& EATS)

Built along the Evian Gulf, the city’s waterside promenade is perfect for slow family strolls and kiddie scoots. Start from the iconic 19th century Red House on the northern end, where an assembly of cafes boasting elevated sea views sit beside wide open spaces where giggling children play tag.

The walk towards the old bridge is lined with trendy cafés and touristy moussaka-touting tavernas on stand-up banners at the entrance. The better restaurants are found past the old bridge where it gets quieter on the waterfront. Euvous presents well-executed modern dining that’s big on meats, and even more impressive appetisers. A few doors down, edgy Tsafaki ouzerie is a top spot for sampling the island’s specialty shellfish and seafood.

The old drawbridge connects the mainland to the island at the strait’s narrowest point. Linger long enough and you might notice the “crazy waters” that confounded Aristotle with water currents that change directions eight times a day.

Past the bridge, a 10-minute walk down, is outdoor beach bar and restaurant Asteria. Here, the self-consciously hip gather for cocktails and club beats, alongside families that hover around a fenced playground. This is a space for everyone.

2. THE (MINI) FUN PARK

Close to the city square is a mini fun park that’s just the right size – not too large so adults are not hounded into spending hours, but with a handful of attractions for a brief fill of fun. A mini bumper car ring and eighties-era amusement park aside, trampolines by the sea are perfectly positioned for a sunset bounce.

A mini fun park by the water in Chalkida City
Trampoline by the sea

3. BISKOTOGLYCO SWEET BOUTIQUE

By the Byzantine church of Agia Paraskevi in the city’s main square (Avantes) is a small heaven of dessert, both traditional and updated. A medley of textures and luscious flavours are the stuff of cake dreams. But it’s the velvety soft serve and artisanal ice cream the girls jump for every visit. From this central spot, you’re not far the city’s main pedestrian-only shopping street (Avanton). Put a google pin on Zara and you’ll find where the shopping action surrounds. A restaurant worth mentioning in the vicinity is Piato. Set in soothing Scandanavian-styled interiors, a luscious repertoire of modern-Greek flavours stream out from the kitchen. Or just a very tasty burger if that’s more up your kid’s alley.

Biskotoglyko – a mandatory sweet stop in Avantes square

4. ALYKES – ROCK POOLS & BEACH BARS

Better than most beaches in Athens, and with less of a crowd (although you will still be hard-pressed for loungers on a summer weekend), Alykes was a frequent escape for a summer splash when we lived in the big city. Its fine, fair coloured sand and turquoise waters are unusual for dark and wild volcanic Evia. An attractive respite for families, a family-friendly line of beach bars line its shores, some with bouncy castles and playground equipment.

Daluz beach bar in Alykes, Chalkida
Daluz is one of many family-friendly beach bars in Alykes

Daluz is our favourite in a quieter corner at the far end, with a shallow seabed that stretches for a distance, and decent-for-a-beach-bar fare they can serve to your beach lounger. Alternatively, kick-back on grassy lawns of Ippokampus under the shade of mulberry and fig trees.

Between stretches of sandy shoreline at Alykes are rocky outcrops that only became interesting after kids. Easy-access rock pools teem with sea life waiting to be discovered. Endless are the hours they spend watching shrimp and baby fish scuttle up and down flooded cracks, collecting and releasing tiny hermit crabs, and dislodging rocks in search of crabs and slithering brittle stars.

Rock pools in Alykes beach, Chalkida
Uncovering crabs, catching shrimp, and looking for hermit crabs in the rock pools of Alykes

5. SEASIDE SEAFOOD DINING

Seafood is a highlight in Greece. And in Evia, there’s more to get excited about. Home to varieties of shellfish only available in these parts, Greeks come to Chalkida to feast on exotic, fresh-caught delicacies. Paleologos is a seaside tavern where our meals stretch for hours, in part because the kids discover a good time running in circles in the little garden behind.

Palaiologos Taverna Chalkida
Chalkida is renowned for fresh fish and shellfish, and Palaiologos is our go-to seafood tavern

In it’s largeness, Evia doesnt quite feel like an island. But twenty minutes out from Chalkida’s city is Nea Artaki with a distinct island vibe, and more seafood taverns to choose from.

Nea Artaki in Chalkida
Nea Artaki seaside village 10 km north of Chalkida
Jun 07, 2023 0 comment
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Ionian Islands

Why (and Why Not) Lefkada: Is the Island and its Pin-Up Beach Attractions Fit for Kids?

by Lindsay Aug 26, 2022
written by Lindsay
Egremni beach in Lefkada

Lefkada’s draw is exceptional beach beauty. But is it for everyone?


Fringed by scores of sensational beaches, such concentration of extraordinary coastal beauty in one island almost seems unreal. Also known as “Lefkas” (“white” in Greek), Lefkada’s shores are famous for milky hues that meet absurdly blue beauty. Then framed by vertiginous cliff-faces, these are the makings of mythic island paradises where steep descents down wood and rope staircases reward the brave with a spectacle of nature.

While enticing, the best of these dramatic coasts are difficult to access. Particularly with a baby on one hip, a toddler gripping your opposing hand, and a backpack of water, fruit and beach gear. It’s the eastern shoreline that families tend to settle on, with flatter coastal edges, shallow shores, and sheltered waters. Hardly as exciting, and missing the main point of Lefkada.

Thrilling Egremni is hard to leave, in many ways . Getting there involves a 1 km hike and a 400-stair descent.

And what of its off-beach draws? Having just come from the Cyclades, I pined after graphic villages to roam after long afternoons on the beach. Agios Nikitas, Lefkada’s prettiest, is a single, busy walkway that feels a tad over-touristy. Its mountainous hinterland village scene? Slightly over sleepy. And the capital? Most of its old town was lost to successive earthquakes in 1948 and 1953. Left to re-build, the result is an anarchic cross between a Brazilian backstreet and a neon-lit soi in Bangkok (the Thai bit is particularly accentuated around the waterfront corner).

For me, Lefkada is not an island for enchanting villages. Lefkada is for beach lovers. If you’re the type to cross continents in search of sublime shores, this is the Greek island for you, with older children in your company.

WHERE TO STAY WITH KIDS

With young kids and many mini market trips to make, it always easier to live close to a village. Consider these two:

— AGIOS NIKITAS —

Easily the most attractive village in the island, a main stone-paved pathway lined with apartments-to-rent, souvenir shops and tavernas lead you to a cozy beach cove with sparkling blue waters that are perfectly child-friendly. If you can find seaside accommodation here, this will give you a head start for a spot on the beach before the crowds arrive. At the same time, as a central draw for the island’s visitors, it’s easy to run into your neighbours here. Dodge the congestion by staying on the outskirts. Perhaps higher up in the hills above dreamy Milos beach where some villas have direct access to the elusive sand strip below. 

  • Sapfo Tavern in Agios Nikitas
    At the end of Agios Nikita’s main walkway, you will find the beach.
  • Agios Nikitas beach
    Protected, calm, and child-friendly, but also crowded. The water taxis to Milos beach dock here.
— NIKIANA —

Skip Nidri. Nikiana’s quaint waterfront is less busy, relaxed, complete with mini-marts and a clutch of cafes, tavernas, and the stylish new NV beach bar, in addition to more swimming bays nearby. 

The small port of Nikiana has numerous child-friendly beach options close by

THE BEST FAMILY-FRIENDLY BEACHES

You don’t have to miss out on all of the stunning, but sometimes daunting, stretches of Lefkada’s dreamiest west side beaches, even if you’ve come with tots in tow. While Egremni is probably not a good idea, and getting to Milos comes with a little more adventure (take a boat taxi departing from Agios Nikitas beach to avoid the 20-minute trek), we’ve included hospitable choices that are just as impressive.

Especially if you’re visiting the exposed west, check a wind app  for the direction and strength of the wind for the beach you’re considering on the day of your trip. Too wavy, and you’re better off heading to a calmer bay (e.g. Agios Nikitas) or a sheltered spot on the eastern coast. 

— PEFKOULIA —

Delightfully unchallenging, yet thoroughly impressive, this long sweep of part-organised, part-free beach delivers on the Lefkadian promise of bluer-than-blue waters and white pebbly shores. Backed by a lush green mountainscape, the scent of pine surrounds as you sunbathe on its shores. It’s thoroughly more relaxed here than on packed-out Kathisma with its mega beach clubs. Also close to Agios Nikitas, you can drop-in for an evening walk later. Deck pool bar and restaurant supplies drinks and snack type foods, but also has a full menu of traditional favourites like pastitsio and moussaka. 

Pefkoulia Beach in Lefkada
Close to Agios Nikitas, Pefkoulia is both stunning and easy to access
— PORTO KATSIKI —

With a name that translates to “goat port”, I was concerned about taking the kids down a beach only goats could previously reach. Now, there are 100 stairs. And it turns out that 100 stairs is hardly tiring at all, even for the semi-fit. While the beach has no amenities, there are three shops at the entryway with fast food, refreshment, beach mats, floats, umbrellas and other last-minute purchases you might need. Arrive before 1pm and you might be able to steal some shade under the shadow of towering rocks that crown the beach. After that, the shaded portion quickly recedes. While the beach will be filled with a rainbow of umbrellas covering the entirety of its shore in the peak of summer, somehow, the crowds get lost in the presence of such majestic beauty, and nature envelopes all. Parking is a challenge, but not overly difficult. The easiest option is to pay for spot (€10) right by the entrance. Otherwise, free parking is available along the road father up the hill. 

  • Porto Katsiki beach
    Porto Katsiki’s towering rocks provide natural shade until about 1 p.m..
  • Porto Katsiki beach stairs
    100 stairs down …
— DESIMI —

Desimi is different. In the blue-green kind of way more reminiscent of beaches in the Sporades. Flanked by lush green forests, there’s a handful of tavernas and cafes supplying ice creams and coffees. An “unorganised” beach without umbrellas and parasols, you will have to find shade under the trees that back its shores. The highlight for us – Dessimi boats rent out sea pedal boats for €20 an hour. Explore sea caves and peddle out to secret spits of beach you can dock at for a splash in your private bit of sea.

  • Desimi beach, Lefkada
    Turquoise beauty in Desimi.
  • Cave explorations at Desimi Beach
    Exploring.
  • Found a near private beach!

WHERE TO DINE WITH KIDS

Where can you dine deliciously while your toddler runs a riot through grassy lawns and pebbly shores?

— OASIS TAVERN (Athani) —

Sprawling over an elevated green studded with towering pine trees above, this tavern’s location above the lookout point for Egremni is hard to miss. Such a precious spot also happens to go hand-in-hand with excellent food. Succulent lamb, a stand-out moussaka, beef stifado, and chicken ala crème crowd-pleaser (with fries) devoured by the girls. As you wait for your meal, a toy-filled sand pit draws them happily away to leave you in a moment of Zen. There’s more – swings and a slide peek out from the foilafe of a mini playground steps below. It’s the kind of set-up that encourages families to linger.  

  • Oasis Taverna, Lefkada
    The most family-friendly tavern we ever did see.
  • Oasis taverna
  • Oasis Tavern Food
— ELENI TAVERNA (Karya) —

A small family-run taverna in a quiet corner under Karya square’s plane trees, a menu of familiar favourites with some secret recipe type execution continue to impress even the most restaurant-tired taste buds. There’s ample space for the kids to have a dash around between empty tables if you go early (i.e. not Greek timing) – we sat next to a large tree which they circled for 20 minutes, beam balancing on the short wall enclosing it. Head to the Folklore Museum in advance if you’re looking for more ways to spend sunny afternoons off-beach.  

  • Edem Tavern in Karya Village, Lefkada
    Under the plane trees of Karya village square is Eleni Taverna – one of the best eats on the island.
  • Karya village in Lefkada
    Take a stroll through the village after.
— TAVERNA PANTAZIS (Nikiana) —

On the east coast of Lefkada and its child friendly coves, Pantazis found an idyllic seafront spot where you can dine with pebbles between your toes. They get busy after 8pm, so call in ahead to reserve a table on the beach. Seafood is the highlight, although we were happier with our meat dishes – pork in wine sauce, and a lamb stamna. Take a leisurely stroll around the mini marina after.

Taverna Pantazis in Nikiana, Lefkada
Waterfront dining at Pantazis if you’re on the east coast

GETTING THERE

Lefkada is one of three islands in Greece you can drive to by car (the other two being Evia and Elafonissos). From Athens, a scenic coastal highway dotted with points of interest (like Corinth) will take you there in four hours. Alternatively, an airport in Preveza is located 30 minutes from Lefkada. Planning a Greek island hopping itinerary? Lefkada has frequent ferry connections with Kefalonia, Zakynthos, Ithaca and Paxi. 

Nidri village in  Lefkada
The port at Nidri has ferry boats to Fiskardo in Kefalonia.

WHEN TO VISIT

Like most Greek islands, the main tourist season runs from May to October. July and August are the hottest, busiest and most expensive months to travel in, so we try to avoid these months in particular. By winter, life on Lefkada dwindles down to its population of 22,000 locals. The main town of Lefkas stays open, along with some hotels and tavernas, while island adventures focus more on forest hikes and mountain village wanders.

Aug 26, 2022 0 comment
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Destinations

Roadtrip to North Evia – Coastal Hideaways, Sizzling Seafood and Healing Spas

by Lindsay Dec 17, 2021
written by Lindsay
Saint Nicholas Beach in North Evia

What’s left of the evergreen Eden of North Evia after the wildfires of 2021? An island of simple and pure pleasures that is our second home, we share the attractions that remain to be enjoyed.


Last updated 6 June 2025

The 2021 inferno that engulfed North Evia was the biggest Greece has ever seen. Once a lush mountainscape of pine, oak, fir, and olive trees, 51,000 hectares of primary forest went up in flames in eight days. Along with the livelihoods of resin collectors, bee keepers, olive oil producers, and other agribusinesses. 

Ours was a farm of almond trees. So heavy with fruit their branches almost grazed the ground. After seven years of waiting for them to mature, they were ready to supply their first yield. But rather than the bountiful harvest anticipated, we walked through scorched rows of skeletons scavenging for nut hulls that looked salvageable.

We planned to take the girls for their first forest walk through Drymonas and its waterfalls at the start of the summer. But everything changed within a week. There is little left of its magic for this generation to enjoy.

The drive from Mantoudi to Agia Anna
What remains of once scenic drives from Mantoudi to Agia Anna after the wildfires

WHY NORTH EVIA?

Various reasons may continue to bring you to North Evia: It’s a gateway to the Sporades (Skiathos, Skopelos and Alonissos) from Mantoudi’s port, the evergreen road to which was untouched by the fires. You might also be on a healing pilgrimage to Prokopi, also unharmed after a freak shower of rain uncannily occured after believers gathered at its church to intercede for a miracle. Limni and Agia Anna may have lost their trees, but their endless sea views are still a scene of beauty. And then there’s Edipsos – with its thermal springs and a renowned spa hotel – which escaped unscathed.

FIRST STOP: CHALKIDA

Entrypoint to Evia on the island’s closest point to the mainland, Chalkida is picturesque and petite. Sizable enough to support basic city conveniences for its 100,000 strong population, locals might be able to get their fill of Zara and Oysho, but have to head out to Athens for the cinema.

The city’s feature is a waterside promenade lined with cafes-bars and restaurants that is perfect for family strolls and kiddie scoots. Continuing past the old sliding bridge where you can witness the “crazy tidal waters” that riddled Aristotle himself, and you will find Asteria. An expansive outdoor waterfront bar and restaurant that hasn’t forgotten little ones, its family appeal include a fenced playground positioned within clear view of a section of dining tables. If we needed accommodation in Chalkida, we’d look between this part of the promenade and the center, or one of the seafront Airbnbs in Alykes.

  • Chalkida Waterfront Promenade
    Chalkida’s waterfront promenade.
  • Playground by the sea
    Playground by the sea near Asterias in Chalkida

Alykes is Chalkida’s summer highlight for us – a child-friendly beach only the locals seem privy to. With clear blue waters that lap over soft golden sand, it’s impressive for these parts (Evia’s beaches, for me, are nothing to shout about, and usually of the darker variety). Settled by an assembly of cafe-bars for every taste, Daluz at the far right corner (as you face the sea) is our favourite with wood-framed sunbeds, breezy electro tunes, and a gently sloping seabed clear of rocks.

Daluz beach bar on Alykes in Chalkida – one of the most child-friendly beaches in the region

THE ROAD TO MANTOUDI – GATEWAY TO THE SPORADES (SKIATHOS, SKOPELOS, ALONISSOS)

After exiting Chalkida, the drive north involves 40-minutes of dizzying twists (bring Dramamine for the car-sick prone) through pine-carpeted highlands, before meeting Kireas river. It used to be prettier here, with water-loving plane trees crowding its banks, filtering the light through leafy, cut-out canopies. But a recent imported sickness bringing targeted death to this tree species swept through, leaving skeletons in place of dense greenery.

Prokopi is the first village of interest you will meet, where many visit for the hope of healing at the church of one of Eastern Orthodoxy’s great saints, John the Russian. Tourist-geared shops stocked with Evian pine honey and other “traditional products” border its square, anchored by the church.

Prokopi village square and the Church of Saint John the Russian, North Evia
Prokopi village square with the Church of Saint John the Russian in the background
On the way to Mantoudi, Alexiou’s is a special café stop with expansive garden grounds
Loukoumades
Honey drizzled, cinnamon sprinkled, loukoumades doughnut balls

Mantoudi’s village center is a 10-minute drive from here. Once a proud regional center, magnesite mining factories used to drive the local economy. Now, like many Greek villages, it steadily diminishes in size and feels somewhat forlorn for the lack of upgrades. While not for sightseeing, it still harbours some exceptional stops: Stamatis – a first-class ouzerie serving mezze plates of fresh shellfish (also try the shrimp pane and fried peppers) in the corner of the main square, and a sizzling Souvlaki shop owned by the butcher next to it. On the village’s edge, you will also find Legola-nd, where the girls wobble through the forests and fields of Mantoudi on horseback with owner Thanassis.

Horseriding in Legoland Mandoudi, North Evia, Greece
Horserding in Mantoudi

Kimasi beach and port, a five-minute drive from its center, is where you can catch daily summer ferries to the Sporades. Of the high-speed variety, you can get to exotic Alonissos marine park in an impressive 40 minutes.

Kimasi Beach and Port in Mandoudi
Kimasi beach and port – gateway to the Sporades

AGIA ANNA – A FAMILY-FRIENDLY COASTAL RETREAT

Our preferred swimming beach in North Evia is where yiayia (Grandma) is from. An endless sweep of charcoal shores, Agia Anna is Evia’s longest beach, looking out into the gentle outline of Skopelos in the horizon. Pebbly on the “organised” end (i.e. providing sunbeds and food service) with cafes and taverns lining the boardwalk, the sandier, wilder bit is where four-star, simple-but-sleek Thalatta resides. Bringing a surprise bit of flash when it first arrived on the nonchalant village scene, its now a seaside destination in itself, fitted out with family-sized rooms (just be careful of stairs with toddlers), airy restaurants, and a rave-worthy kids club.

Agia Anna Beach in North Evia
Agia Anna Beach in North Evia

A tourist “hotspot” by North Evia’s laidback standards, Agia Anna has given us some of our most relaxed family outings. Including coffee and homemade banoffee under the Mulberry trees of Remetzo, while the girls play on the vaulted horse of a tree stump in front. Or dinners at Maistrali with a prime beachfront position and bushes to play hide and seek around. There’s also Trata for fresh seafood.

Some menu tips in these parts: order thrapsalo instead of fried calamari – distinctly more tender and tasty. And trade lobster in for crayfish – sublimely sweet and delicately succulent. The region is also famed for its specialty shellfish like gialisteres, chténia scallops, and razor clams.

Maistrali Tavern Agia Anna, North Evia
Seafront seafood dining at Maistrali

COASTAL DRIVES, SEASIDE TOWNS & THERMAL SPRINGS

A once especially scenic seaside road runs from Limni to Rovies and Edipsos in the northeast. And while the fires consumed Limni and Rovies, it self-extinguished in Ilia before reaching the thermal spring spa town and port of Edipsos.

  • Limni Seaside Village
    Limni seaside village
  • Limni Sea in North Evia
    The still, glassy waters of Limni.

Built on the wealth of ship captains, the seaside village of Limni is North Evia’s prettiest. With increasing tourism interest, once derelict neoclassical houses have morphed into slick cafes and cocktail bars, dotted with traditional tavernas in between. Because the waters of Limni (“lake” in Greek) are so still, there’s a particularly calming effect as you sit here for dinner or sundowners. Clear to its rocky depths, children catapult bread bits to feed a frenzy of fish, while ducks leave disappearing trails as they drift, and kaiki (wooden fishermen’s boats) bob on its ever-gentle surface.

Limni's beach
Family-friendly Kochyli beach in Limni is a 3-minute drive from its center

While you might find teens dive bombing off Limni’s pier, we gravitate towards Kochyli’s supersized family umbrellas for swims when Agia Anna gets too wavy. Calm and washed over by crystalline waters, its waters are good for tots with some care, as its pebbly seabed gets steep quickly.

If you’re looking for somewhere to combine a swim with lunch or dinner instead, drop your google map pin at Paralia one beach down. Complete with umbrellas, sunbeds, a bar, and a seaside taverna, there’s also a little playground next to it (albeit one that’s a bit run-down). Considering staying in these parts? Boutique resorts Elimnion and Eleonas with its 35-hectare organic farm sit on its hillside.

  • The beach at Rovies
    The waters in Rovies are calm, clear and very tranquil.
  • Rovies beach
    The free camping area, with Paralia Pine and Sand in the background.

A 30-minute drive from Rovies is North Evia’s most famous draw. The thermal springs of Edipsos drew all from Aristotle and Marcus Aurelius to Winston Churchill by the curative powers of its rich mineral content. A stately 19th century Thermae Sylla Wellness Hotel dominates the small spa town. Natural wells fill its pools daily with enriching waters saturated with metals and chemicals. While its indoor pool is only for guests over 15, infants and young children can enjoy it’s outdoor pool with sea water mixed into its spring waters. If you’re not a hotel guest, you can still enjoy the area’s therapeutic waters in the beach fronting the hotel where spring waters spill into the sea. 

FROM EDIPSOS, TO OMPHALOS

Also a small port, from Edipsos you can cross over by ferry (which also transports cars) to the mainland port of Arkitsa in 45 minutes. Why? Because in another hour-and-a-half by car you can find your way to omphalos – the center of the ancient world. Kings, warriors and other supplicants similarly journeyed here seeking guidance from the oracle of Delphi at the Temple of Apollo. Carved into the towering rocks of Mount Parnassus (also a winter ski destination), the temple ruins continue to elicit wonderment. Best visited with a guide, walk its expansive grounds in the cooler months of spring and autumn. 

GETTING THERE

Connected to the mainland by bridge, Evia is easy to get to. Chalkida (its capital) is a good day trip destination from Athens in under an hour’s drive. It’s also served by small ferry ports in Mantoudi, Edipsos, Agiokampos in the north, Kymi in central Evia, and Marmari and Nea Stira down south. There is no airport on the island.

Dec 17, 2021 0 comment
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