Kalymnos
About Kalymnos
Kalymnos is the island where you can taste the Greek hospitality.
Here you feel free and have a good time. On the island you find nice accommo-dations and you can create your own holiday. If you like you can rest in the sun on one of the beautiful beaches or you can go climb a mountain.
You can also visit the sponge factory or the monastery in the mountain. Maybe you prefer to sit in the harbour or have a walk over the mountain. Kalymnos offer it all and let you feel free as guest on the island.
The terrain of this fourth largest of the Dodecanese is mountainous, except for two fertile valleys. It is along these valleys that its biggest villages have sprouted Kalymnos or Pothia and Vathi.
Castles, remnants of fortresses, archaeological finds, and old churches bear witness to the continuous importance of Kalimnos in the history of the Aegean. Its natural attractions - caves, lovely beaches, unspoilt scenery - make it a mini earthly paradise.
Kalimnos is widely known as the spongefishers' island, since such a large portion of the population is engaged in this age - old occupation.
Once the island's capital was located at Horio, which benefited from the protection offered by the castle of the Knights of St. John just above it. Today's capital is pothia or Kalymnos, founded around 1850 by the inhabitants of Horio. Its brightly coloured houses surround the port like the seats in an amphitheatre, arranged along the hillsides down to the caiques and fishing boats bobbing below. ?n old church dedicated to Christ the Saviour adoms the waterfront. It is decorated with frescoes and valuable icons, while its iconostasis is the work of the well known sculptor, ?ian??lis Halepas.
Kalimnos has other channing villages, like Vathi, set in a fertile valley fuli of citrus tress, and Metohi, on the southeast side of the island. The quiet hamlet of Emborios lies to the north.
To the west are Massouri, Mirties, Kamari and Panormos where one can try sea-food delicades such as «fouskes» and «chtapokeftedes». ?n the road to Panormos, y?u will notice the remains of a three - aisled basilica dedicated to Ch?ist of Jerusalem, which was erected around the 6th century on the site of an ancient temple where Delian ??oll? was worshipped.
To the north of the main town is Pera Kastro, also called the Castle of the Golden Hands (Hrissoheria), because the chapel in its interior has an icon of the Virgin whose hands are covered with gold leaf. Northeast of Pothia, at the f?ot ?f Flaska hill, is the cave of the Seven Virgins or Nymphs (not to be visited).
Kalimnos boasts two other caves, the richly decorated Skalies, about 100 metres from the village of Skalia in the north of the island (not to be visited), and Kefalas or Trypas Kefalas to the south (which can be visited and one can approach it by boat).
At Therma, only one kilometre or so from Pothia, there are radioactive springs and therapeutic bathing installations, rooms where visitors may spend the night, and specially trained personnel to assist them. Among the lovely beaches on Kalimnos are Massouri, Mirties and Arginondas along the west coast and Vlyhadia in the south.