Greece
Olympia

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    • Day 20

      Olympia Stadion

      April 20 in Greece ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

      Besuch der Geburtsstätte der olympischen Spiele. Es ist eine riesen Anlage mit 3 Museen, sehr beeindruckend. Danach durch Olympia schlendern, shoppen, essen und am Nachmittag schön relaxen bei Sonne, während die Schweiz beschneit wird.Read more

    • Day 46

      Olympia

      August 30, 2022 in Greece ⋅ 🌙 24 °C

      Nach 1.5 Monaten waren heute meine Beine das erste Mal so richtig leer. Vielleicht lag es am späten Start in den Tag, an den über 40 Grad auf dem Navi oder daran, dass die Strasse neu geteert wurde und es von oben wie auch unten nur so bräglete.🥵 Ein Zwischenstopp beim antiken Olympia war dabei genau das Richtige - bitzli alte Steinhaufen und Skulpturen angucken und dabei neue Energie tanken.

      Danach gings viele weitere Kilometer wieder zurück an den Strand, wo mich etwas später ein kitschiger Sonnenuntergang erwartete.🤩
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    • Day 11

      Olympia - Wohnkabinenvorstellung

      December 9, 2022 in Greece ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      Nun nehme ich mir mal etwas Zeit um euch unsere Wohnkabine zu zeigen. Bett 1,80x2,00m, Sitzbereich mit Tisch, Spüle, 2 Gasflammen, Dieselheizung, Waschbecken, Toilette und Dusche!!! In einer separaten Kabine, Klimaanlage. TV und LED Leuchten Links, Rechts und hinten. Dachfenster mit Lüfter und je ein Fenster auf jeder Seite. Die Kabine is mit Stützen bei Nichtnutzung auf dem Grundstück abstellbar. Als Basisfahrzeug haben wir einen Dodge Ram 1500 mit Vollausstattung und Luftfederung, einem 5,7 l Motor auf 8 Zylinder mit 400 PS. Zusätzlich haben wir noch einen lpg Tank als Alternative zum Benzin verbaut. Basisfahrzeug stelle ich nochmal in einem extra Foodprint vor.Read more

    • Day 24

      Olive you glad for oil 🫒

      September 27, 2023 in Greece ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      After our buffet breakfast we headed just down the road to the medieval Byzantine citadel of Mystra, where we walked from the top of the mountain through the ruins of the ancient city to the bottom. There were multiple churches as well as leftovers of buildings. I think for me this was my favorite ancient city to date. There was so many roads and places to walk.

      After spending a long while here we headed to a little tavern nearby for lunch where Phill enjoyed the local speciality of Pork with a crispy skin and we had a side of crispy cheese.

      We made our way to an olive oil museum to learn about different types of olives, oils and the techniques used. After leaving the museum we headed on the bus for a 2 hour drive to another store where we tasted different olive oils, olives and wine.

      Finally, we arrived at the hotel for dinner and after we went for a walk around the town where we walked into a store where they had an Olympic torch just shoved in the corner because the store owner's brother was one of the original runners.

      We grabbed some ice cream and headed back for some sleep.

      Step count
      Both: 11k
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    • Day 12

      Übernachtungsplatz

      September 28, 2023 in Greece ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      Nach dem Besuch von Olympia fuhren wir noch einige Kilometer weiter nach Osten. Die steilen Berge sind bewaldet, dazwischen immer wieder Oliven. Nur ab und zu ein kleines Dorf, weit verstreut sieht man einzelne Häuser zu denen schmale Schotterpisten abzweigen. Wir stellen uns zum Übernachten auf einen Ebenen Platz. Später entdecken wir, dass das Gebäude auf der anderen Straßenseiten eine Olivenölmühle ist. Raymond hat 5 Liter gutes Bioöl für 40 Euro eingekauft.😁Read more

    • Day 21

      Olympia—Home of Heroes

      April 29, 2022 in Greece ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F

      The port of Katakolon is the doorstep to the Ancient Greek town of Olympia. Viking sky docked here today for our last full day of this Mediterranean Adriatic sojourn. A 40-minute bus ride took us to the ancient site of the first Olympic Games, whose recorded history goes back to the year 776 BC. Our guide showed us the site of the gymnasium, where boys from 10 to 15 years of age would engage in boxing, wrestling, and track and field events. There was also a race for girls aged 10-12 who, incidentally, wore white dresses as they ran. Nearby was the hippodrome. Only adult men could participate in the chariot races, though some of the most famous horse breeders in Olympic history were women.

      We saw the ruins of the Temple of Zeus where athletes were required to take an oath to perform honorably without cheating. For most events (but not all) boys and men competed nude. This was to insure that no participant was wearing any item of clothing (like Nike shoes) that would give him an unfair advantage. It was also to prevent any contestant from carry a small weapon that could be used against his opponents. Occasionally an athlete was convicted of misbehavior, such as bribing a judge, ingesting a forbidden substance, or attempting to poison an opponent. The disgraced athlete’s name, along with the names of their family and hometown were inscribed at the base of a statue of Zeus hurling a thunderbolt. This statue was placed in a “Hall of Shame” at the entrance to the stadium. At every Olympic competition thereafter, the crowds would note the names of the cheaters. They and their families would be practically ruined, and many chose to leave Greece after being so publicly embarrassed. Those who won honorably were given a crown of woven olive wreaths, free food for the rest of their lives, and their statue was placed in the hall of heroes. Additionally, for the rest of their lives in their hometown they would be treated as superstars.

      The games awarded a particular honor to the adult who won the 800 meter run. The stadium was 196.2 meters long. Contestants ran in a straight line, down and back, four times while wearing full armor and a full military pack. Their load weighed about 70 pounds. The winner was awarded not only the regular Olympic prizes, but also was allowed to serve as the commander of his hometown militia.

      The 45-foot high statue of Zeus was carved out of marble, ivory and gold by the noted sculptor Phidias, and was considered one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. He had completed a similar statue of Athena for the Parthenon in Athens. Shortly after finishing Athena, he was exiled from Athens and came to Olympia, vowing that his next statue would put the one in the Parthenon to shame. From all contemporary reports it did exactly that. He also completed a statue of Hermes, which was discovered at the site of Olympia by archaeologists on this site, and still exists today. It is housed in the excellent archaeological museum adjacent to the excavated site.

      The ancient Olympic Games ended around 394 A.D. when Roman emperor Theodosius I, a Christian, declared pagan festivals in to be illegal. Of course the modern Olympic games were revived in the early 20th century, but visiting Olympia, one cannot help imagining how it must have been in ancient times.
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    • Day 20

      Olympia

      Yesterday in Greece ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      One of the most anticipated stops on our route greeted us with rain and wind 😅. On the other hand the bad weather scared away all the other tourists which made the visit an almost exclusive experience 😅.

      Ancient Olympia in the so-called "valley of the gods" grew to be the most celebrated sacred site of Ancient Greece, and the birthplace of the Olympic Games, the most important sports events in all antiquity: starting from 776 B.C., all Greeks – across the then known world – would be united every four years and all hostilities would be suspended so that everyone could take part in these games in the true spirit of sportsmanship. Olympia is now, as it used to be in the past, a famed destination, a powerful landmark known the world over.
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    • Day 6

      Olympie

      September 21, 2023 in Greece ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

      L'ancienne olympie,
      avec :
      - Le temple de Zeus,
      - Le Leonidaion (l'ancêtre du village olympique)
      - le stade olympique

      Aujourd'hui nous sommes allés à Olympie, le site est vaste, il faut bien entendu beaucoup d'imagination pour y voir des centres d'entraînement d'athlètes et un stade !Read more

    • Day 3

      Archimedes was Incalculably Cool

      April 9, 2023 in Greece ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

      This museum was community run and bloody awesome! Replicas of Archimedes and Plutonian devices from the ages. There were activities too.

      He was responsible for so much stuff. I mean he had his fingers in every Pi.Read more

    • Day 8

      The Wonder that was Zeus

      April 5 in Greece ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

      Pausanias was a Greek adventurer and geographer who was the earliest travel blogger, 2nd century AD. It was he who first branded the Seven Wonders of the World. Our journey is visiting the sites of three of those: today was the first. We were ready for the large cylinders of collapsed columns and monumental ruins and the grassy seating of the stadium where naked men competed in feats of fleetness and strength - but we didn’t expect the Olympian Archeological Park to be such a garden spot. PL: “Before I would never have thought to see this: now I can’t imagine missing it.” The famous statue of Zeus by Phidias, who also sculpted the so-called Elgin Marbles, was a wonder to Pausanias, but we knew that after presiding here for 900 years, that gold-and-ivory marvel disappeared, destroyed either in a cataclysm at the site, or looted to Constantinople and lost there. What we didn’t know is that the original sculptures of the pediments on Zeus’ temple, the work of a team of artists whose names are lost to time, are preserved and displayed in the museum here in a small Greek town as well as anything at the Pergamon or the Getty. The two pediments offered inspiration to young athletes on two virtues in physical contest: fraternity on the east (the myth of Pelops, who founded the ancient games) and ferocity on the west (the battle of the Lapiths and the Centaurs). Athletes only in imagination and craft, we were inspired for sure.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Dimos Olympia, Olympia, Αρχαίας Ολυμπίας

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