Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Milies-Labinou-beach

View over Pagasitic gulf
Distance: 9,5 km
Duration: 3,5 hours (walking time 2.50')
Altitude: from 380 m. (Milies) to 660 m. (max) to 0 m.
Total ascent: 302 m.  Total descent: 670 m.
Signed with red paint and signs
Drinking water on walk: yes (Lambinou village)
Download GPS track:   from Everytrail    from Wikiloc


       The path from Milies to Lambinou was closed and forgotten for many years but now it is open again, thanks to the efforts of Manuel Baud-Bovy from Switzerland (grandson of Daniel, one of the three people first to climb to mt. Olympus in 1913) and his wife Aristea Tzanou. This excellent walk ends up at the Aegean sea.
Lambinou beach
          We must have arranged a taxi or bus to pick us up from the beach, otherwise we have to walk back (regular bus lines pass from the main asphalt just above Lambinou village, www.ktelvolou.gr). During the summer season, a taverna is open at the beach. We can also continue walking north to the beaches of Limnionas and Milopotamos (about 1-1,5 hour mostly on earth road).
      At Milies square the library building, inscripted with the words ''ΨΥΧΗΣ ΑΚΟΣ'' (psychis akos, “therapy for the soul”) is found just above the church and immediately to its right begins the kalderimi towards Labinou-Xourihti-Tsagarada. We start up this and pass a covered spring water drinking fountain on our left. We continue straight ahead, climbing past the houses of the village in an easterly direction. 
Kalderimi at Milies
       The kalderimi zigzags next to a plane tree, diagonally crosses a cement road and continues uphill in the same direction. We keep following the red marks and ignore any downhill kalderimis or roads crossing our path.

      A little further on, we continue on a concrete road as we leave the last houses of the village behind us and walk between apple orchards. At the second left hand bend, we leave the road and turn right onto a kalderimi next to a concrete water channel and water pipe. On our right is a row of cypress trees. We pass a stream bed over a small concrete bridge and continue on a lovely kalderimi/path.
Kalderimi in wild chestnut forest
                           We soon come to a crossing, at which the signpost indicates that we should turn up to the left onto a wide path, which becomes a kalderimi a little further up. We come out at an angle onto a kalderimi/road and continue uphill. In a short while, we meet and cross a wide earth road and continue in the same direction between chestnut trees. Where a road comes in from the right, we continue ahead in a northerly direction and soon reach a junction, where the path to Labinou branches off to the right. The location here is called Kefalas. There is a kiosk ahead on the road, which continues towards Xourichti and Tsagarada.
Path in arbutus forest
        Just 50 meters before the kiosk (attention!) we leave the road to the right, take the signed path to Labinou and follow it into the wood. On our way we find some sections of kalderimi.  We pass from the lower edge of a wide clearing, where sheep shearing (kouros) was performed in the past, as we were told by the old people. This was much like a feast, with many people gathering to assist, food and drink being at hand. Nowadays the area is deserted, most of its inhabitants have left the village and such stories only seem to belong to the past. Could they ever be revived, who knows? 
Manuel Baud-Bovy walking on the path  in arbutus forest
       



























    Anyway, the path continues downhill on the ridge into thick shady arbutus forest, a joy to walk on. Eventually, it opens to an earth road, on which we walk downhill northeast. A little further down at a signed V-junction we go right and reach the small chapel of Agios Georgios (St. George). A narrow kalderimi continues to the main asphalt road  just below. Here is a refreshment kiosk that remains closed. If we wish, we can end our walk here, having walked 2,5 hours from Milies, and take the bus back to Volos via Neochori (www.ktelvolou.gr).
       An earth road continues downhill next to the kiosk. Reaching the low stone fence of the cemetery, we turn left and it becomes a kalderimi. We pass from Agia Paraskevi church and then cross the asphalt next to a large plane tree (here is a drinking water fountain), down to the village square of Labinou. Sadly, the cafe-restaurant at the square remains closed and deserted (last checked September 2021).
Labinou village square
                                   











    We go down the steps to a concrete road, next to the old disused water fountain, and walk down this initially, ignoring a narrow kalderimi on the right. After 50 m., we notice the wide kalderimi at an angle to the right and follow it, going northeast through the village.
Going down the kalderimi 
            






















   Further down, we reach an old spring water fountain (Kria Vrisi) on the bed of a stream, next to an old olive press turned into a cottage. We follow this stream downhill. A little further down we get to the asphalt and walk on it downhill  to reach the entrance of the old monastery of Labidona, after which the village was named. It was built in 1796 by craftsmen from Zoupani village, North Greece. Dedicated to the Dormition of Virgin Mary, its annual feast is on August 23rd. For a long period it used to be deserted and unfenced, allowing free passage, but nowadays it is a nunnery, open Thursday to Sunday (see timetable here ).
Monastery of Labidona
          Leaving the monastery, we follow down the asphalt to the parking lot, from where an earth road sets off towards Limnionas and Milopotamos beaches. At the and of the asphalt lies a taverna (open in summer period, tel. 6973006910) and a paved path leads down to the nice little beach of  Labinou.
Labinou beach

1 comment:

  1. As of June 2020, the trail between Kefala and Lambinou village was doable, but we would not recommend it. At the Kefala junction, do not look for the path at the kiosk, but the sign to the right 100 m before. The path is overgrown, but quite ok, it get‘s harder further down in the forest where most of it is damaged and you really have to watch your step and head - lots of branches are in the way. The red markings did help us anyway. In the end, we chose not to walk the same way back as planned.

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