Delphi was also a marvelous archaeological site. There was actually a smaller site, down the mountain from the main one, that included a gymnasium for training and several temples. This picture was taken there.

This is our intrepid tour leader, Ihla, standing next to the "naval" stone on the main archaeological site, which I got to rub before being whistled at by a site monitor. That act is supposed to guarantee me long and healthy life, I think.

This is looking down on the temple of Apollo, which is where the oracle sniffed her herbs and gases and muttered mysterious words, that were then translated for the common folk by temple officials.

There was also a fairly sizable theatre on site.

This is Hal with Anne (from our group) and Marilyn (a woman we met on the bus from Seattle) when we had finally made it to the stadium at the top of the hill--whew! This stadium, unlike Olympia, actually had rows of seating along the sides.


It was hard going up the hill and hard coming down because the stones were so worn and slippery. Guess that's what happen over thousands of years with untold generations treading the steps.
There was an amazing aquedict that apparently carries water from the surrounding mountains all the way back to Athens. The valley below Delphi, with a small fire going on the hill, and the sea of Corinth is in the background.

There are
more pictures of the town, the museum and the archaeological site of Delphi here.
Next we headed to Meteora and on the way stopped briefly at the site of the
Battle of Thermopylae (480 BC). Here, an alliance of Greek city states (Spartans, Thebans and Thespains) held off an infinitely larger invading army for several days (approximately a few hundred Greeks and over a million Persians) until they were betrayed by a local resident who showed the Perians another path through the mountains. The heroic efforts of the Greeks are honored at this site.

The setting of the town of Kalambaka and the remaining seven monasteries at Meteora is just stunning, with pinnacles of rock rising up from fertile farmland. The bus made a short stop in town Monday evening and then went on to our hotel--which was pink--to settle in and wait for dinner.


As was the case on most of the bus tour, we were pretty much the only guests in the hotel.