I once spent a whole 5 month summer on the island of Crete. This was a decade ago, I was adventurous and I needed to see the sun.
The small, not-yet-that-touristy town where I stayed instantly felt welcoming, and before I knew it, I had gotten to know some of the friendly locals there. Only in Greece have I been offered a piece of cake by an elderly shopkeeper and his sister to celebrate the sister’s name day, when I just went in with the intention to buy water. I was traveling alone and I was enjoying myself.
That summer hurried by while I was developing my tan and engaging in interesting conversations with other travelers (many of those conversations were in French and – now this is completely logical – I actually managed to improve my French, in Greece!)
A local hotel had amazing fried calamari on Fridays and I ate olives and chocolate ice cream like it was my last day on earth. I also learned to make surprisingly delicious frappé from instant coffee.
But there’s one memory in particular that I have of sunbathing on the nearby beach one hot day.

It was siesta time and everything was closed. I had developed a daily habit of going to the same spot on the beach during that time. As I was relaxing there on my beach towel, with closed eyes and having almost fallen asleep, I suddenly felt a strange odor drifting towards me. It smelled like a farm animal.
I opened my eyes and saw a lonesome, random sheep hovering straight above me.
The animal was looking me in the eye with a curious expression, his face very close to mine. He had long, rasta-like pieces of dirty wool hanging from his face and he was unsheared. After a short and mutually startled stare contest, he ran off to the sea for a swim (I’m not sure which one of us won the contest).
All the usual locals were of course there, too, and they were staring at us – some of them laughing openly. As an outsider staying for a long time in a small town where everyone knew each other, I was used to being recognized and stared at – but this time there really was something to look at!
It was a very bizarre, short moment. Maybe it doesn’t sound like much, but I can assure you that things like this never seem to happen to me at home. As a city girl, my encounters with roaming sheep are sparse!
If travel memories were stored in old-fashioned photo albums in the brain, this story would be on the cover of my Crete album. This is what I always remember first. I have to dig a bit further for the other memories! (And the sheep would be an animated gif, running towards the sea)
Poor little lamb, he must have been boiling under all that wool on that hot summer day. After a refreshing swim, he just left. I always assumed he went back home, wherever that was (I never saw a farm nearby, though I know sheep were common on the island).

When the long, Greek summer finally ended, I flew home on a Friday. On Saturday, I repacked my bags from summer clothes to winter. On Sunday, I flew to Paris where I’d decided to live for a while (and where I quickly got into a nice rhythm of eating baguettes and nutella-and-grand-marnier crêpes… but more about that later!)
103 replies on “Things That Only Happen While Traveling”
Great shots =)
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Thanks! 🙂
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I really enjoyed reading your blog post which spotted in the travel section and it also got me to wonder, how do you get to travel so much? :p
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Thanks for reading it! 🙂 I used to work in the travel industry, so many of my earlier trips were either work related or done with employee discounts, etc. Right now I’m doing another type of job, so no discounts! All my recent travels are realised through determined saving and planning: set your mind to your goals, prioritise, and all the usual. I saved a lot of money for instance by just buying cheaper food, make-up and hair products for a longer period!
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I guess when you are so passionate about something you do tend to get it, even if you have to compromise a bit on the other things. I work as a model in India and because of that I get to travel a bit but i wish to travel more often. Hopefully soon 🙂
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Compromising is definitely part of it! 🙂 Hope you’ll get to fulfill your travel dreams, too! Modelling sounds like an interesting job, though!
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Modelling is definitely fun! I’m sure I will one day, but until then will satisfy my wanderlust by reading blogs such as yours. 😉 Great talking to you!!
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I’m happy you stopped by! 🙂
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Quite the globe trotter!
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Haha! We all have our purpose in life 😉
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Haha…that’s an awesome encounter:) I was laughing as I read it imagining the situation with you and the sheep eye to eye:)
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Glad to hear that! Thanks for reading it! 🙂 It really was the last thing I expected..! Just a little surprise, that’s all… 😉
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That was a wonderful and entertaining read. (I hope you intend to write either your memoirs or a travel book one day.) Loved the sheep story, but also all the other little details that brought your holiday to life. I’ve been to Crete (with husband and three of our children) but I don’t think we had as much fun as you did!
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Thanks, Millie! 🙂 I seemed to get a lot more done back in those days! Now, everything seems more difficult and takes more time! Crete is great for family vacations because it’s so safe and clean – your holiday in good company sounds great 🙂 I’m happy to have my blog for a spot to “publish” a little travel memoir, haha! In mixed up order and without all the details, but nevertheless…
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I always enjoy reading your posts, whatever order they come in. I agree that Crete is a lovely island, although so many tourists visit, a lot of them to visit Knossos.
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I enjoy your posts, too 🙂
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😀
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Great pictures. Sounds like heaven.
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Thanks! 🙂 Heaven with rasta lambs!
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I enjoyed reading this post. Moving to Egypt, I have been closely looking at the areas around and Crete has been on my radar as a possibility. I wonder if it is still as quaint and charming?
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lol, love it. My encounter was with a random donkey on a very isolated and windswept beach in Ireland.
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Haha! No, you’re kidding!!! 😀 I can so totally imagine what that would have been like! (Though maybe it’s not entirely possible to imagine it, you have to be there!) Really funny!!
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Nope I had 2 encounters. Once on narrow little country rounds and after I had passed what seemed to be the same donkey 3 times I realised it was and I was going round in circles. and once I had walked acrose farmland and was on a very isolated windswept wee beach, I think on Achill Island and got that funny feeling that someone was on my shoulder. Looked up into a donkey muzzle! We just sat and companionably passed the time till he wandered off again. I would love to see a see a sheep swimming in the sea!
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Oh, sweet little donkey on the beach, just wanted to say hi to you! 🙂 Sounds cute
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Must be something about Greece and farm animals …! My very first travel story/post on my blog was about a summer in Greece and a little goat, but its ending was not as benign! I hate putting links in other people’s comments, but I will just this once so you can find this post if you are interested. Meanwhile, where were you on Crete? Our Greek family has a place there in Sissi, east of Heraklion on the northern coast.
https://lexklein.wordpress.com/2014/04/08/it-started-with-a-little-goat/
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I’ll check out your post, thanks for the link!! 😉 Very curious about it now, haha! I loved these type of things in Crete, the whole island felt like a little village sometimes – in a good way! I was near Heraklion (also to the east). Near Knossos, which I was planning on visiting the whole time but then didn’t! (I really do love stuff like that, it’s just the crowds that I don’t particularly enjoy). So, you are lucky to have family there! Do you go there every year? I haven’t been there since.
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I have not been back since 2005 – way too long! I went more frequently in the past, but new lands have beckoned as the years have gone by. My parents spent almost a month in Sissi last fall and it was incredibly relaxing for them. Like you, they became part of the town and the people. I really want to go now that my aunt has inherited a nice place on the beach where we could stay.
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Sounds lovely!
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Lovely bathing beach and a sweet story. 🙂
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Thanks! 🙂
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Great story! Well told! Greece is one of my favorite places, although I have not been to Crete. I lived there for a while many years ago and did some island-hopping. Never had an encounter like yours there with a four-legged creature, but I have many great memories of all the things I did and the great friends I made. Spending money on traveling instead of material possessions is so worth it for us. The experiences and memories are something no amount of money can buy!
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I so agree with you!! I can happily live without a lot of possessions and save up for travelling – but it’s a matter of prioritising. Few people can have it all. Crete was really beautiful, I loved the BLUEness of the sea there, it was somehow bluer than anywhere else. Also visited Santorini, but that’s it. Where did you live? Thanks for leaving a comment! I’m happy you came by for a visit! 🙂
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I lived in Ekali, a suburb of Athens and spent a summer on Tinos. It was a quiet island, mostly locals. Later I went back island hopping with my husband. Really liked Andros as well. I remember reading “Jaws” at the the beach, and when I’d go for a swim I hoped that I wouldn’t encounter any sharks. I was hooked on traveling the world!
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Sounds like happy times! I love the Mediterranean… (sigh!)
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One of my favorite regions!
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Hey snow, thanks for taking us down memory lane! 🙂
Such a wonderful post!
Snow, also, do put up more such posts; and be our virtual tour guide! 😀
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Thanks, Hannah! 🙂 Let’s see what I come up with… 😉 Thanks again for visiting!
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😀
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Just a lovely post and your personal anecdotes are as warm and inviting as your photos. Thank you.
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Oh, so sweet of you 🙂 Thank you!
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Haha starring contest with a sheep! That’s priceless. I like the first shot too. Thanks for sharing.
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Thanks for reading 🙂
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That must have been something waking up to a rasta-looking sheep!! 😀 I can just see it! Your stay in Crete sounds so delicious in every sense. Fried calamari and olives and chocolate ice-cream. The good life indeed. I’ve just had a holiday. How come I’m just so ready already for the next?!!!! Sharon xxx
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Oh yes, the Med has it all, that’s the good life in my opinion. How were your hols? Last time you said you were going to London – and maybe Nuuksio 🙂 No holidays for me, so plenty of time for blogging! Too much, maybe! 🙂 Happy to see you’re back!
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Snowsomewhere
I have Nominated you for the Creative Blogger Award.
Please Check.
Regards,
Shiva
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Hi there! I will check out your post asap! 🙂 Thanks for nominating me and for thinking of me – it’s so flattering to be remembered and noticed among all those other blogs! I’ve decided a while ago that I’m award-free, so I will have to say no thank you… I know I should advertise being award-free somewhere on my blog…. going to mention it in my About-page maybe but haven’t gotten around to that yet. Thanks so much anyway! Have a happy Monday 🙂
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I’d love to travel through this area. Since I haven’t yet, thanks for taking me along on your trip. Sounds like exactly the sort of trip I would like to take.
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Hey, thanks for coming along! 😉 Greece is wonderful, you really should go!
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I love this story! Your words and story telling is great! I have got myself out of bed at 5.45am to try and get a moment for myself before the kids wake so I actually get time to read your lovely blog! ❤ Yay! Before I can finish this sentence I hear my toddler stirring so for now goodbye friend x
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Thanks so much for reading and of course for the comment, too! 🙂 Wow that was an early start to the day! I’m looking forward to doing absolutely nothing this weekend. Talk to you soon! Moikka!
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What a fun story with the lamb! I love Crete. I’ve been there several times. The locals are super friendly, and very generous. Even now when they have to be used to tourists. Great post!
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Thanks Maria! I loved Crete, too. So beautiful and, as you said, everyone was so friendly and generous. Like a family already when you’d just met them 🙂
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My pleasure. Exactly, that’s what I experienced too.
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Telling you, girl… we must be on a parallel. I was there one month, but you were five! 😮 What a summer! And your story… ahhh, the funniest. And I could just see it happen too. Do you remember any of your Greek? For me the most useful words were Psomi, krasi, psari. 😉
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I don’t know those words, but I remember efkaristo and poli kalo… that’s about it! 🙂 It took a while to recognize the letters, too!
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Good to find this reply, it didn’t show in my notifications. Poli kalo is ‘you’re welcome’? psari = fish, psomi = bread, krasi = wine. 😀 survival kit!
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I have that problem, too. Not all comments show. Anyway, poli kalo is apparently very good, though I always thought it was very hot (weather). So I actually only knew one word, after all 🙂
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great story! I spent a week on Crete years ago:)
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Thanks for taking the time to read it! I enjoyed Crete, hope you did too!
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Wow, you travel a lot! It sounds amazing to spend an entire summer somewhere, and then just take off again to Paris! I love the sheep-story, haha! This certainly only happens while traveling:)
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Never happened to me in my home town, for sure! 😉 I used to travel a lot, worked for airlines etc. Now, less and less. So this blog is a bit of a memoir 🙂 Thanks for reading!
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love this post! so recently I have gotten back to blogging and was wondering if you wouldn’t mind checking it out 🙂 thankyou x https://cloudmindblog.wordpress.com/
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Of course I’ll check out your blog, gladly! 🙂
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wow what a story. You are so lucky you were able to stay on Crete for summer. I’ve never visited there but I hope to someday after I pay down my debt.
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Hope you get the chance to visit! Crete really was so beautiful. I wish I could go back there, too 🙂
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🙂 Someday when the debt’s paid down and there is room on the credit card I’ll go.
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What a great memory! But I’m concerned about your eating habits. Olives and chocolate ice cream is a combination I will probably never try. But Nutella and Grand Marnier I could probably get behind!
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Hahaha! 😉 Try adding fried, Greek squid to the diet, do you think it would go with chocolat, maybe? You never know until you try!
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How different could fried Greek squid be from calamari? Unless they serve the squid whole. With a nice Nutella and Grand Marnier sauce- lots and lots of grand marnier- I might even try it.
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😉
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A sheep staring at you when you open your eyes!! My my that would be a story to regale everyone 😮 I am glad you maintained your composure though. I might have shrieked or not sure what would I have did 😛 Great read and splendid pics 🙂
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Hahah, thanks! 😉 I don’t know if I looked that calm and collected but I tried! 😉
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What a beautiful blog post – a lovely vignette of a vivid experience! Things like these are only possible while travelling – these sorts of serendipitous experiences…
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Thank you! 🙂 I think I’m just more aware of my surroundings and more present in the moment when I travel. I pay attention and later on remember things. Whereas in “real life” the days are so similar… 😉
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Great post!
I had a similar experience once while sunbathing in Ios, Greece, but with… a donkey…!
I have nominate you for a tag “The Places Where” ! You can check it out here https://abouthersmallworld.wordpress.com/2016/06/28/the-places-where/
I hope you’ll like it!
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Hey, thanks for the comment and for tagging me! I really liked your post! I’ll continue the tagging and do a post on this 😊 – though it might take a week or two
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You’re welcome!
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Great memory!
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Thanks, it sure is!
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Absolutely love this, both the writing and the shots are so good!
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Thank you very much! It’s always so encouraging to get comments like yours! Much appreciated!
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