Kamirosregion.

The Kamirosregion is the name for the 7 villages around the Kamiros.
They are:

Kalavarda.
If you blink you miss this tiny village on the west coast. It has a petrol station and a turnoff to the village of Salakos, reached by a tarred road going up into the mountains. A drive down to the beach brings you to a tiny harbour and a  sandy beach with showers and places to eat and drink.
We also lives here in hotel Vouras.


Fanes.
The name means light or lamp so named because a light from here warned the people over the Halki of attack by Venetian pirates. There`s a sandy beach, showers, tavernas, wind surfing, a tiny harbour and the smallest playground in the world.
It is also home to Camelot, the quite extraordinary and ambitious brainchild of a local hotelier. A right turn just after a disused water-trough on the road down to the beach brings you to a medieval jousting hall complete with stables, shields and seating for quite a few hundred people. The place was last opening in 1991 with horsemen brought over from Spain to perform the jousting. Such a courageous idea deserved to succeed but the windswept appearance tells another story.


Soroni.

This is an agricultural village, the area producing mainly cereals. In fact Soroni (meaning oak) was the first village on the island to buy a mechanical thresher. The traditional cafes, houses and locals are still largely unaffected by tourism. A drive down to the beach at Soroni offers good swimming, shade, showers and a couple of tavernas.
Just out of Soroni is a sign for the little church of  St Soula. There`s a very jolly festival every year on 29/30 July with donkey races, music and dancing. Local folklore tells us that if you suffer from warts you collect send from outside the church, mix it with candle wax and rub it on the warts and they will almost certainly disappear.


Dimilia.

This tiny village next to Eleousa in the mountains takes its name from two mills at either end of the village. Above one of these mills are bits of yet another castle where villagers would hide from the pirates.
The village has a little church of the Forty Martyrs and a charming square places to eat and drink.


Apollona.

This village has a dear little museum and library. Both are set  in a flower-filled garden containing tiny section of the wall of a medieval castle. The stones from this castle were used to build the church and the schoolhouse in the village. The museum has old farm machinery and a giant stone olive press with a model horse pulling it around. There`s also a huge handcarved wooden press for candle wax, the usual marble relics from preCristian times and a charming traditional house.
The nearby Church of the Cross has a piece of the real cross which is displayed on feast days. A sign just past a petrol station points to the graveyard and the football stadium, a very smart affair with sparkling white walls and brightly coloured bougainvillea.


Eleousa.

This fascinating village was built by Italians when they took the Dodecanese island in 1912. This area was an army base with some 30,000 Italians soldiers. This village square has the crumbling ruins of a shopping arcade with hand-painted wall decorations and a gently crumbling grandeur. The only resident now is Sofia who lives in a little flower-filled room and takes care of the post box. The prison and police headquarters opposite the arcade is now a school. The church, originally Roman Catholic, is now the Greek Orthodox church of St Haralambos. The building straight across the square from the church was a sanatorium for patients with lung diseases and now an army base.
If you leave this square and follow signs for Profetis Ilias you come to a beautiful Italian-built reservoir used to store water brought down from the mountains.


Salakos.

The village with about 600 inhabitants is nicely situated by the Profitis Ilias. Nearby is a underground spring witch gives water to more than 40 % of the inhabitants.
During christmas time, the people of the village arrange a big party by a cave outside the village, inside the cave they have a crib with the Jesuschild inside and Josef with his wife Maria standing around.
In the centre of  Salakos they make the god dam best stifado with tsatziki that we've ever tasted.


Information taken from Rhodes A Holliday Handbook by Judi Miles
except Salakos.

This document was created by Hasse Lundholm
and translated by
Dan the man Neimark.


International ecological  project between Sweden and Greece