SELF-GUIDED WALKING

• 1 week holidays (8 days / 7 nights)

• Start any day from 1 April to 16 June and from 1 September to 16 October.

• Combine with Tinos or Amorgos for a 2-week plus holiday.

GUIDED WALKING

• Guided group holidays by special request mid-April–16 June and 1 September-16 October.

• Contact us for details.

 

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Naxos general
Naxos mountain
Naxos central

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“There can be few Greek islands more suited to walking than Naxos, where verdant valleys, orchards and vineyards temper the rocky Cycladic landscape – and where tour operator Walking Plus has introduced guided walks.”
– Jill Crawshaw, The Times

You see history around you as you walk, in the shaping of the land and in its art and architecture. In one lush valley lies a giant 2,500-year-old kouros statue from the famous marble workshops of ancient Naxos; in another, a pre-Classical temple commands a broad valley of golden fields. Mysterious grave circles are set in a granite moonscape at the foot of a weathered tor – which is topped by the ruins of a fortified palace built by Venetian occupiers.
The walks take you to magical parts of the island that you would never discover on your own, along marble-paved mule-tracks and hidden valley paths, past the crumbling ruins of a vaulted monastery in a luxuriant, wild garden or a remote Byzantine chapel with rare frescoes.

The largest and greenest of the Cycladic islands, Naxos has a wonderfully diverse landscape that ranges from the severe beauty of marble mountains and deep, Eden-like valleys to perfect and deserted beaches. It is Greece in microcosm, where walkers explore an infinite network of traditional paths and experience classic Greek countryside, coastlines and culture.
Because of the island’s size (about 750 sq km), soil, and plentiful water, it is self-sufficient in fruit and vegetables, cheeses, wines and liqueurs – not to mention the local roosters, goats and rabbits. The seasonal rhythm of farming life evokes a sense of peace and continuity as you walk through tiny villages bordered by market garden terraces and citrus orchards, beside channels of sparkling water.
The island’s eventful past reaches far back to the myths of ancient Greece. Some say that the Olympian god Zeus grew to manhood on the slopes of Mount Zas; that the wine god Dionysos was born in a cave high above the north-east coast, and Minotaur-slayer Theseus abandoned the Cretan princess Ariadne on the islet of Pelatia near Naxos town.

 

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