VI. Evia and the Northern Sporades


ÖRMOS VATHOUDHI AND APPROACHES



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ÖRMOS VATHOUDHI AND APPROACHES

@ 39°10'.0N 23°12'.8E

A number of yachts are wintered afloat here and it can be difficult to find space to swing in the NE corner on account of the numerous permanently moored yachts there. Yachts are hauled out at the boatyard on the E side of the entrance.

Tavernas ashore. Water tap at the root of the jetty. Provisions and tavernas at Milina, the village about 3 kilometres N.



  1. Anchor in either of the two coves opposite the S
    end of Nisis Alatas. Care is needed to stay in the
    fairway of the channel to avoid the rocks and
    shoal water on either side of the channel before
    turning into the coves. There are 3.5m least
    depths in the fairway of the channel.

  2. In the cove to the W of the S end of Nisis Alatas.
    Anchor in 3--5m on mud and weed, good
    holding.

PETRAKI

39°10'.8N 23°13'.0E

Half a mile N of Milina, Petrakia cove offers good shelter from the meltemi. Anchor in 5-10m on mud and weed, good holding. Open to the NW.

KHORTOS

39°11'.2N23°12'.7E

In settled weather when the meltemi is not blowing hard you can anchor off the resort of Khortos. Anchor in 5-8m on mud. There is a jetty off the beach with 2-3m depths at the end. Provisions and tavernas ashore.

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WsideoftheGulfofVolos

AMALIOUPOLIS AND NEARBY ANCHORAGES (Örmos Mitzellas, Örmos Soupis)

On the W side of the entrance to the Gulf of Volos a steep-to headland juts out from the coast ending in Âk Periklis and Ak Almiros. The headland is indented with a number of bays and on the E side is the village of Amalioupolis at the head of Ormos Mitzellas.




AMALIOUPOLIS

@ 39°10'.0N 22°53'.4E


Note Navigation is prohibited within a 5 mile radius of the military area at 39°13'.3N 22°48'.5E. However, in practice local yachts do not observe the prohibition and anchor at Amalioupolis and nearby anchorages.


  1. Amalioupolis 39°10'.0N 22°53'.5E The village
    is conspicuous from seaward. Anchor off the
    town or go stem-to one of the two piers off the
    village (2.5m depths at the extremity). The
    bottom is sand - good holding. The small fishing
    harbour here is usually full of local boats. With
    the meltemi some swell rolls into the anchorage.
    Good shelter from SE winds. Port police. Water
    near the pier. Good shopping for provisions.
    Tavernas and cafes.

  2. Half a mile N of Amalioupolis there is an
    unnamed cove providing some shelter from the
    meltemi. Anchor near the head of the bay in
    2-4m.

  3. Loutrdki Amalioupolis (Fearless Cove)
    39°10'.2N A sheltered cove in Ormos Sourpis on
    the W side of the headland. Anchor near the head
    of the cove in 3--6m. The bottom is mud,
    excellent holding. Good all-round shelter.
    Although the cove is open to the W for 1.5 miles
    the wind does not blow home from that direction.
    A boatyard on the N side of the bay hauls yachts.

  4. Örmos Ây Ioânnis Lies just to the S of Loutrâki
    Amalioupolis. Anchor in 2--5m. Much of the bay
    is shallow towards the head. Good shelter from
    the meltemi and the SE.

Note On the W side of Örmos Soupis there is a large factory complex with storage tanks, gantries and several long jetties.

NEA ANKHIALOS (Nea Aghialos) 39°16'.53N 22°49'.29E WGS84 About 7 miles N of the factory complex in Ormos Soupis and tucked into the W corner of the gulf is Nea Ankhialos. The entrance is difficult to make out until very close-to when a few boulders extending from the beach and a half submerged breakwater to port become visible. Here there is a small circular fishing harbour entered by a narrow channel. There is room for a couple of yachts alongside the outer end of the quay where there are 2-2.5m depths. Here there is enough of a lee from the meltemi for it








Amalioupolis looking S across the N pier

The small harbour at Nea Ankhialos looking out to the entrance

335








Ây Yeöryios looking SSW

to be comfortable. The channel and basin are shallow with l-

Provisions and tavernas nearby. The little harbour is a pleasant enough stop despite the busy road along the shore. Just across the road from the harbour are the ruins of ancient Pyrasos.

Ayios yeöryios

39°18'.00N 22°53'.93E WGS84 A bay lying under Âk Spilla. The inner part of the bay is mostly shallow, but you can tuck under the SW side as far as possible and find reasonable shelter from the meltemi.

There are also several other bays to the W that afford some shelter from the meltemi.

VOLOS

BA 1571

Approach

Conspicuous The large city and a cement factory one mile to the E of the city are easily seen from the distance. The commercial docks, a large grey silo behind the docks and the church of Ayios Konstandinos (especially the clock tower) immediately behind the small yacht harbour are conspicuous. The harbour is generally full of cargo ships.




APPROACHES TO VOLOS

@ 13 Âk Seskoulo (approaches to Limin Völou) 39°20'.62N 22°56'.60E WGS84


By night Use the light on Âk Seskoulo Fl.l.5s7M and at the cement factory Fl(2)10sl2M. The NE

end of the detached breakwater is lit Fl.R.3s. The end of the breakwater is lit Fl.G.3s4M, as is the extremity of the commercial pier F.G/F.R. Note The new detached breakwater sits very low in the water and can be difficult to pick out from the distance, but the light structure on the NE end of the detached breakwater stands out well.

Mooring

Go stern or bows-to the town quay or the N end of the E mole where shown. There are laid moorings tailed to small buoys, although these have been reported as suspect so it may be best to use your own anchor. The bottom is mud and good holding although in parts of the harbour the bottom is very soft mud through which most anchors just plough furrows. Note Pontoons are to be installed in the near future.



Shelter Good shelter although there is a fetch across the bay with SW winds.

Authorities A port of entry: port police, customs and immigration. Charge band 2.

Note To the E of the commercial harbour a small yacht harbour has been constructed. Local boats are kept here.

Facilities

Services Water and electricity points on the quay. Water points on the breakwater. Fuel Near the quay. A mini-tanker can deliver. Repairs Most mechanical repairs. General light engineering including stainless steel welding and machining work can be carried out. General electrical work. Yachts are hauled out in the bay S of the commercial harbour. Good chandlers. Excellent hardware and tool shops. Provisions Excellent shopping for all provisions. Good SPAR supermarket in the W of the town. Wine from the barrel. Ice from the fish market. Eating out The tavernas and bars fronting the quay are fairly flashy and of varying quality. Towards the fishing harbour and further along to the SE are more convivial tavernas and there are a number of good ouzeries with good mezedes.

Volos looking N from Âk Sesoulo with the detached breakwater in the foreground


Other PO. OTE. Hospital. Banks. Hire cars, motorbikes and bicycles. Buses and trains to

336





VOLOS

@ 39°21'.58N 22°56'.77E WGS84

Thessaloniki and Athens. Ferries to the northern Sporades and Syria. Internal flights to Athens.



Note Volos is a good base from which to visit the spectacular monasteries at Meteori - buses and trains run regularly.

General

Volos is one of the most important commercial harbours in Greece, handling most of the Thessalian exports: cereals, silk, cotton, olive oil, sugar and soap. Until the disastrous earthquakes of 1954 and 1955 Volos rivalled Piraeus in commercial power. After the earthquakes, which flattened a large part of the city, it was rapidly rebuilt and once again it is prospering.



The present harbour was built in 1912, but Volos has always been an important maritime town. Jason and the Argonauts set sail from Volos (then Iolkos) - a fact commemorated by a bronze model of the Argo in a square by the harbour. The local wine is also called, appropriately enough, Argo.

The museum (towards the SE end of the city) contains an excellent collection of artifacts from Iolkos and Pagasai-Demetrias (across the bay S of Volos). Its collection of painted stelai is one of the best in the world and I recommend a visit. The faded paintings on the stelai show touching scenes from everyday life in ancient Greece - Protos, a muscular-looking man walking his dog, Metrophanes holding out his hands to his child, Hediste lying wan in bed - scenes far removed from the friezes of warriors and chariots and wounded lions we commonly think of as ancient funereal art.




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