Because they have a different climate, hot and dry in summer but very wet in winter, they are luxuriously vegetated, unlike the better-known islands on the other side of Greece in the Aegean.
bleasdale-paxos-map-08

On important trade-routes between Western Europe and the Middle East, in history they have been occupied over time by various powers, all of which have had influences but of which the Venetians are probably the most noticeable.

If you have read Gerald Durrell’s book “My Family and Other Animals” you will have an idea what Corfu was like in the late 1930’s. Paxos, being that bit more remote, was still in that degree of idyllic-ness until about 20 years ago!


Tourism on the Island


The tourist industry has flourished since then but, because there is no airport and everyone and everything has to come by ferry, because there are no Hotels (in the traditional sense) and because it is relatively expensive to get there (and nowadays to stay there too!) it has retained a degree of laid-back exclusiveness.

Some 10 kilometres long and averaging 2½ wide, it is almost entirely tree-covered, rising in generally gentle hills to a maximum of 233 metres. There are 3 seaside villages, Gaios (the Capitol), Lákka and Loggös plus quite a lot of inland villages and settlements. A main-road system (now all surfaced) runs along the spine of the island with loops off each side to the villages and a networks of tracks serving the smaller settlements.
COBBLES for bleasdale

These vehicular routes are all relatively recent as I don’t think wheeled vehicles reached the island until WWII. Thus there remains a complex network of former donkey-paths criss-crossing the countryside in various stages of decay.

These form an excellent recreational walking heritage and it was in order to discover and perhaps somehow preserve this system, that my Walking Map was conceived.

That the Island Administration is beginning to appreciate this, is reward in itself. Hidden in the olive groves which these paths and tracks traverse, are all manner of unexpected delights including no less than 65 Greek Orthodox Churches (not all in use).
For many years I have had a fascination with the Greek Island of Paxos.. (PAXOS the Peaceful Isle, from the Latin PAX = peace).

Some time ago, I decided to map the Islands footpaths and with an ever-increasing interest in my maps, I decided that a web site would be a good way to illustrate the work I have carried out over the years.
blocks_image
blocks_image

The Greek Islands of Paxos


Situated, with it larger neighbour Corfu, off the West Coast of Greece, some 75km south-east of the heel of Italy, in the Ionian Sea with it’s off-shoot, Anti-Paxos 1½ km away to the SE. They, like most of the more southern Ionian Islands, form exposed summits of a range of coastal-shelf limestone hills, once part of an uplifted ancient sea-floor. Forced up by the interaction of plate-tectonics along the Eastern Mediterranean fault-line.
blocks_image
blocks_image