- Greeks and Turks are short, especially Turks. In all my travels so far, I cannot remember one person from either Greece of Turkey that was as tall or taller than me.
- Lots of poor people in Athens. I have seen more gypsys selling incense, guys sleeping on benches, and African guys selling purses and sunglasses than anywhere else I have been.
- There are lots of Canadians in Greece. Turkey was dominated by Australia and New Zealand. Greece has been dominated by Canada (with some US as well).
- The times that places close in Athens is dumb. All the museums close at 3 pm and all the ruins close at 5 pm. That is ridiculous!
- Greek middle schoolers and high schoolers have terrible hair, especially in Athens. In 5 years, they are going to look back and be very embarassed I think.
My next stop was the Benaki Museum of Islamic Art. Lots of stuff from the 8th century to the 19th century. I like Islamic Art a lot so it was cool to walk around the museum. Most of the stuff was just like the items I saw at the British Museum. There was a sixteenth century room from Cairo that they transported to the museum. The tiles in it were sweet. From there I walked over to the Ancient Agora. This was where Socrates would walk and discuss stuff with his pupils. It is also where St. Paul preached to the Athenians. The ruins were ok but sort of hard to decifer (picture 7). My favorite part about the Ancient Agora had nothing to do with the ruins. It was the small Byzantine Church in it (picture 8). I walked into the Ceramics Gallery of the Museum of Greek Folk Art. The ceramics were all really nice but, honestly, I wasn't really in the mood. I did a quick peek at the Roman Agora but was kind of "ruins"ed out so it did not impress me. I had a gyro and fries from this place called Thassis. Totally and completely fantastic. They put spice and salt on the fries and the pitas and meat had different spices on them as well. I ate them in the square by the Municipal Cathedral. It was so hot out while I was walking and it really drained me so I went back to my hostel and did Friday's post. Read it if you like. I walked over to the Temple of Zeus after that. It closed at 5pm (dumb) and I just barely had time to walk around the thing and take some pictures. It was the biggest Temple in Athens when it was finished in 100 AD. Some of the columns are still standing and they are massive (picture 9). I can only imagine what it looked like when it was complete. I sat in Syntagma Square for a while and read and people watched.
I had dinner at Everest again. I had a club sandwich and french fries. The sandwich was great. Ham, bacon, mayonaise, tomato, lettuce, yum! While I was eating, a guy came over and talked to me. He said he was from Torino. He talked about his dog and showed me a picture of it. Kind of random of him to come and talk to me but whatever. I walked around for a little bit. I was kind of tired of just walking around in the evening so I went to hostel and sat in the Garden. My original intention was to read but I ended up talking to a bunch of people instead. I met two people from Baton Rogue. They were nice and were doing what I did but backwards. They were starting in Athens and working their way over to Istanbul. I also met a guy from Quebec City. We talked about how Quebec is like Europe but on North America. There was a girl there from Vancouver who had been traveling all over Europe since October (she lived in Edinburgh for three months and worked). I met a couple from Winnepeg that were really nice and ended up being on the same flight to Milan as me. Finally, I met a guy from Miami who was traveling all over the world. He started in August and had been to South America (he snuck into Bolivia), Antarctica (he swam in the water there), Africa (he had an elephant chase his safari car), and Southeast Asia. He was thirty eight and unmarried so he could afford this trip. It was a great time meeting all those extremely interesting and cool people. Then I called my mom on Skype and went to bed.
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