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Slow travel with the Hidden Gemologists

Get travel inspo in your inbox every week from storytellers Marilee and Paul. Discover wonderful places, delightful hotels, and meaningful travel experiences in the USA, Europe, and beyond – currently, GREECE. 100% original content by Paul, the photographer, and Marilee, the writer behind Spotlight Sojourns.

Featured Post

✨A new European travel logistic

You’re likely familiar with the European Union’s upcoming program for visa-free countries: the European Travel Information and Authorization System (ETIAS). The EU originally planned to roll out ETIAS in 2025; however, the target date is now Q4 2026. However, another new EU entry program launched on October 12, 2025: the European Entry/Exit System (EES). Similar to the ETIAS, the EES is a digital registration system specifically for citizens of visa-exempt countries at the point of entry and...

Awaiting an international flight in the airport as a wide bogy plane is taking off in the air

The carefree spirit of late summer lingers in the gentle warmth and golden leaves of early autumn. Still, Reader, now is the time to begin planning your holiday travel, especially your holiday flights. Remember those days when last-minute airfares would offer irresistible deals on unsold seats? Paul and I do. We gladly took maximum advantage of travel opportunities that suited both our pocketbook and our schedule. Alas, those days are gone. And remember those rumours that booking flights on...

Aerial view of a modern S-shaped pedestrian bridge over the Erie Canal

The Empire State’s brand-new bridge opened on June 13th, 2025, in the 19th-century town of Brockport, New York. The serpentine bridge gently curves around the existing guard gate and gracefully spans the Erie Canalway. The stair-free design incorporates slopes, promenades, and landscaping to make the Brockport Pedestrian Bridge and environs accessible to everyone. It’s a fitting (and fabulous) demonstration of the Erie Canal’s two centuries of ongoing transformation, connection, and...

Roman-Ottoman aqueduct criss-crossing downtown Kavala.

All roads lead to Rome. Because in the 1st century AD, Emperor Augustus raised the Golden Milestone monument in the Roman Forum, marking the origin of all roads. The Roman Empire’s most strategic road, the Via Appia in Italy becomes the Via Egnatia upon crossing the Adriatic Sea. The Via Egnatia runs the entire length of the Balkans. It connects Rome to the great cities of Thessaloniki and Constantinople – the “New Rome” founded by Emperor Constantine, now modern Istanbul. And everywhere...

Traveler sitting on top of an ancient Mycenaean stone bridge in Greece, surrounded by greenery and clear blue sky, showcasing archaeological history and cultural heritage.

Is there a special something that captivates your imagination, something you especially seek when traveling? Maybe it’s medieval castles with mighty bastions. Quaint stone villages with blossoms aplenty. Sacred and secular spaces with soaring ceilings and stunning art. For Paul and myself, it’s all of the above. And also, bridges. The best bridges blend the science of engineering with the elegance of design. Thus, the best bridges serve both the user and the beholder with connection,...

Dramatic coastline in Crete, with long beautiful sandy beach, azure seas and tall mountains with snow on the top in the background.

Do you ever wonder how certain places became in-demand vacation destinations in the bygone days before social media? Books, magazines, newspapers, TV, and films perform a vital service in travel and tourism, then and now. Take the Greek island of Crete, for instance, the setting for two very different productions filmed on location and released in the same year, 1964. The acclaimed 1964 film Zorba the Greek, is a bittersweet rumination on life, love, and loss that became a blockbuster hit: ✨...

Sandy beach with turqoise waters in Crete, Greece

“Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air’s salubrity,” wrote Raph Waldo Emerson in the poem “Merlin’s Song.” Excellent advice. Because sunshine, sea, and fresh air impart a certain sense of health and well-being. (or “salubrity” in our turn-of-the-century poet’s rhythm and rhyme) So, how do you as a traveler confidently choose a great place to get a good dose of Vitamin Sea? Well, one way to make a confident choice is the Blue Flag Awards, an annual global program that...

Street view in Athens, Greece, showcasing the ancient Tower of the Winds in the Roman Agora with the Acropolis and the Temple of Athena Nike visible in the background, surrounded by neoclassical architecture and lush greenery.

Wandering through Plaka, Athens’ oldest neighborhood, you notice people snapping shots of an unusual eight-sided marble tower. You smile, wondering if they know that’s the world’s oldest weather station, operating since the 1st century BC. The Tower of the Winds is the highlight of the Roman Agora, endowed by Emperors Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar. It’s one of your favorite antiquities in the Greek capital. Form following function as Roman architecture is wont to do. The tower’s ancient...

Woman in a pink skirt walking through the Ancient Agora of Athens, Greece, with views of ancient ruins, marble statues, and lush greenery, set against the backdrop of the iconic Acropolis hill and Parthenon.

Morning mist cools your brisk walk to the Ancient Agora, located at the intersection of Athens past and present: Below the 4th-century BC Acropolis. Next to the 18th-century Monastiraki neighborhood. With the 20th-century Athens Metro rumbling past. Paying the entrance fee, you enter the archaeological site with a lineage and legacy as important as the Acropolis above. Here, commerce and cultures flourished. Democracy and philosophy were born. Laws and coins were minted. Religion and rituals...

The sturdy motorboat chugs through turquoise waters to the small island just off Crete’s eastern shore. Shivering, you button up your denim jacket. Maybe it’s the sea breeze causing chills. Or maybe it’s the stout bastions drawing near. The little island is a short ride from chic coastal resorts and white sand beaches. But it seems so distant from that holiday scene. For this is Spinalonga, a world within walls on an island apart. From the late 1500s to early 1900s, a medieval fortress...