Home
KAIROS GARDEN THE HOTEL
THE TAVERNA
RATES
ABOUT US
THE BLOG
GUESTBOOK
MEDIA
WORKSHOPS
FREE NEWSLETTER
DO & SEE NORTHERN GREECE
PLACES TO VISIT
THINGS TO DO
GREECE 4 KIDS
WELLNESS
WINE TASTING
BULGARIA
THASSOS
ISTANBUL
PRACTICAL STUFF Map/Kart
Weather
Currency Calculator
Getting Here
Rent a Car
CONTACT US
GREEK LIVING LIFE IN GREECE
FACTS ON GREECE
HOLIDAYS
Animal Welfare
LEARNING GREEK
REAL ESTATE
IMAGES MY BOOKS
GREEK CARDS
FREE E-CARDS
GREEK FILMS
ETC. LINKS
STA ELLINIKA
NEW ARTICLES
Create a Site Like Us

Subscribe To This Site
XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

Experience a Real Greek Market

A Greek market is an exotic experience you shouldn't miss during your holidays! The outdoor market of Eleftheroupolis takes place every Friday, while the one in Kavala takes place on Saturdays. Both are easy to get to while staying at our small hotel in Eleftheres. There's a bus to Kavala every hour (the bus takes 45 minutes and is a beautiful trip itself along the sea), while you need to drive to get to Eleftheroupolis - it takes ten minutes.

The Greek market is of course an excellent place to shop for fresh fruit and vegetables - here you'll find what's in season and nothing else. A visit here always inspire me to cook something nice! Many of the vegetable and fruit sellers are farmers who sell their own crop, and often also their own home-made wine or tsipouro (a local liquor that resembles ouzo), jam or herbs for cooking or teas.

But in the market you can also buy clothes, shoes, underwear, chickens, rabbits, plants, cds, belts, materials, jewelery, handbags..and you name it!

Northern Greece has always been a center in Europe for textile production. Long before industry, here it was produced furs and silk - there's actually still silk production in this part of Greece. When I moved permanently to Greece in 1993 huge clothes brands like Hennes, Marks and Spencer and Levi's still had clothes made here. The market sellers would buy up stuff directly from the factory - usually clothes with some kind of flaw (like a size 20 being labeled size 16) - and you could do real bargains in the market.

Today the textile industry has flagged out to China and, to some extend, to Bulgaria. You can still do great bargains, though, for instance buying jeans for a fraction of what they cost in the shops. Women should wear a shirt or dress when visiting the market, as you can always slip on a pair of trousers under your dress to see if it fits. It's worth looking through the huge piles of clothes or shoes, as this is where you'll usually find the great piece to a ridiculous price.

Return from Greek Market to KAIROS homepage


footer for greek market page