October 24, 2012
Times have changed, said the shop keeper. There are
now only 2 layers of travellers. Those
who have so much money that they can come into a store and buy anything they
want, and those who buy the usual cheap tourist souvenirs. The class of people who had two or three
hundred dollars to spend is gone. They
were the middle class and they don’t exist in Europe anymore. Some Canadians, Americans and Brits, but
rarely do the European cruisers have that kind of money any more.
Wyona and I always look at bags, scarves and
jewellery. When Margaret’s husband said
good-bye to her as she left for this holiday, one of his last words to her was,
“I hope you don’t pick up any bad habits while you are gone.” She hasn’t.
She picked up 2 scarves in Santorini and one on the boat – and that
hardly counts as shopping.
“Holy Doodle”, she said when she saw the ring Wyona
had purchased but and then offered to let me buy from her. Picking up a piece
of jewellery is a significant investment of time; I was glad to be on the
receiving end of that deal. I just say
yes. Yesterday at the end of a long day in Santorini, we stopped by some
merchants who had 35 % or 50 % off of their rings and necklaces – the end of
the season sale.
Easy to tell it was the end of the season. Many of the villas and hotels are already
closed – really closed. Plywood is
nailed over their windows, no deck chairs are out, and their pools are empty. We didn’t take a ship excursion into town. Wyona had read that if you go into the
village at the other end of Fia, take the cable car to the top of the cliffs
and then ride a local bus That way you can go to Oia (EE-yah) for €1.6: 4 euros
up in the cable car, 4 down and 1.6 each way into town and out – a grand total
of 11.2 euros for the day instead of 89 on a boat excursion. Another significant saving would have been to
walk to the top of the cliffs on the same trail that a donkey ride can also
transport you to the top, the donkey ride being 4 euros – the same price as the
cable car.
I can’t remember the last bus I rode where the bus
fare is taken on the ride – except for those trips I take home from Sicamous
and haven’t purchased a pre-paid ticket. Then I am all the way to Golden before
I have to pay. Here the local ticket taker walks down the crowded isle, bills
stuffed in one hand, a set of tickets he tears off in another and clenched
between his hands is a set of 5 metals columns out of which he dispenses the
correct change, should people give him bills. “What do I want 30 centimes back from 3.50”
said Wyona, “so I just whispered to him, ‘Keep the change.’ That is how my hand got an extra squeeze and
a large smile from him.”
She did the same thing with her money to a clerk in a
jewellery store in Athens. A young 19
year old shopkeeper said to her on the street, “Come in. I give you no hassle.”
“No hassle?” she confirmed.
“None ,” he said and he was true to her word. He let her look around for more than an hour,
just left her alone, though she had gathered information along the way that it
was his brother’s shop (aged 32) and his uncle was somehow in the family
business.
When the bill was finally totaled up, for her it was
tip time – to the younger shop keeper, even though the older brother and uncle
had tried to hover around making the sale.
When he saw the size of the tip he ran to get her another “free” gift. The tip may have been too much for him to
comprehend.
Arta
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