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Greece magic: This is what it's like to visit Greece right now. Around the Peloponnese region, beaches are uncrowded and people are enjoying relaxing vacations.
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Ancient wonders: The theater at Epidauraus was built in the 4th century BCE and has been hosting performances ever since. Fewer visitors this year means you might have it all to yourself.
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Limited opening: Greece is now welcoming visitors from across the European Union and a few other countries and hopes random Covid-19 tests at borders will allow it to keep borders open for the rest of the summer.
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Hand sanitizer everywhere: Hotels in Greece appear to be taking Covid-19 regulations seriously. Staff wear face masks or shields, check-ins are screened off and hand sanitizer is omnipresent.
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Remote working: TV and aircon remotes in Greek hotels are often wrapped in fresh plastic for each new guest to prevent infection spread.
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Sunset steam clean: As the last rays vanish over the imposing cliff above the coastal town of Gerolimenas, staff at the upscale Kyrimai Hotel can be seen steam cleaning the poolside recliners.
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Food and face masks: Vasiliki Besiou sports a face covering as she waits tables at the Takis seafood restaurant in the beautiful bay village of Limeni.
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Unexpected visitor: This friendly guy visiting the shoreline dinner table of Limeni wasn't wearing a face mask.
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Social distancing: Keeping your distance is a struggle for friendly folk in Greece, but the two-meter rule is enforced in some enclosed spaces, like the Caves of Diros, a subterranean coastal attraction that's one of the highlights of a trip to the Peloponnese.
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Island hopping: Anyone boarding one of Greece's many inter-island ferries needs to fill in extra paperwork to help tracing. Face masks must be worn when passengers are inside.
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Escape from it all: There are plenty of places where no face coverings are required. With so many to choose from it's easy to find a secluded place to swim alone in Greece.
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Empty beach: This cove, deserted by all but one one bather, is a typical site in the wild but stunning Mani peninsula in the Peloponnese.
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Volcano view: The extinct Kaimeni Chora volcano on the island of Methana offers great views over the Saronic Gulf.
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Soul-soothing sunsets: No Greek vacation is complete without some stellar sundowns, like this one over the western coast of the Mani.
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Tower houses: The Mani is famous for its villages of towers, which sit atop wild and windswept hilltops. Many are ruined, but some are being restored and rented out to tourists.
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Gythio at sunset: The quiet port town of Gythio is a great place to overnight during a Peloponnese road trip. Its waterfront restaurants offer a low-key place to unwind after a day of sightseeing or swimming.
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Unusual attraction: This "ghost ship" stranded on Valtaki beach north of Gythio makes an Instagram-friendly backdrop to a swimming session. The shipwreck of the Dimitrios has been there since slipping its moorings in 1981.
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Mavrovouni: Just south of Gythio is the wide expanse of sand at Mavrovouni, another largely empty beach.
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Akrotiri Tenaro Lighthouse: At the southernmost point of mainland Greece, and one of the most southerly points of mainland Europe, this remote lighthouse feels about as far away from coronavirus as you can get.
Vathia, Greece CNN  — 

If you’re wondering how coronavirus has affected that Greece vacation dream of blue skies, bluer seas, bright sunshine and the most delicious al fresco salad you’ve ever tasted – it hasn’t.

Greece has worked hard to adapt its tourism offering in an age of infection. For the time being at least, this seems to be paying off, even as a second wave of infections threatens other European destinations.

Thanks in part to the fact that it’s so far seen few cases, visiting many parts of Greece right now is almost like visiting a country where Covid-19 never happened.

There are a few reassuring precautions in place, but the beautiful empty beaches, crystal clear seas and waterfront tavernas are all still serving up the 100% authentic Greek relaxation needed to cure those lockdown blues.

Not everyone can visit Greece at the moment. It has only opened its borders to travelers from European Union countries and a handful of other nations, although officials have hinted that US visitors (other than Tom Hanks) may be welcomed before summer’s out.

Visitors need to complete paperwork before departure, giving details of where they’ll be staying. On arrival, they’re subject to random testing and could, if anyone on their flight tests positive, be quarantined for 14 days.

Airport swabs

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Blue skies, bluer seas: The Greece of vacation dreams is still out there waiting.

Despite pre-flight nerves on a trip to Greece on July 16 – one of the first flights between London and Athens after a ban on UK arrivals was lifted a day earlier – the journeying was smooth.

Passengers mostly behaved themselves by wearing masks throughout the British Airways flight. There were paperwork checks during immigration, but there was no sign of anyone being given swabs for Covid-19 testing.

Which is not to say that these aren’t being carried out. While it accepts that travelers will inevitably import some infections, Greece desperately needs to contain these in order to keep its vital tourism industry in business for the rest of the summer.

Once clear of the airport, Greece is all still there, waiting.

Rugged hillsides, covered by cypress trees, olive groves and citrus orchards, descend to soft-sand beaches and navy blue waters. Almost every evening, a liquid sunset bathes the sky and the scenery in a soul-soothing spectrum of oranges and pinks.

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Hotels are doing their best to keep things safe and clean for guests.

Hotels and guest houses are doing their best to make guests feel safe. Check-in desks have been placed behind screens, staff are wearing masks and – sometimes – gloves and full plastic face guards, even if they’re uncomfortable.

“I feel like I’m about to go scuba diving in this,” says Takis Zotos, who runs the Pension Marianna guest house in the touristy port town of Nafplio, on southern Greece’s Peloponnese peninsula, sweating heavily behind his plastic face guard.

Hand sanitizer is everywhere – in hotel lobbies, outside rooms, inside rooms and even in little bottles in the bathroom, next to the complimentary shower gel and shampoo. TV and aircon remotes are sometimes wrapped in plastic.

Signs and floor markings try hard to enforce a two-meter social distance guideline that isn’t always practical. Arduous one-person-at-a-time breakfast servings, instead of the traditional buffet, seem to still be a logistically tricky work in progress.

A traditional welcome

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Hand sanitizer is everywhere.

If hoteliers are concerned that their guests could be unpacking coronavirus along with their beach shorts, they’re not showing it.

Welcomes, even to visitors from virus hotspots like the UK, seem genuine. Greek hospitality has apparently been undimmed by Covid-19, even if some restraint must be shown.

“For Greeks, not being able to shake hands is like having an arm cut off,” says Zotos, who runs his scrupulously clean guest house (a Covid-19 training certificate is proudly displayed in reception) with his two brothers.

Restaurants too are taking precautions. Tables are spritzed with disinfection between diners, and hand sanitizer bottles occasionally sit next to the salt and pepper.

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Waitress Vasiliki Besiou wears a face mask while waiting tables at the Takis Taverna in the pretty coastal village of Limeni.

Serving staff are mostly equipped with masks or a mini plastic guard that sits beneath the mouth. Sometimes the masks are missing though, or are worn below the nose or as ineffectual chin decorations, in busy tourist spots.

However, even in remote mountain villages, wait staff in tiny roadside tavernas can be seen gamely wearing the full gear in the high heat of midday.

Low risk

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Many historical attractions, such as the ancient theater of Epidaurus, are largely empty.

There’s certainly a degree of trust involved in some dining out experiences, but given that this is mostly al fresco and Covid-19 cases have so far been minimal, the risk seems very low.

Out in the streets, there’s little to show that there’s a global pandemic going on. Few pedestrians milling in and out of shops, whether in tourist areas or ordinary parts of towns, are wearing face masks or observing social distancing. Shopkeepers mostly are, though.

In Greece’s many historic attractions, face mask rules do apply for any indoor exhibits. The irony here, though, is that because tourism has been so heavily affected by coronavirus, these places are largely empty.

While that’s tragic for the Greek travel industry, it’s rather magical for visitors exploring ancient wonders that would normally be crawling with people.

At the ancient theater of Epidaurus, an acoustically perfect ancient structure that’s been hosting shows for more than 2,000 years, a tiny number of tourists were enjoying the unexpected delight of being able to stage their own performances to a completely deserted amphitheater.

Masks are required on all public transport, which includes the numerous ferries connecting the islands. There’s also additional paperwork for traveling this way.

Empty beaches

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It's not hard to find your own stretch of shoreline on the Mani peninsula.

No masks are required for Greece’s many beaches. And with visitor numbers currently well below the seasonal norm, there’s very little concern over social distancing.

This may yet become an issue on some of Greece’s smaller islands or destinations with more intensive package tourism scenes, but around the Peloponnese, most shorelines were occupied mainly by only a few Greek bathers.

This area of mainland Greece, easily accessible by a fast new toll road from Athens, is arguably one of the country’s best destinations for Covid-era tourism. It’s traditionally less visited than the Greece’s islands, yet it has an abundance of beaches and historical attractions.

With imposing mountains, green countryside, dramatic driving roads and gorgeous inland and coastal towns, it has all the ingredients for road trip perfection.

Highlights include the historic Byzantine fortress town of Mystras, the paradise shorelines of Elafonisos island, the beautiful port town of Gythio, the medieval castle town of Monemvasia, and the Mani – a wild peninsula of breathtaking coastal roads, secluded bays and hilltop villages that feels a very long way from trouble.

Greece may yet witness the beach crowding seen in Spain and other parts of Europe. It may yet see a new spike in virus cases as a result of opening its borders and be forced to cut short its summer.

But right now, with the cicadas singing on warm olive trees, the sun melting into the mirrored surface of the Mediterranean and the condensation dripping down the side of an ice-cold bottle of Mythos beer, it’s the perfect escape from everywhere else.