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British diver dies at Epanomi Shipwreck in northern Greece
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Local media reported the unnamed man had died after diving into rough water following bad weather.
Other people on the beach notified local authorities once they realised he was in danger and he was pulled from the water by another swimmer.
Emergency services including an ambulance and a lifeguard boat rushed to the scene but efforts to resuscitate him failed.
The Port Authority of Michaniona is investigating the incident, local media reports, and a postmortem will be carried out at the nearby Hippocrates Hospital.
A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “We are supporting the family of a British man who has died in Greece and are in contact with the local authorities.”
A coastguard official told The Sun: “He was swimming when the weather turned and it began to rain. A rescue boat and an ambulance were immediately sent but by the time they arrived he had been pulled out of the water unconscious.”
Epanomi Shipwreck is frequently visited by divers wanting to catch a glimpse of the remains of the ship, which sank in the winter of 1970 when it was transporting soil. It lies just off the shore of one of the most popular beaches near Thessaloniki in northern Greece – a hotspot for international tourists.
It is the latest in a string of recent tourist deaths in Greece and on Greek islands.
Earlier this month, TV doctor Michael Mosely died after going missing while walking back to his accommodation on the island of Symi.
At least six more have since died or gone missing since his death.
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
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A British tourist has died in Greece after diving at a well known shipwreck in ‘rough seas’
dies while diving at famous Greek shipwreck in ‘rough seas’","description":"British diver dies at Epanomi Shipwreck in northern Greece
A 33-year-old man died while swimming in a popular beach in northern Greece
on Friday when he “found himself in a difficult position,” the Coast Guard said
another swimmer pulled the man out of the water unconscious
The ambulance staff who had arrived at the scene performed CPR
The man’s body was taken to the Hippokratio Hospital for an autopsy and the Port Authority of Michaniona is conducting the preliminary investigation
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We’ve rounded up 10 medal-winning wines and one sparkling from our Spring Tasting
Israeli Syrah and a Chardonnay from an American sporting legend
The following wines are a selection of highlights from The Spring Tasting by the drinks business, which was conducted earlier this year, following the inaugural Autumn Tasting towards the end of 2020
which meant that the judges did not know the source region
or grape variety of the sample they were assessing
although they were given a broad indication of style (white
Click here to see all the medallists from The Spring Tasting 2021
and scroll down to see the 10 highlights from the competition
This was my first taste of Malagousia – a near-extinct native white grape revived by the producer of this wine
There’s nothing subtle about its characteristics
which emerge from the glass like a pack of children after school
with flavours ranging from fresh peach to rose petals
but then comes this fresh salty element to it
In a world where sipping skinny drinks is considered sophisticated
discovering this Bourbon-barrel-aged Chardonnay made me smile
with its caramel and butter-popcorn characteristics
I just yearn to pour it to people who pretend to enjoy the puckering experience of bone-dry
it won’t be an expensive one – this Chardonnay sells for under £15
We had some fantastic Provençal rosés in this year’s Spring Tasting
showcasing the pristine peachy fruit of the 2020 vintage in southern France
but I’m plugging this pink Sangiovese from Italy because it offers so much joy for so little cash
and there’s so much juicy cherry fruit and fresh salty interest that I challenge you to drink this at a pace that’s anything other than dangerously fast for something with more than 12% ABV
spicy red wine for the price of an oven pizza
then there’s one place you should look: Jumilla – home to Europe’s largest stock of ancient ungrafted vineyards
These undervalued viticultural relics yield wines with power and sweetness
BSI Bodegas San Isidro is the biggest and best-value producer in the region (it’s a massive co-op)
and this crianza is a wonderful chocolate-scented red with notes of toast and blackcurrant
for having with that oven pizza you ditched to buy this
a winery from American football legend and restaurateur John Elway
and it was my highest-scoring white wine of the Spring Tasting – even if the Grand Reserve Chardonnay from Church Road in New Zealand’s Hawke’s Bay ran it close
Those who love sweet wines tend to turn towards the seductive oak-laden world of Sauternes or the pristine taste of late-harvest German Riesling
But there is a third way: the world-famous
as this remarkable wine from Royal Tokaji Winery shows so well
you can have the honey and sweetness of Sauternes and the cleansing freshness of Riesling
If anyone ever asks you why people get so excited by Italian fine wines
pass this Brunello di Montalcino under their sceptical nostrils
which is a set of qualities I don’t find anywhere else in the world
and it’s this: ripe red fruit but with a light fresh texture
gently warming alcohol but with a pleasantly bitter character
but a mouth-coating just-bottled dry tannic sensation
This is the sort of wine that gets me excited in a blind tasting
You want something that stands out but has structure
the characters of a great match between site
By that I mean something where you can taste the perfection of each berry that went into it
You can tell that of each one was picked at just the right time
perfect things with ripe skins and juicy pulp
or sweeter notes from the new oak are hidden
These are the hallmarks of a great modern young red
In a world where Cabernet is favoured by collectors
one of the most underrated sources of fine wine seems to be Syrah – the basis of great reds from the Northern Rhône
I shall add – if you haven’t already – Israel’s Upper Galilee
based on the brilliance of this wine from Tulip Winery
Nothing is over-done and dull; it is just wonderfully ripe
if you’re asked for a recommendation and suggest something well-known then your audience feels short-changed
Even if they know little about the classic wine regions and noble grapes of the world
they want to be told about something unusual
And this is a good thing – enjoying wine should be about finding new tastes from far-flung places
So here’s something to sate such a desire (and show off a bit)
and made with the country’s native and near-unpronounceable native grape Agiorgitiko (say it without the ‘gs’)
grown in the Argolida region (use the ‘g’)
it provides a lot of character and quality for the cash
What a great find in the world of sparkling wine: A creamy
bready fizz with plenty of ripe yellow fruit and a really dry citrus-fresh finish (this contains just 6g/l residual sugar); that uses native Cava grapes (Macabeu
Xarel.lo and Parellada) that are grown organically
Please visit The Global Masters website for more information about The Spring Tasting, or, to enter future competitions – giving you the chance to feature online and in print – please call: +44 (0) 20 7803 2420 or email Sophie Raichura at: sophie@thedrinksbusiness.com
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Home> News> UK News
A British tourist has drowned while diving at a well-known Greek shipwreck
the 33-year-old has tragically died following the incident yesterday afternoon (30 June)
The man was diving at the Epanomi Shipwreck in northern Greece
about a 50 minute drive away from Thessaloniki
Currently unnamed, it's said he ran into some trouble due to 'rough seas' in the area following a bout of bad weather.
The Brit was then reportedly pulled from the sea by a fellow swimmer as emergency services were called
However, SL Press reports that the ambulance crew were sadly unable to resuscitate him and the man died at the scene
The Port Authority of Michaniona is now investigating the incident and a postmortem will be carried out as the deceased was taken to the Hippocrates Hospital
The Epanomi Shipwreck is a popular spot for snorkelling as both locals and tourists visit the remains of the 1970s ship
It is said to be one of the most popular beaches near the city of Thessaloniki with crystal-clear blue-green waters and the wreck often visible above the water at low tide
While the wreck itself is a popular spot for diving near to the shore
local media suggests it tends to be avoided by swimmers during spells of bad weather
Topics: Travel, UK News
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She graduated with a first in Journalism from City
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June 15: Greece is one of the oldest European countries producing wine from indigenous grape varieties but has not been in the limelight because of lack of export efforts and unenviable quality but during the last couple of decades it has been in the news because of tremendous improvement in quality and sustained export efforts
writes Subhash Arora who was overwhelmed with the outstanding quality of indigenous varieties after visiting several wineries and tasting diverse wines last month and feels the time is ripe for Greek wines to make a grand entry into India
It’s all Greek
With trigonometry thrust on us in school-it helped me read the contrived signage- Malagousia
Now try pronouncing Thessaloniki (thhay-saalo-neeki)...try it without looking at the spellings
for now but see if you can pronounce it-easy
Ok-the last one- Gerovassiliou (Jayro-va-ssi-liu)
I don’t know about you but I found the words pretty hard to pronounce the first few times
And relating to wine can give you some idea why an ordinary consumer would shy away from Greek wines initially.
is one of the 130 grape varieties in use currently in Greece. Malagousia from Ktima Gerovassiliou won the ‘Best White Wine of Greece’ Trophy earlier this year at Mundusvini international wine competition where I have been judging for the last 9 years
You may find the name unfamiliar as it is one of the indigenous grapes found mostly in Greece and around. But even Greeks did not know much about this feminine grape variety 25 years ago
To Vangelis (Evangelos) Gerovassiliou goes the credit of bringing the variety to the center stage
Working with Professor Logothetis of Thessaloniki Agricultural University
who collected vines from several villages in Greek mountains including this near-extinct variety from western Greece
he planted them in Porto Carras a well known winery in Halkidiki
he felt it had good potential in making good wine
He worked on this grape variety in the 70s and 80s
The first commercial vintage was released by Porto Carras in 1994
at a tasting conducted by the Greek Master of Wine
he found it still singing though the wine was expected to be well past its prime
Meeting in Delhi
And I am glad I did
Not only are the winery and vineyards worth visiting
I was also able to visit Porto Carras winery
around 90 kms from the Ktima (Estate/Domaine) following the visit
Vangelis joined Porto Carras in 1976 and worked for 23 years as the winemaker. After his last harvest of 1998, he quit and started completely on his own. He was already growing vines and making small amount of wines on his own account
He is a rare breed who still has very high regard for his previous employers when he says
‘Porto Carras was my life!’ He owns 63 hA of land part which he bought when he was working and kept on adding through his savings
‘The vineyards in my village had been totally destroyed by phylloxera in the 1880s and it was my strong desire to grow grapes once again in this land in my village and hence I decided to buy land in Epanomi.’
Because he had been accumulating more land even when he was working in Porto Carras
many of his vines being in that 4 hA of land he had bought earlier
he also worked for 8 years during this period with Prof
who was a consultant to Porto Carras.Contrary to some people saying Prof Peynaud did not believe in tasting the seeds at harvest and went only by the lab reports
‘The professor always walked the vineyards tasting the skins and seeds.'
People flock to the winery not only because of its close distance to the city and an excellent reputation of its vineyards and wines, there is a lot of interest in the wine museum which he completed in 2008, from artefacts collected and stored away by him for years
Even bigger draw is a unique collection of over 2500 corkscrews from all over the world
‘He has been collecting them ever since we remember’
says Marianthi who works with her father and takes me around for a tour of the winery with all its fineries
he has several pieces of art and sculptors strewn over the vineyards and the winery
The Visitor Center with the Café of the Museum was completed last year with the financial assistance of EU and is an excellent work of architecture and a great destination for wine tourism
Though there is no place to stay at the vineyard
it is very close to the city for a day visit in any case
There are regular tours of the vineyards and winery and only for €5 one can taste two wines as well
The basement also has his personal cellar and library where all the vintages of wines made in Porto Carras are stacked; so are the wines produced by him from the beginning
One section is reserved for his private collection of Bordeaux Growths and other top quality wines from France
that he has been collecting for years and also when he used to live there
There is a big-sized play room for school kids where they can come with their teachers and are encouraged to draw and paint grape related subjects
There are several otheractivities panned out to educated children about agriculture
It is a part of the new tasting room and the Museum Café with a 270° view of the winery and vineyards with Mount Olympus in the background and completed in 2015
The winery and the area surrounding it is full of artefacts and sculptures and reminded me of Castello di Ama
one of the leading Chianti Classico producers whose owners Marco Pallanti and his wife Lorenza are so enamoured with Art that every year he commissions a new artist for a new sculptor including one by the Indio-British sculptor Anish Kapoor
Vangelis is equally excited about another winery
Ktima Biblia Chora – a partnership venture where they produce slightly more 400
Their Sauvignon Blanc Assyrtiko blend- slightly off-dry wine
retailing at around €10 is very popular with the young people and women
Malagousia sells for €25-26 in the restaurants
Between the two wineries, he makes about 750,000-800,000 bottles that makes him a decent size player. 30% -35% of his production is exported to 29 countries whereas the balance vast majority finds its way to the domestic market
The wines are well known in Greece ans well as overseas
Germany and Cyprus are the major markets
Australia and Singapore which are interesting markets for him
Only 25% of his production is red wines; vast majority is white wine which according to Vangelis
He also owns 20 hA of vineyards in South Africa but the reasons for acquiring the land or the purpose to go so far were neither comprehensible nor clear. He is known to help construct wineries professionally too but an estate
so far away from his homeland was not convincing to me
Tasting Gerovassiliou
I tasted a range of wines from the Domaine- all of which were outstanding to excellent.
All the wines tasted at Domaine Gerovassiliou were a tribute not only to Malagousia and other local varieties but the terroir and winemaking techniques and capabilities of Vangelis Gerovassiliou
There is no system of grading the vineyards– like premier cru or grand cru in France
These wines are certainly in the top rung of Greek wines and command a premium
The premium on these wines makes it difficult for them to enter the Indian wine market, which is sensitive to prices . In general, a Malagousia wine may be purchased at a third of the price at Gerovassiliou. This would make it very difficult to make the product retail worthy
Hotels with discretionary guests may find these wines reasonable if imported without import duty agaist their duty-free licenses
Only time will tell if and when these Greek beauties will make a breakthrough in India though the time seems to here and now
But in the meanwhile Gerovassiliou has already set a benchmark for fine Greek wines
The number of recognitions Vangelis has received as a Winemaker of the Year
is indicative of the top quality coming out of Ktima Gerovassiliou- and the passion and commitment of the much awarded winemaker
And in case you are wondering about the signage-it was outside the ladies washroom in a restaurant whose manager insisted Malagousia is a popular feminine grape from Greece
For an earlier related Article, please visit Tasting: It’s All Greek to Us
The Article may erroneously give the impression that Malagousia is the signature grape of Greece.With only about 300 hA planted
Assyrtiko and Moschofilero are still the most popular white grapes and would be covered in subsequent Articles
GALLERY
MAP PGI
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A BRIT tourist has tragically died while diving at a famous Greek shipwreck
drowned while diving at the Epanomi Shipwreck in Thessaloniki due to 'rough seas'
On Sunday afternoon the diver got into some difficulty due to bad weather
A coastguard official said: “He was swimming when the weather turned and it began to rain
“A rescue boat and an ambulance were immediately sent but by the time they arrived he had been pulled out of the water unconscious.”
He was pulled from the waters by another brave swimmer
The Port Authority of Michaniona is investigating and a postmortem will be carried out
The tragedy brings the death toll of tourists in Greece to nine since the beginning of June after a Brit sailor's body was discovered in Spetses last Friday.
Coastguard officials said the 44-year-old was “found floating in the sea” with head injuries.
The Brit’s body - found last Friday - was due to be transferred to a coroner’s office in the port city of Piraeus, outside the Greek capital.
the playground for the rich and famous including members of the now deposed Greek royal family
is a two-hour hovercraft ride away from Athens
Media reports suggested the dead Brit was a crew member participating in Spetses’ annual Classic Yacht Regatta which began yesterday
draws hundreds of sailing fanatics ever year and is seen as one of Europe’s most competitive regattas
For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online
Thesun.co.uk is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news
Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/thesun and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheSun
Stavros Sarafis had been fighting for his life with vigor since September 17, when he was admitted to hospital after suffering a stroke. On the morning of October 13th, however, and although there had been some encouraging signs in the last days, Caesar passed away, to the sorrow of all who knew him and loved him.
At the age of 13, he signed for Epanomi and played for the first team as the youngest of the Regional Championship of Thessaloniki, in which Anagennisi was competing at the time. «The first coach I worked with was Adam Kitsoudis, in Epanomi, who liked to work with the youngsters in Epanomi and deal with their weak points. Thus, at the age of 15, I had developed both due to the training, but also due to the strength I had to acquire in order to face clearly older opponents.»
From the beginning of his career he played as a midfielder and stayed at Epanomi from 1963 to 1967. Nikos Pangalos had spotted his talent and in fact in 1965 when he had an appendicitis operation, he made sure that PAOK took care of all the expenses. His transfer to the Double-headed Eagle was completed on August 15, 1967.
He was only 17, but he was so ready that with less than a month at the club he started in PAOK’s European game against Liege in the Exhibition Cup at the Kaftanzoglio Stadium on 13 September 1967, and a week later (20.09) he was a starter again in the match in Belgium.
He was one of the main contributors to the team’s league title in 1976, while earlier – in 1972 and 1974 – he had competed in both finals when PAOK won the Greek Cup.
«I was «baptized» as Caesar… by my first coach at PAOK, Nikos Pangalos, because I had curly auburn hair. At the time the movie Julius Caesar was playing in the cinemas and that’s how he made the connection,» recalled Sarafis.
Sarafis played in all of the Greek national team age level groups and was a member of the youth side when he was still a player at Renaissance Epanomi. He played in 32 matches with the full Greece national team and scored 7 goals.
He made his debut for Greece on July 19, 1969 in the 1-0 defeat against Australia that took place in Sydney. His last game came on April 24, 1977 in a match against the former Soviet Union that ended it a 2-0 defeat for Greece in Moscow.
Debut: September 13th 1967 | PAOK – Liege 0-2
Final appearance: June 7th 1981 | Atromitos – PAOK 0-2
PAOK top scorer in the ‘Α’ National Championship with 137 goals.
4th in the list of most appearances for PAOK in the Greek top flight, behind Koudas, Iosifidis, and Gounaris.
At least four people died and another went missing as heavy rainfall late Tuesday and early Wednesday flooded streets and homes in the Messinia region in the southern Peloponnese and areas east of Thessaloniki in northern Greece.
According to the fire service, all four victims were in the southern Peloponnese and all were senior citizens: an 80-year-old woman who lived alone in an apartment in Kalamata; a 62-year-old woman with mobility problems in the village of Pidima; a 90-year-old man in the village of Thouria; and another elderly man, whose age was not disclosed, whose body was found some 150 meters from his home in a rural part of Laconia.
Authorities, which declared five municipalities in a state of emergency, fear the list of casualties could grow, especially in villages whose residents are mainly elderly people.
The floods caused extensive damage to hundreds of homes, businesses, farms, roads, bridges and livestock in the town of Kalamata and surrounding villages in eastern Messinia, including Gargalianous, Filiatra, Hora, Stoupa, Thouria, Eva, Pidima, Kefalovryso, Vasiliko and Psari.
Although there were no official estimates of the damages, Kalamata Mayor Panayiotis Nikas said that at least 38 homes and five schools were damaged in the town, while the equipment of dozens of businesses lining the coast was destroyed, as well as infrastructure in the surrounding region.
“Seven villages were cut off but we managed to regain access, while the entire farm road network has been completely destroyed, hundreds of animals have drowned and crops have been decimated,” he said.
In northern Greece, floods mainly hit the Thermaikos Municipality.
A 53-year-old woman went missing after she apparently abandoned her car in a flash flood in the area between Mihaniona and Epanomi. The woman reportedly phoned her husband and told him she was trapped in her car. Rescuers later found the car but there was no sign of the woman.
The mayor of the Thermaikos, Yiannis Mavromatis, said the floods caused destruction of “biblical proportions” and called for the area to be declared in a state of emergency, after floods swept cars into the sea, destroyed roads and trapped people in their homes.
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Agia Triada may not be the most picturesque option
but it is the nearest to the city – perfect for a quick getaway
with a range of restaurants and bars lining the sandy stretch
you can reach Agia Triada within 30 minutes
you can hop on the 72 OASTH (city) bus from the bus station at IKEA
is the beach in the coastal town of Angelochori
Although there are not as many nearby amenities as
the Riviera Beach Bar is a one-stop shop for all your beach day needs
provided you order something from the menu
which is reasonably priced and features both Greek and international dishes
Angelochori is a 35- to 40-minute drive from Thessaloniki by car
or about 90 minutes via the 72A city bus from IKEA
Situated near the town of Epanomi, Potamos Beach is the gateway to the Thermaic Gulf and the Aegean. By virtue of the beach’s position on the open sea, the waters at Potamos are stunningly clear; in addition, the beach’s southwestern aspect reveals a breathtaking view of Mount Olympus over the horizon
Potamos is particularly popular among city-dwellers during the weekends
Potamos is only 40 minutes away from the city by car
there is also a summer bus line (70) that connects the centre of Thessaloniki directly with the beach from 1 July
Moving southeastward, towards the Halkidiki peninsulas
you’ll find the wide Nea Kallikrateia beach
The bustling town and its golden sandy beach are particularly popular among local families
with many Thessalonikians choosing the area for their seaside holiday homes
The beach was awarded a Blue Flag in 2017 and is fully equipped
bars and water sports facilities lining the shore
Nea Kallikrateia is a 40-minute drive by car from Thessaloniki
which leaves approximately every 45 minutes from Thessaloniki’s KTEL Halkidiki bus station
It is practically impossible to separate the Flogita and Nea Plagia beaches
which lie right next to each other a short distance from the entrance to the first of Halkidiki’s peninsulas
They have Blue Flag status and are well organised
bars and full access for visitors with limited mobility
The beaches are lined with parks and green space
making them ideal for families with children
Flogita and Nea Plagia are around 45 minutes away from Thessaloniki by car and are also accessible via the KTEL (intercity) bus
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Perched along a 7km (4mi) stretch of white sand
Sani is one of the most stylish beaches to be found within an hour of Thessaloniki and is known for its chic restaurants and boutiques
here you will find an awe-inspiring combination of luxury and natural beauty
with unparalleled views of the Aegean and Mt Olympus
don’t hesitate to visit the beautiful beach resort nearby for a spa day
Sani Beach is an hour away from Thessaloniki by car
Known for its popular harvest festival in early September
Agios Mamas is a quaint village with a wide sandy beach and shallow
clear waters overlooking the Toroneos Gulf
between the first and second peninsulas of Halkidiki
Agios Mamas is exceedingly popular among Thessalonikians and
the nearby ancient Olynthus archaeological site is definitely worth a visit
You’ll find artefacts from the Neolithic Period on display
as well as the oldest Bronze Age cemetery found in the region
Whether you like lively beach bars or are looking for some seaside solitude
sandy beach sits beneath a charming village of the same name and offers views of the Toroneos Gulf and Sithonia (the second leg of Halkidiki)
Afytos Beach is an hour’s drive by car from Thessaloniki
and can also be accessed by bus from Thessaloniki’s KTEL Halkidiki bus station
Though Halkidiki is far and away the most popular choice for a day at the beach from Thessaloniki, travel in the other direction (westward) to discover a host of other idyllic spots. Resting on the foot of Mt Olympus
Plaka Beach is arguably the area’s best-kept secret
this pebbly stretch is perfect for combining a summer day trip to the sea and the legendary mountain
Plaka is situated 90km (56mi) southwest of Thessaloniki and can be reached within an hour by car
while the nearby Enipeas River canyon offers another enticing option for hiking enthusiasts
Athens-based writer with a passion for learning
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