Sunday, 7th June, 2026
Another week. Another glorious morning. A day of end to end sunshine which will reach 32C/90F. Up early to get a walk in before the peak heat of the day.

It is about 3.5 miles down to the landmark statue of Alexander the Great – a hugely significant character in Macedonian history. The girl who serves us in the VIP Lounge is called Alexi as so many girls here are. I remember being surprised on Corfu/Κέρκυρα in 1982 to find that about 30% of men were called Spyros named after Saint Spyridon. Anyway, 7 miles in 27C/81F is enough for the morning and I will need a clean, dry shirt on return.

Down below us in Aristotle Square, the Beach Volley Championships are going along in spite of the heat. The scaffolding tower housing the television cameras reaches well above the spectators seating but I was surprised to look up in the sky and see this bird hovering. Morning and evening swifts and swallows dart and swoop in huge numbers to sweep the sky clean of insects but this bird – a TV Drone just hovered steadily collecting overhead views of the sport and beaming it back to the screens. Ancient & Modern jostling for popularity.

Our Suite in this hotel has improved over the years to the point where we have worked our way up to the best. The people – Chamber Maids, Cleaners, Personal Assistants – are absolutely delightful. The make the stay delightful and take such pride in their work. After a long walk this morning, we had a light lunch in the VIP Lounge and then a salad on the patio of our rooms this evening, relaxing and watching the sun go down. It is just then that the swifts and swallows come out to play with such speed and energy as we are winding down.
Monday, 8th June, 2026
Don’t you just love Monday mornings? We’ve survived another Sunday, Dear Reader. It is 8.30 am / 6.30 am (GMT) and the temperature is 28C/82F. It is extremely humid this morning and energy sapping. That is before my long walk.

I walk along the side of the sea down past the ancient White Tower which I featured last week, down past the monument to Alexander the Great which I featured yesterday and on to the Sailing Club and, if I’m feeling particularly strong, right down to the Opera House.

Other than the natural charms of the area and the wonderful tavernas, there are few concessions to tourism. There are the pleasure boat cruises around the bay, the open top bus to hop-on-hop-off and electric scooters for the lazy.

Even so, walking or promenading is extremely popular here. The Greeks and Italians call it volta.

The latest tourist money-making machine is the instant vintage newspaper souvenir camera booth. It is a portable camera + laser printer with a set up to drop the photograph directly into a newspaper front page and print out before the tourists can walk past you. It is a very popular replacement for the Wish you were Here post card of previous times. Even so, I know some old wrinklies who still love to get a postcard because social media is too frightening for them so there is something for everyone. I just like communicating, keeping the links open. We are a long time dead.
Tuesday, 9th June, 2026
Our 4th year in Thessaloniki has ended. It is 6.00 am Greek Time / 4.00 am (GMT). I have been awake for an hour and listening to The News Agents podcast. Up to Breakfast and then down to checkout. At 8.30 am a taxi is called for us. Alexi, our taxi driver talks non-stop about his city – Thessalonik – with massive pride. At the airport, his bill is €28.00 and we give him €40.00 for his enthusiasm.

Macedonia Airport is small, quiet and delightful. We arrive 3 hours early, go straight through security control and up to our Executive Lounge. The Sky Lounge is delightful for its exclusivity. This morning there were three of us with comfortable chairs and tables, good wifi and lots of refreshments from food and drink to bottles of wine and anything else we would desire.

The Departures Board announced our Gate to go to. We go early to make sure we can get our cases in the first two rows where we sit. Everything is going fine. Our flight has arrived on time and then it is announced that there is a problem.

Refuelling has revealed a technical problem which has to be resolved. A Fire Engine has arrived. We are on the tarmac and have to return to the Terminal. This has never happened to us before. We imagined having to find a hotel for the night and staying over, It didn’t wory us but created a logistical problem.
Anyway, we got to know some delightful people in the queue waiting to find out what was happening. I talked to this lovely, young girl – just 26 years old – who thought I could sort it out for her. We talked to her about the news, about politics and whether she had heard of Andy Burnham. She hadn’t, she relied on her husband for the news and wasn’t really sure who the PrimeMinister was. I told her off and treated her like an errant child. She loved it.

When we arrived at Gatwick Airport, she rushed up to tell us that her family had berated her for having to be told off by us and for not knowing about the By-election and the significance of it. She was lovely and totally representative of Gen. Z. She proved what a glorious girl she is whatever her ignorance. I’m really warming to Gen Z. They are the future.
Wednesday, 10th June, 2026
I woke up freezing. Couldn’t feel my legs. Thought I might be paralysed until I checked my phone to find it was only 8C/46F over night – a ridiculous temperature for June. Just as well I’ve only got 5 more nights at home and then off to Gatwick again for a month in Spain. Won’t be cold there.

Unfortunately, we are not flying into the small and friendly Murcia Airport on this occasion. The timings were all wrong so we are going through Alicante Airport this time. We booked it in December last year and couldn’t have predicted what would come up. Yesterday we sailed through Macedonia Airport in a matter of minutes because Greece has suspended the new, biometric system on the grounds that it wasn’t working well enough.

At least we are not going for a weekend but for 4 weeks which gives us long enough to get over any frustrations. I’m currently exploring whether I can pay for VIP Fast Track Security Channel as we can do in Athens. The property we are renting is the one we booked last year for 2 weeks through Booking.com. It was absolutely delightful but this time we have booked directly through the letting agents to reduce the price.

Although there only two of us, to get the space and facilities we want, we have to rent a bigger property than we need. In this gated Development, there are a moderate number of individual properties that are three floors. Ours has 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, kitchen/diner/lounge, a Breakfast area immediately outside on the patio and then a huge sunroof with sunbeds, barbecue and dining tables under a covered pergola. The whole sunroof has expansive views over the gardens and two pools and out over the sea.
Feeling quite tired after a long, travelling day yesterday and I have a huge list of jobs stretching out in front of me today. I will almost certainly have to give my walking a miss for once.
Thursday, 11th June, 2026
Talk about coming home with a bump. The weather is emphasising that. This morning, it is cool and damp – light rain and just 15C/59F. Get me out of here!

We leave for a month in Spain on Monday and the weather looks good as far as one can see. I was shattered last night because my head was still in Greece which is two hours ahead of UK. At least the adjustment will be softened with just one hour difference in Spain.

This morning I’ve been contacting the management of our hotel in Thessaloniki to thank them for their service and for the presents they give us as we leave. The first time, it was a bottle of local olive oil which is long gone now. Then we were given an Electra Palace scented candle which my wife swears literally smells of the hotel. Next year it was a steel dove from the Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art. This year, we rather gulped as we were given a very heavy copy of a book of illustrations of the delights of Thessaloniki. We only had carry-on luggage and wondered how we would cope with the extra burden.

Well, we managed it and it will live on the bookshelves for the next few years. We may even take it out and look at it occasonally particularly when it is cold and wet like today.
Today is haircut day. Drives me mad sitting still that long but it has to be done. I sit in the kitchen on an inclement day like today so I can watch a political programmed or rolling news while my hair is being cut and the process is almost tolerable.
Friday, 12th June, 2026
It was 16C/61F over night but didn’t feel like it. The morning has opened grey and with a little damp in the air. With just 3 full days left at home, we are still ticking off the jobs needed to be completed before we fly. This morning, I have had to go down to the Surgery to book a PSA Test for when I come back from Spain. It has to be done a week before my bi-annual cancer review. It is always a little nervy.
I’ve got the street’s grass to mow and my Under Gardener will make sure the hedge is trimmed to last a month without attention. I’ve got two automatic watering systems to set up and get the timings right so need to put them through a dummy run. We are cutting lettuces but they have been slower to develop than I’d hoped. Keeping my fingers crossed that they survive 4 weeks without me. They are delicious fresh from the garden.

Something strange and delightful is happening. We moved in to this house 10 years ago and we set about furnishing it inside and out with a will. As well as beds, settees, tables, etc, we were planting the outside enthusiastically. In July 2016, we were planting up the sides of the drive and we put in a Phormium – a native of New Zealand. It was less than 2ft tall at the time. In the summer, it was supposed to throw up flowering spikes and it never has …. until now.

Now it is about 8ft tall and has suddenly, in the week we were away in Greece, thrown up the most amazingly tall and strong flower spikes. Literally, in a weeek these spikes have arrived. Unfortunately, we go away on Monday and will miss the full flowering. They look as if they are going to be a pale yellow. I have asked Jill, my neighbour, to photograph them for me and send them on to Spain. The contract is that I will send back sunshine.

One person who will miss all flowering for ever more is the artist, David Hockney. His death was announced today at the age of 88. A life long smoker, he looked and sounded older than his age. I am so glad I gave up 42 years ago. I have little in common with Hockney but I have loved his work for a long time, particularly his digitally generated art.

It is the work of an old man creating art for our new age. I would love to have these hanging on the walls of my house.
Saturday, 13th June, 2026
Warm and sunny day to mark our last two at home for a month. At least it’s not Friday. Most things are done and ready but the automatic watering system failed when I came to set it up yesterday. I have a programmable unit that screws on to the outside tap and has two outlets at the base for two, separate hoses. These will be connected to two, wide arc sprayers which allow me to cover the whole of the back garden.

Unfortunately, they don’t at the moment because the unit’s stopped working. Fortunately, Amazon do ‘free’ next day delivery. I’ve ordered a new one which really suits a gadget man because it is remote control. Can’t wait.

It means I can water each side of the garden independently, for different durations and at different times.I can have them watered on alternative days and have the watering programme delayed if it rains. What fun!

Going away really does me good. The challenge of travel and making arrangements lifts my spirits. We have been back just 4 days and have got through so many tasks in that time with renewed energy and determination. To give the month away a relaxing start, we are spending the night in the Sofitel Gatwick which is just a walk across from Departures at the Airport.

Once again, quite amazingly, it is no more expensive to take the car to the Long Stay Carpark for a month than to get a taxi for the hour long journey to the airport so that is what we will do. The service is incredibly slick and user-friendly for such a massive set of interlinked parking areas. The only thing I have to do is not rush to park but find a comfortable end of row position to leave the car for 4 weeks safely.