Make it a Double
As I looked out my cabin window at the feisty steel-gray
seas of the Aegean, I knew the day was going to be challenging. Our ship had anchored
in the caldera harbor of Santorini, Greece, consistently voted one of the world’s
most beautiful islands by travel magazines. Oh so beautiful, they gush. Those
white-washed blue domed churches are a must see, they urge. But travel
magazines don’t have a category for world’s most inaccessible islands for those
with multiple sclerosis. I know, right? A little warning would have been
appreciated.
The very definition of not-glassy-seas. |
The first sign of trouble appeared before I even
left the ship. Santorini is a tender port for cruise ships, meaning you have to
board smaller boats to get ashore. While cruise ship tenders tend to sync
decently with their own ships, Greece requires ships to use their tenders,
which sync not at all. This fact is
compounded when the seas are not glassy flat.
As I stood waiting to board the tender, watching
it bob up and down like a whack-a-mole game run amok, I naïvely thought “totally
doable.” And then I tried to get on, putting my forearm crutches on the lip of
the vessel, which promptly dropped several feet. Forearm crutches, it turns
out, offer little support when they are both in midair. To avoid becoming fish
food, this was going to require perfect timing, luck, and Scotch. Lots of
Scotch.
The zig-zag climb up to Fira. |
After what felt like a minute of false starts
listening to instructions from the crew—“go now, wait don’t go, okay now, nope hold
on, NOW NOW”—four large men helped me clamor down into the tender as fellow
passengers watched on. I’ve never seen eyes so large in my life. I broke the
tension the only way I knew how.
“Well, I guess we’re moving to Santorini, because
I’m never getting out of this thing.” I was only half joking. Maybe a quarter
joking. Fortunately, large and muscled Greek longshoremen were waiting at the
dock to lift me out whether or not I wanted to permanently reside on the
tender. Probably a good thing in the long run as it lacked restroom facilities
and Laura wasn’t thrilled with the décor made up primarily of uncomfortable seats
(my wife is so nit-picky). Little did I know the fun was just beginning.
To get to any of the towns in Santorini, which are
all perched on the cliffs 800 meters above the bay, you have to go up the side
of said 800-meter cliff. There are three ways to do this: take a donkey up 600+
steep and slippery steps holding on for dear life, climb the 600+ steep and
slippery steps while avoiding donkeys and donkey poo, or take the cable car. Option
C seemed most practical.
This is steeper than it looks. |
After taking an elevator (reserved for the
disabled), then a wheelchair lift (restricted to wheelchair users), I arrived
at a cable car that was not wheelchair accessible. Really. To get on, you had
to fold your wheelchair, duck down, and slink inside. Finally, after nearly an
hour—tender, elevator, lift, cable car—we arrived in Fira, pronounced
(appropriately) FEAR-ah. Why appropriately? See, the narrow, cobblestoned
streets in Fira primarily go in two directions: straight up and straight down. This
is a challenge for many tourists (I overheard one say he was going to die, and
I believed him), but it is especially challenging in a wheelchair. At least
there were no steps. But there were also no blue-domed churches, either. Those
were in the town of Oia, known as the “eagle’s nest” or as, loosely translated
by me, “town of many friggin steps.”
Oh crud. Fortunately our guide assured us the
main, albeit narrow, marble pedestrian thoroughfare through town was flat with
no steps. Brilliant! Except for the minor complication that it was neither flat
nor step free. Ah, details, details. I was going to see those damn blue-dome
churches one way or another after this escapade.
Busted? Really? |
After playing tourist dodgeball, walking a bit and
rolling a bit, there they were. Blue. Domed. Churches. Now, I could say that
the trials and tribulations of getting to this perch were not worth the effort,
but as the morning cloud cover had burned off and the skies turned an aching
blue, the sight was every bit as pretty as advertised. This was worth it and I
had the photos to prove it. Then reality sunk in. I still had to make it back
to the ship in one piece. Santorini, that little devil, wasn’t done messing
with me.
Naturally, almost predictably, in the few hours between
our morning ascension, the wheelchair lift at the cable car had broken down. Could
I do steps? the attendant asked. Oh yeah, I said (pronounced conveniently like
Oia). Finally, epically, all that was left was the tender ride. After “boarding”
the small boat as safely as one could with balance and wonky legs, knuckles
began to whiten, faces began to ashen. All of my fellow passengers were
genuinely concerned for my safety. Me? I was just calmly freaking out.
A small step for a man, a giant leap for an MSer. |
As the tender lined up with our ship, my shoulder
felt many comforting pats as mumbles of Good luck and Godspeed rippled through
the cabin. I am not joking. Finally it was just me and Laura on the tender as
it bobbed fitfully. I climbed up the stairs and went for it. Nope. Then went
for it again. Nope. The step was nearly three feet—we had to time my exit with
the bob. Finally, and with a huge heave from the crew, I made it to the ship’s
platform. Almost. My right foot, the weak and stubborn one, was stuck on the
lip of the ship as the bobbing tender threatened to crush it against the side
of the ship. I knew it was getting serious when the crew’s eyes began to widen,
apparently the theme for the day. Their shouting also gave away their concern. And
then… Laura reached up and popped my foot loose. I made it back aboard.
I saw my blue domes. Hot diggity! |
Every adventure one takes with MS is going to deliver
challenges, that’s a given. And some will be bigger than others. When that
happens—when that challenge looks more like a mountain than a molehill—you are
left with only question: how does one rise to meet such a challenge? For me,
rising to such an occasion in Santorini was a bit more literal and included a fortuitous
bob and four big dudes, but whatever. I survived to enjoy another day, and another
day when I could enjoy my beloved beer and Cheetos. But today, this day, I was
going to have a Scotch. Make that a double.
Comments
We made plans to travel to Africa in August to visit a relative in Angola. However, we are required to obtain yellow fever shots as a visa requirement. This vaccination contains a live virus that the MS Society recommends we avoid, as there is a high risk of an severe relapse within 6 weeks of inoculation. I've already experienced a horrible relapse after the Shingles vaccine last year.
Have you taken the yellow fever vaccine in your travels? Do you have any experience with this?
Thanks for any feedback you can offer.
After a delay because of heavy seas, I perched with my walker on the ship next to the pitching launch and said to my family, "I don't think I can do this." One of my sons in law said, "Oh yes we can!" Walker, scooter, Aaron and ten other family members visited Santorini. Wonderful trip, but none of the Greek Islands had any toilet seats.
Aaron Cohen
www.gimpytraveller.com
Love your blog, BRIAN