About Kalymnos
Kalymnos is the commercial capital of the Dodecanese, and its second city after Rhodes. Sponge fishing, boat building, fishing, fish-farming, agriculture and maintaining the local ferry network sustain its economy as much as tourism which includes a well established rock climbing tradition. Kalymnos is frequented by Greek holiday makers as much as by expatriots and an all-year round population of almost 17,000 sustains itself and smaller neighbouring islands, Telendos, Pserimos and Farmakonisi. There's more groundwater than on other Dodecanese, with a number of running springs, one particularly fertile farmed valley and a number of juniper woods. It's about 20 by 15 Km, 110 Km2 in area
Kalymnos has
- plenty of wild hillsides and coastline, well established paved walkers paths and waymarked climbers' access paths
- exposed cliffs and crags in a gnarled and fissured state and impressive rock scenery
- a wealth of antiquities; Neolithic, Minoan, Classical, Roman/early Christian, Crusader, Byzantine, Ottoman and Venetian remains all over the island
- two fine cliff top castles, numerous smaller forts and look-outs
- chapels with frescoes, mosaics and carvings, Byzantine churches, functioning monasteries and modern shrines
- a wide range of wild flowers and notable fauna including nesting sites of Eleanora's Falcon
Getting to Kalymnos
Kalymnos is well served by ferries and is in effect a main shipping hub for the eastern Aegean, and its nearest international airports are Kos and Rhodes. There are always several boats a day from Kos. Fast overnight ferries (Blue Star) connect with Piraeus, via Astipalaia (3 hours) and the Cyclades at least twice a week, taking 10 hours or so. The Cretan LANE line also connects with Chios, Limnos, Thessaloniki or Alexandropoli (8 hours) and south to Halki, Karpathos and Crete after an overnight halt at Rhodes. GA Ferries call on the Rhodes-Piraeus route too. Catamarans and hydrofoils connect frequently with Leros, Lipsi, Patmos, Fourni, Samos, Ikaria, Astipalaia, Kos, Symi and Rhodes (3-5 hours). The local ANE line based in Kalymnos operates a one-boat service up and down the chain, including the smaller islands Agathonisi, Fourni, Arki and Lipsi on its route between Samos and Astipalaia. The other local ANEM line provides several daily connections to Mastichari on Kos, 1 hour, providing the shortest international connection via Kos airport, and to Pserimos.
The hilltop airport at Argos hosts just one or two flights a day, to Athens, occasionally to Rhodes and Crete: http://www.olympicair.com/549-en-gb.cmt
Web links for Dodecanese ferries include:
www.gtpnet.com, www.hellenicseaways, www.diavlos.gr, www.greekislandhopping.com, www.bluestarferries.com