XpatAthens

XpatAthens

Monday, 23 November 2020 07:00

How To Print And Pay Your 2021 Road Tax

The road tax notices for 2021 have been uploaded at the TAXIS online platform and are due by the end of December. Car owners may access the document either through their tax number (AFM) or their licence plate number.
 
In order to help you navigate through the Greek online tax system, Insurance-Greece.com, an insurance advisor site, has uploaded instructions on how to print and pay your 2021 Road Tax.

This content was originally posted on Insurance-Greece.com


XpatAthens is grateful to Insurance-Greece for being a Silver Partner and supporting our efforts to connect and inform the international community in Greece.

Insurance-Greece is an online insurance advisory portal focused entirely on ex-pat insurance matters in Greece. They do not have call centers and never send automated email replies. An actual person deals with your insurance needs at all times. Whatever your insurance plan, an Insurance Advisor is there for personal advice! You will have an experienced insurance advisor assigned to you so you'll always have someone to talk to regarding your insurance needs.

Find out more here.

In the spring of 2018, the Yale psychology professor Laurie Santos unveiled a new course, Psychology and the Good Life. The subject was happiness.

The course was launched in the US at one of the nation's most elite universities. The reaction was unexpected as Psychology and the Good Life became the most popular class ever taught at Yale and garnered national and international media attention as nearly a quarter of all Yale undergraduates had enrolled in the class.

After waves of people asked to access the course, Santos designed an iteration for the online learning platform Coursera, called The Science of Well-Being, available for free to non-Yale students. There's an optional fee of $49 (about €45) to receive a certificate of completion.

The course is a combination of positive psychology and real-life applications of behavioral science. It debunks popular notions of what makes people happy and helps students understand the habits they should build to lead more fulfilling lives. It teaches practical advice such as how to choose a career that you'll love, as well as how to distinguish satisfying pursuits from hollow ones.

Now that most of us have to stay at home with plenty of free time in our hands, we have the opportunity to get creative. Taking this online course is an excellent way to promote our mental health and arm ourselves with courage and hope.

The course covers the following topics in weekly installments: 
  • Misconceptions about happiness
  • Why our expectations are so bad
  • How we can overcome our biases
  • Stuff that really makes us happy
  • Putting strategies into practice
The online course features lectures by Santos on things that bring lasting life satisfaction, optional readings, and "rewirement" activities to do each day to build happier habits. Research suggests that if you do these rewirements as prescribed, you should get a boost in your mood and overall well-being.

What To Expect From The Class 

To make the class warm and inviting, it's shot in Santos' own home, with Yale students in the audience so you can see how the material lands with other people. It feels intimate, and Santos' tone is friendly and conversational.

You will be thrilled to know that there's absolutely no required reading. All the information you need to know is summarized in the lecture. If you do want a deeper context, Santos provides links to complementary readings. Also, there's no grade penalty for a missed assignment deadline. 

However, just because it’s free it doesn’t mean it will be a piece of cake. While you can take the class at your own pace, you're encouraged to implement the rewiring techniques on a weekly schedule, since research has found that improving your well-being takes daily, intentional effort over long periods. Also, you will get 180 days from the time you sign up for the class to complete all of the work: quizzes, tests, and a peer-graded paper.

To join the Psychology and the Good Life course, please click HERE.
Article source: Business Insider





Saturday, 10 April 2021 14:20

Aphrodite & Loutraki's Landfill Dogs

Greece is a very well-known tourist destination, due to its natural beauty, archaeological sites and beautiful landscape. Every year, it attracts many tourists, both foreign and local. What many people do not know is that there is an estimated population of 3.5 million strays wandering in the streets throughout the country.

This is the story of the Loutraki's Landfill Dogs and how it all began. Afrodite, a Greek rescue volunteer, and her dogs have to face an enormous struggle every day. This kind and compassionate lady has captured, vaccinated, neutered, and treated as many dogs as could be moved to the small plot of land she rents. She has no more space for the dogs left at the rubbish dump/landfill site. Aphrodite moved near the huge Loutraki landfill in 2018. Passing by the rubbish dump/landfill was a life-changing experience for her, seeing the horrendous conditions the dogs and puppies were living in. She found packs of dogs and puppies in terrible conditions with broken bones, sores all over their bodies, starving, thirsty and, sadly, some dead.

This dump is huge, and inside live about 130 dogs, among tons of garbage in the most adverse conditions. Countless puppies in a miserable state are born and die helplessly in there without a chance to live a full life. This is tragic. An endless cemetery of animals. Dogs drink water from dirty and dangerous puddles, they scavenge in the trash. Her dream would be to take all the dogs out of the landfill and give them the life they deserve, with a loving family.  To make her dream come true she needs a larger plot of land with shelter, to give as many dogs as possible a chance of a happy and healthy life with treatment, love, and care – hopefully, a foster or adoption as well.

In 2018 Afrodith created her Facebook page, The Loutraki Landfill Dogs so that people could see her work trying to help alleviate the suffering of the poor dogs. The smallest donation will help.

Read the full article on dogstodaymagazine.co.uk
The Athens Urban Transport Organization (OASA) has announced that the frequency of bus, metro, trolleybus and tram services will return as of September 4 to pre-holiday conditions.

The bus and trolleybus network, in particular, is expected to be significantly strengthened this year due to the addition of new vehicles to the fleet.

Public transport will be further enhanced from 2022 onward, when the first electric buses will be integrated into Attica’s bus and trolleybus operator (OSY) network.

The announcement of the first phase of the tender for the supply of 600 buses (300 powered by electric, 300 gas and the rest hybrid) is scheduled for September.

Originally published on: ekathimerini.com
The beach of Chiliadou in Evia is in the running for the Best European Location Award 2022 by the European Network of Film Commissions (EUFCN), according to an announcement by the Hellenic Film Center and following a proposal by its Directorate for International Audiovisual Productions.
 
This is the second time a Greek location has reached the finals of the annual European Film Location Award. It should be noted that Corfu won the award in 2019 when it hosted the filming of the British series "The Durrels."
 
During the pandemic, Chiliadou was the location for the award-winning film "Triangle of Sadness,"  starring Charbli Dean, Harris Dickinson, and Woody Harrelson. The Greek production company Heretic was also involved. The natural landscape of Chiliadou became one of the film’s protagonists, playing a huge part in its atmosphere and aesthetic character. The film won a Golden Palm at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. 
 
Online Voting
 
From November 28, 2022, until January 30, 2023, the public can visit the EUFCN European platform and vote for their preferred location. You can vote for Chiliadou here. 
 
The winner of the EUFCN Location Award 2022 for Best European Filming Location of the year will be revealed at the European Film Market 2023 in Berlin.
 
The five nominated locations for the 2022 Award are: 
  • Brissago Islands for the film "Dawn Chorus" – Ticino Film Commission (Switzerland) 
  • Chiliadou Beach for the film "Triangle of Sadness" – Hellenic Film Commission (Greece) 
  • Portsoy for the series "Peaky Blinders (Season 6)" - Screen Scotland (Scotland)
  • Schlosshotel Kronberg for the film "Spencer" – Film Commission Hessen (Germany) 
  • Stari Grad district for the film "How I Learned To Fly" – (Croatia)
Originally published in Greek on: kathimerini.gr
Translated by: Codico Lab
Tuesday, 06 February 2018 08:00

Spring Is In The Air

With spring in the air, one’s thoughts turn to sea & sun. And when one’s friends decide to visit for a long weekend, one’s rental car tends to turn south… After a leisurely Sunday breakfast at my favourite Hip Café (yes they have pancakes!), we jumped in the car and headed south. The destination wasn’t clear, but we thought perhaps we’d make it to Sounio before deciding to turn back.

Sounio is one of those destinations that ‘some’ people love to hate. It’s quite a hike from Athens, and the reward is ‘just’ a 5th century BC Temple of Poseidon. There is no huge site, no museum, not much but the temple ruins. 

But the position on the edge of the cape, the spectacular drive en route, and the famous sunset make the trip a worthwhile one to have on ‘repeat’ whenever friends visit the city.

If you’re heading in that direction, Vouliagmeni is about half-way down the coast. There are numerous tavernas and cafes along the way, but one that I especially like is En Plo. It’s perched right on the seaside, with a great view of the coast, and lots of sporty activity in the water nearby.

The place itself is modern, ‘cool’, relaxed. There is a full menu – from the interesting to the every day (seared wasabi salmon or club sandwich?). Prices are reasonable, service is acceptable. And the whole experience – seaside, sunshine, coffee, snacks, music – is priceless.

For everything else there’s Mastercard, as the saying goes. And they do accept it.  Bring on the spring!

Hip Café
Mitropoleos 26
http://hipcafe.gr

En Plo
Poseidonos 4, Vouliagmeni
http://www.en-plo.gr


Until next week,

Jack

Thursday, 24 October 2019 07:00

What To Do In Athens With 5 Euro

Athens is a multi-faceted city which gives visitors, regardless of age, mindset, style or budget, the chance to enjoy a unique experience. Since the best things in life are free, let’s find out what someone can do in Athens with only 5 euros.

Visit The Acropolis Museum

One of the finest architectural diamonds and best museums worldwide. You will be impressed, no matter how many times you visit. Over and over again, the feeling one gets is overwhelming – admiration and awe take over. With the exhibition area occupying 14,000 m2 and the exhibits numbering 4,000, it is understandable that one visit cannot cover all this beauty. There are always details waiting to be discovered. The light coming through the glass engages in a playful motion with the surfaces and the night casts a magical veil on the past and the dynamics of the space. You can only be taken aback by its everlasting splendor. Visit the museum during the winter months when the ticket price is just 5 euros.

Ride Along The Athenian Riviera

Athens Riviera: Faliro, Glyfada, Voula, Vouliagmeni, it doesn’t matter where to – just climb on the tram or the bus line that takes you there and rush to the calling of the sea. Leave the madness of the city behind and relax by viewing the amazing Saronic Gulf. If the weather is appropriate, take a swim and lay on the beach with company, or with the company of a book. If the water is not yet warm enough, get lost in the endless horizon listening to your favorite music. Whatever the case, the ideal time to begin your ride is just before sunset.

Eat ‘Vromiko’ Downtown

As the daylight evaporates, the canteens start getting their fast food ingredients ready. The smell of grilled meat takes over the surrounding streets and neighborhoods, capturing the people that move among them. The sandwich is called ‘vromiko’, which in Greek means ‘dirty’, because it is generously stuffed with full-fat ingredients that create delightful bites. The canteens are scattered in various downtown spots, but the most popular is in Mavili Square, where, after all-night partying, the night walkers gather to claim a tasteful epilogue to their fun.

Visit A Book Bazaar

A journey to the parallel world of books, not only for those capable of reading between the lines! From time to time, the area of Zappeio, Klafthmonos square, Dionisiou Areopagitou Street, host the most famous utdoor book bazaars where you can lose yourself in the pages. With free entrance and special low prices you can buy a rare edition and a book you wouldn’t want your library to miss. These bazaars are not permanent, so you’d better watch out for their opening dates.

Article source: VisitGreece.com 

Thursday, 19 February 2015 12:31

Greece Ranked 8th In World For Food Quality

Greece is ranked 13th in the world as a place to eat, according to an Oxfam survey which ranks countries according to their diet, food quality, prices and disease levels. That put it in the same group as Spain, Germany, the UK, Norway, Finland and Cyprus. The report put Greece 8th for food quality and found it was also within the top 10 for food affordability.

But while it has no issue with undernourishment, it was found to have a small problem with underweight children.

The country's performance was middling when it came to obesity (ranked 27th) and diabetes (30th) levels. It also scored well behind many other western European countries when it came to nutritional diversity.

When food prices were compared to those for other goods and services it was ranked 16th.

Oxfam used data from the World Health Organisation and other international agencies to rank 125 countries on a range of food related measures.

The Netherlands came out top for having a decent diet at affordable prices. Chad was ranked as having the worst diet.

enetenglish.gr

Friday, 27 February 2015 15:48

Athens' First Cemetery

“In the midst of life we are in death”. How strongly that line rings true as you leave the noise and bustle of the city and step through the gates of Athens First Cemetery. Although physically so much a part of central Athens, the cemetery seems cut off and remote; a calming oasis or distant, peaceful island.

I think of it as Athens ‘secret garden’, its shady pathways green and full of surprising beauty.

First opened in 1837, the cemetery has many of the country’s major historical figures buried in its extensive grounds. Heroes of the Greek Revolution, politicians, poets, artists, intellectuals and shipping magnates all have tombs and memorials here. Melina Mercouri, Andreas Papandreou, Aliki Vouyouklaki, Odysseas Elytis, George Seferis and Sofia Bellou are just some of the well-known twentieth century names that are interred within its boundaries. Many foreigners are buried here, too, and it’s possible to find some illustrious names from the nineteenth century such as Heinrich Schliemann, Ernst Ziller and Sir Richard Church. (British General fought with the Greek army during the Greek Revolution and was later elected to Greek parliament)

Take a few hours to wander round the well-tended walkways and you’ll find a collection of some of the most eclectic funerary sculpture anywhere. Touchingly, many of the tombstones are very personal. A scout hat marks the grave of the founder of the boy scouts movement in Greece, Masonic symbols, ships, books, animals, even an airplane…each portraying the aesthetic and interests of the departed.

Some of the finest examples of nineteenth and twentieth century Greek sculpture are on display and one of the most famous monuments is the Sleeping Maiden.  This touching and beautiful work by sculptor Yiannoulis Halepas was created for the tomb of Sofia Afentaki and, to me, seems to encapsulate the faraway, otherworldly feel of the cemetery through a figure that represents death as an eternal dreamless sleep.

A walk through Athens First Cemetery would probably not be top on anybody’s “must see” list but take my advice and visit as it is a fascinating and emotional experience that can offer a deeper understanding of this city and it’s inhabitants.

www.athensliving.net

Crowds surge through the pedestrian shopping zone of Athens’s Ermou Street, past designer boutiques and a tiny Byzantine church that stands at a kink in the road like an island of sanctity. Kapnikarea church is at least 1,000 years old, though its domed roof rests on four ancient columns from Roman times, each of them stripped from a different ruin.

Those mismatched columns, so pragmatically reused, offer an object lesson about the problems and promise of Athens today. Six years of economic crisis, and several decades of thoughtless urban development, have focused many minds here on the task of building a better future from the usable past.

Apart from its classical monuments, Athens is not a picture-postcard capital. It is gritty, restless and spontaneous, as you can see from rampant graffiti that sometimes blows up into epic street art.

But the city seems to be rebounding from the depths of the crisis, which many say were touched three years ago. More and more Athenians are involved in a kind of civic infill activity, reimagining the town, improvising social services and engaging in what Greek photographer Eirini Vourloumis calls “a forced renegotiation of Greek identity.”

Athens is still living the hangover from the boom years of the 1960s, when Athenians were proud of the city they thought they were creating, but also strangely oblivious to the consequences of that process. Unco-ordinated development, fuelled by aid from the U.S. government, erased much of the city’s neoclassical heritage, and damaged the city’s ecology and infrastructure.

Now, ambitious plans are afoot to remodel the downtown in more sustainable ways, and to add cultural capital to civic life. Innovative restorations, led by artists and arts organizations, are reclaiming rundown industrial districts. There is a feeling here that creativity is the last and best resource when other resources fail.

Nikos Vatopoulos, cultural editor of the Athens daily paper Kathimerini, says that Greece “has entered its Weimar period” – a reference both to its political fragility and its creative dynamism.

Rethink Athens, a project led by the Onassis Foundation, will insert a “green spine” between two central plazas, starting later this year. The six lanes of Panepistimiou Street will be pedestrianized and planted with 800 trees, to become a grand promenade – with bike lanes and a tram line – between the neoclassical environs of Syntagma Square and the slowly reviving area around Omonia Square. Near the centre of that promenade, the Greek National Theatre is completely restoring the Rex Theatre, an art-deco building designed in 1935 that will become a three-stage theatre hub. Dozens of empty buildings along Panepistimiou will reawaken as cultural spaces through a citywide project called theatre of 1,000 rooms.

The Greek National Opera, which has expanded all over town with unstaged “suitcase operas” and pop-up performances, will have a new theatre as of next year, designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation’s new complex in the city’s southwest. The National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST) has already taken up quarters in part of a restored brewery building originally designed by Takis Zenetos, a leading Greek proponent of modern architecture’s International Style.


 
To read the complete article please visit: TheGlobeAndMail
By: Robert Everett-Green
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