People often ask, ‘How do I get to the museum?’ To which, I reply, ‘Sir, you have to be of interest and very old,’ because I’m like that.
No, of course I don’t. Well, I might, but… Not long ago, when the bother-in-law was visiting with a friend, that friend met up with us in the evening, and we asked what he had done that day, and he told me he had been to the museum in the village, and what a delight it was. I don’t know why I should have been surprised, but I was, and then I wondered why, and I think it was because I’ve often heard people bemoaning the lack of signposts (there are several), the number of steps to get to it (ditto), and the fact that there are few signs directing foot traffic up to the village from the harbour, and no tourist information kiosk or office down there, where one might be of use to day- and longer-stay visitors alike. Those obstacles are clearly easy to overcome, because no-one had given this chap directions, and he had found it on his own.
I’ll tell you how to get there, but, sadly, thanks to my PC eating my file of photos, I don’t have any appropriate images of the place to hand, so you will have to imagine the scenery.

The first stage is to reach the village: Bus on the hour from Yialos, get off at Kampos, the village bus stop by the kiosk, you can’t miss it, and, if unsure, ask the driver to tell you when you’re there. From there, you follow the signs, or, if you don’t see them, walk up the slope by Scena to Taverna Zoi, and turn left.
Or, if walking all the way, it’s a case of up the Kali Strata to the village square (Taverna George & Maria, two bars, orange and green chairs). Keep going, and look for the blue signs or the metal ones on stands. If you can’t see them, and they are not a permanent trail, just keep on through the village as if you are carrying on up the Kali Strata (stopping for refreshments on the way, perhaps). Pass Tavera Zoi and the supermarket next door, and keep going on the same path until you can’t go any further and must turn left or right.
Turn right and up under the arch, and then left.
Again, keep going until you can go no further and must go left or right. Turn right, up the slope (there are definitely signs on the next corner), and, at that corner, turn left again. Then, it’s straight on, around an S bend, avoiding the badly parked mopeds that can get in the way, up the steps, keeping an eye to the left to look for an anomaly, a property with the name plate ‘15b’ (I think it’s 15, I can’t remember, but it’s at the end of a short alley that you don’t take), keep straight on up the steps there, and you’re actually beside the museum buildings now, and at the top of a short but serious set of steps, you come to a small ‘square’ with a large dark red building to the right, and the museum entrance to your left. Double metal gates, a sign on the wall, and sometimes a paper sign stating a phone number in case the place is closed. If it is closed, you can phone that number, and someone will pop up like the shopkeeper in ‘Mr Ben.’

It’ll cost you €5.00 to enter, and for that, as witnessed by the friend of the in-law, you get a fantastically restored and fascinating set of buildings, which are themselves museum pieces. The buildings are 18th-century, there are two large houses, one once a sponge-boat captain’s mansion with a pebble courtyard included, and there’s also a small servants’ house in the grounds. The last time I was there, the museum was being renovated and wasn’t quite open, but we were still invited in for a look around, and it was, indeed, a spectacular improvement on what had been before. This was several years ago, and now, everything is fully restored and open. However, I believe it is still closed on a Monday, and usually open from eight to two on all other days. If that’s changed, someone might let me know, and I’ll update this or post an addendum.
There is one other rule of thumb to bear in mind when you’re on the trek: if in doubt, ask someone. Local residents will be only too happy to tell you where to go (in a charming way), and it would be a shame to miss the museum, because, as far as I know, we only have the one. The nautical museum has gone to or back to the Church, and the private museum by the Yialos basketball court… Well, I have been, but I am not sure if it is still operating. Again, someone else might know.

So, there you are – and, as I have used the title in this post, and as some lovely folks yesterday told me they were reading it, you might be interested to take a gander at ‘Carry on Up the Kali Strata’, a collection of bits and pieces about Symi that I wrote for the Symi Visitor years back. Here’s the link to Amazon .com, but it’s there on other Amazon sites too:
Ps: There are other ways to walk there, but too many to mention. The easiest is to start at the village square heading towards the mountain and, from Taverna Zo, go straight on until you can’t, then turn right, 1st left, last right, first left, up and bingo! (Write it down now before you forget.)









