Celebrating Christmas in Kalamata, Greece
Festive lights bedeck a square busy with people celebrating the season in Kalamata, Greece | All photos: Mic Fleming

Celebrating Christmas in Kalamata, Greece

December 6 – Saint Nicholas Day. As I stood in front of the Christmas tree at the entrance to Kalamata’s Central Farmer’s Market, I immediately understood the meaning of Christmas in Kalamata, Greece.

Two families approached. As he led his children up to me, one father pointed to my white beard: “Santa Claus!” Looking a little sceptical, but their eyes still sparkling, four little kids peered up at me. I reached down to the nearest one and pulled a 50-cent coin out of his ear. Smiling, he showed it to his father, who nodded approvingly as the child happily clutched it tightly while they walked off. 

The holiday spirit of Kalamata is a time of intense family outings and celebrations. I asked friends Elena and Stavroula what young people do for Christmas. “Do you go to parties and clubs?” They look confused. “We all go to our parents’ homes.” Sokratis, my go-to sage, confirmed. “For us, Christmas is a time for families and eating.” He paused and smiled. “Especially for eating.”

My wife and I followed the crowds into the market to gather food for their tables, special treats and daily cooking. No roving elves, no red reindeer sweaters, just shoppers looking for the best of the abundance of the local farms and fisheries. Ordinary people in a purposeful, festive mood.

Heading into the market, where we found people in a festive mood, seeking the best local produce

Kalamata is the capital of the Messenia region in the southern Peloponnese. Pressed up against the blue Mediterranean by the Taygetos mountain range, it is surrounded by olive orchards and orange groves, which for three millennia have been part of the settlement and city.

My shopping list included walnuts, oranges and honey to make the Christmas cookies called melomakarona. Meli in Greek means honey, and especially in the mountains, one sees beehives everywhere. Everyone agrees melomakarona are THE Christmas cookies. Every café and coffee shop feature them in front-row display cases.

I also bought bright orange persimmons for a holiday bread and some pale-yellow quince for marmalade. They are just coming into season. 

My shopping list included walnuts, oranges and honey to make Christmas cookies

And of course, we tasted olive oil. Kalamata gives its name to the famous olives and renowned olive oil exported and enjoyed around the world. 

“The 2025 season has been mixed,” my friend Nico – who owns 3,000 trees – told me. “The crop quantity has been disappointing, but the quality results have been extraordinary. The bouquet, light colour and taste are exceptional.”

We are the only ones we know here in Greece who don’t own at least one olive tree. Late fall and early winter are harvest time for the trees. Country roads are lined with battered pick-up trucks carrying rakes, green nets and brown burlap bags full of the fruit.

There are community presses everywhere running late into the night to produce the precious oil. Neighbours give us five-litre cans as presents. 

A carpet of bright crimson poinsettia at the market, ready to decorate local homes

What about other presents? Sokratis told me that New Year’s Day is the traditional time of gift-giving. But when we visited Spinos, our favourite coffee grinder, Daphne, the assistant manager, told us her daughter wakes her up early every morning to announce how many days are left until Christmas. Traditions change by family. Afroditi, the Spinos owner, confessed her favourite cookies are gingerbread men. 

Leaving the market, we strolled Aristomenes Street, the wide pedestrian way named for the half-mythological Messinian warrior who held off a Spartan siege in a mountain redoubt for eleven years, longer than the Trojan War. 

Lining the way were little bright-coloured booths for costume jewellers and in the middle a carousel, the only ride in the city. Families were lined up, 50 strong, to get tickets. Oddly, the stores sported few decorations, a red bow here or a dark green garland there over the doors. A solitary busker, and no food carts anywhere.

Lining the way were little bright-coloured booths, and a mural of Maria Callas watched over the scene

No stalls of roasting chestnuts or hot mulled red wine. Nothing like the teeming acres of the Christmas markets of large northern cities like Vienna, Nuremberg or even Athens. Here, a large mural of Maria Callas overlooks the scene.

Farther on was the pride of the city, a giant evergreen. “Kalamata has the most beautiful tree,” Amanda told us at Leonardo’s, our favourite gelato place on the entire coastline. “They got it from the Taygetos mountains on the back road to Sparta. The government marks the ones available for cutting.” 

We saw only one tree, other than the giant in the main square and the one at the market. The other was in Freedom Square, dedicated to the leaders of the Greek Revolution of 1821, who, after 400 years of subjugation, finally pushed the Ottomans out of Greece. Kalamata was the first city liberated.

Christmas
Reflecting a seafaring nature, the true Christmas symbol, a ship covered in lights, is in the harbour

“We Greeks are seafaring people,” Amanda continued. “Every village on the coast has a light ship in their harbours. That’s our real Christmas symbol. Have you seen the one in Kardamyli? All wires and light strings. No boat. It’s a disgrace.”

And sure enough, in the Kalamata harbour, there was a ship covered in lights. The Mayor of Kalamata leads the lighting of the boat and the tree, accompanied by local orchestral groups and attended by hundreds of families. 

We finished the morning at Ari’s for souvlaki, hands down the best in Kalamata. Cubes of meat, usually pork, on skewers grilled over charcoal fires, souvlaki is the most popular dish in Greece. We favour ours wrapped in pita bread with French fries, tomato and tzatziki, the cucumber/yoghurt dip. A tasty way to finish our market day. 

From Kalamata, Kalá Christoúgenna!

Mic Fleming

Storyteller

Mic Fleming is an American expat living in Agios Nikolaos (Saint Nicholas), a small fishing village in the rugged Mani of Greece, east of Kalamata. A university-trained art historian, he enjoys guiding friends and visitors to the medieval Byzantine chapels in the surrounding Taygetos mountains. When he’s not exploring the area, you’ll find him cooking classic French dishes (cassoulet is his favourite winter dish) or reading his way through Virginia Woolf’s works. As a contributing writer to Stars and Stripes Europe he has published articles on history, culture, travel and cooking.

    Time to Read:  4 Minutes
    Storyteller: Mic Fleming
    24 December 2025
    Category:
    Local Stories - Customs and Traditions

    Let Resonate Transport You!

    Travel the world with the Resonate newsletter.

    Highlights include:

    • Interesting stories from people in all corners of the globe
    • Vibrant photos sure to spark wanderlust
    • Ideas on where to go now — and how to do it responsibly
    My Very First Trek in Torres del Paine: Exploring the Less Famous Trails
    Lago Sarmiento in Torres del Paine National Park, Patagonia, Chile | All photos: Marcela Torres

    My Very First Trek in Torres del Paine: Exploring the Less Famous Trails

    It was 6.30 am, and we were lying flat on the ground, hiding among the Patagonian steppe that surrounds the lakeshore. We were waiting for the sun to rise and the birds to arrive for their morning feed at Lago Sarmiento in Torres del Paine National Park, one of the main nature tourism destinations in Chile.

    My dad and I were there updating information for the Guide to Chile’s National Parks that we co-authored (1999 and 2004, in Spanish). He’d been there several times before, but this was my first visit. And I was excited!

    Although the national park is famous for its ‘W’ and ‘O’ multi-day circuits on its northern half, not everybody can afford to spend so many days there (and sadly, as recent tragedy has shown on the latter, they can have their challenges and the perils that go with them). 

    So, we set out to explore several shorter and easier trails in the southern half of Torres del Paine that will also take you to beautiful places. Some of them are included in the traditional full-day excursion to this national park, while others are off the beaten path.

    Most people enter Torres del Paine through Laguna Amarga or Lago Sarmiento, on its eastern side. Hence, we began by exploring Lago Sarmiento. 

    Torres del Paine
    Our birdwatching patience is rewarded with many species, including the Buff-necked ibis

    I was holding on to a flask full of coffee to stay awake. It was hard, though, because the Magellan Region, where the park is located, is the only one in Chile that does not apply daylight saving time. So, the nights only last about seven hours. 

    This means that we still had some daylight by midnight. If you add to that the rounds of mate – a typical energising Patagonian herbal tea – that we drank with the park rangers earlier, I barely shut my eyes for a few hours. Still, I regretted nothing. So, I quietly sipped some coffee and waited. 

    Our patience is soon rewarded. All at once, we saw dozens of birds fly into the lake! They included species like the Black-necked Swan, Magellan Goose, Buff-necked Ibis, Imperial Cormorant, Cocoi Heron, Coscoroba Swan, Upland Goose, and Spectacled Duck. 

    Satisfied with our birdlife photos, we trekked along the shore on our way to a lookout by the lake that provides amazing views of the Paine mountain range. Lago Sarmiento is the only lake in the park that originates from the rain instead of a glacier. It covers an area of approximately 90 sq km (34 sq mi) and its average depth is 315 m (1,033 ft). 

    Torres del Paine
    A close-up view of the impressive Salto Grande waterfall from the lookout

    The shores are dotted by a characteristic white line that’s made from thrombolites, living calcium carbonate fossils that started forming with the last ice age and grow one millimetre per year. 

    After a while, we got in the car and continued southeast towards the Salto Grande, a 213-foot-high waterfall that connects lakes Nordenskjöld and Pehoé

    This place is a tourism hub because it houses one of the few cafés in the area and is next to one of Torres del Paine’s main attractions. The Salto Grande lookout is a great place to see this impressive waterfall up close. It’s also next to the Pudeto pier, where you can board the ferry to cross Lago Pehoé towards the Paine Grande sector.

    We continued exploring by driving along the eastern shore of Lago Pehoé, which sometimes reflects the Cuernos del Paine mountains. We also saw a herd of Guanacos running around the grasslands known as pampas. These are one of the most iconic species in the park and quite easy to spot.

    The distinctive Guanaco in its habitat against a dramatic mountain backdrop

    After crossing Puente Weber, we headed northwest towards Hotel Lago Grey to enjoy a hot lunch and steel ourselves for the final leg of the day’s journey. Measuring 6 km (4 mi) wide, 19 km (12 mi) long, and over 30 m (100 ft) high, Glaciar Grey stems from the Southern Ice Field and is the largest glacier within Torres del Paine. 

    Our goal was to reach the Playa Glaciar Grey lookout on foot and get up-close views of the floating icebergs breaking down. This is also where people gather to board Hotel Lago Grey’s catamarans to sail on the lake and approach the glacier wall.

    You can also get there on a kayak, but – as the park’s official brochure explains – this is only allowed if you hire excursions with authorised tour operators, so you can’t just go on your own.

    Anyway, we resumed our journey, which was supposed to be a low-difficulty trail that takes close to one hour to complete one way. Starting at the Pingo Ranger Station, it takes you through lush lenga forests, a hanging bridge over the Pingo River, and the southern shore of Lago Grey. Easy, peasy! Or maybe not?

    Upon reaching Lago Grey and the Playa Glaciar Grey lookout, we could at last sit to admire the view

    I swear that more than 30 minutes had passed. My dad and I had made it to the shore of Lago Grey, but were seriously struggling against the strong, cold Patagonian winds that prevented our progress. Two steps forward, three steps back. I was hugging my parka and my camera. We needed to make it… just a little bit more… until we finally reached our destination: Playa Glaciar Grey lookout and boarding area. 

    We could at last sit down and admire the stunning blue walls of Grey Glacier. The view was mesmerising! The effort was totally worth it! I just sat on top of a block of ice in silence and enjoyed the quiet solitude of this magnificent landscape.

    The entire adventure was breathtaking, the connection with nature and realising that it has the power to make or break even the toughest of stones and ice is humbling. This is one of the best memories I have from my travels.

    Not only did we get to make a dream come true with my father, but it also gave me a new perspective on this environmental gem. I hope to contribute to preserving the majestic beauty of Torres del Paine for generations to come.

    MARCELA TORRES

    Storyteller

    Marcela is a passionate writer with a background in journalism and tourism. She likes to share her enthusiasm for food and sustainable travel, incorporating global and local traditions that bring people closer together. Born in Chile, her career has taken her all over South America, while she has also lived in Australia, Costa Rica, and the United States. She believes that the best way to get to know a city is by visiting the local markets and grocery stores, since total immersion always provides new insights to showcase how the different cultures and communities thrive. Check out her website.

      Time to Read:  5 Minutes
      Storyteller: MARCELA TORRES
      5 December 2025
      Category:
      Local Stories - Nature

      Let Resonate Transport You!

      Travel the world with the Resonate newsletter.

      Highlights include:

      • Interesting stories from people in all corners of the globe
      • Vibrant photos sure to spark wanderlust
      • Ideas on where to go now — and how to do it responsibly