Harry's Greece Travel Guide--go to home page Greece Travel

Eco-travel the Greek Coastline

Mykonos Hotels

Vetted for quality, location, price. Hotels for every budget!
Lux to Economy !

hotels in the greek islands

Santorini Hotels

Vetted for quality, location, price. Hotels for every budget!
Lux to Economy !

santorini greece

Greek Island Cruises

cruises in the greek islands

On Cruise Ships
Large & Small

Mainland Greece Tours

greece tours

The Major Classical Sights
Olympia, Delphi, Mycenea and many More - Guided Luxury A/C'd coach tours
Free hotel pickup.
Half day to 7 - 11 day tours

Our Feedback . . .

We are home from Greece and would like to thank you for your assistance with our travel arrangements there.

Everything went smoothly and we LOVE your country.


Thanks for your suggestions and help making our vacation truly memorable.

I will definitely recommend you to my friends here in the US.

–Liz Barnes

Our Feedback . . .

Dear All: You did a great job of selecting hotels and making our arrangements for this trip.

The hotels were all in great locations.

Overall we had a wonderful vacation in Greece – Lloyd & Bobbie Ferguson USA

Dear Harry: I find your Greek web site amazing! I like getting hints from local people, these are more helpful than travel guides – Ilona Mersdorf DE

People Are Saying . . .

Harry: your site rocks! Its commercial but you can tell its not just about the money! thank you! – Gerry Lagos USA

Finally, when we already thought this was a supremely memorable vacation, we ended up in Santorini, which Anthony had booked for us, in one of the most fabulous vacation spots we have ever been in.

Thanks so much to Harry's Greece Travel Guide for helping to make this such a great trip! - Bob and Deb Simeone USA

The Coastline in Greece

Greece has over 15,000 km (9,300 miles) of coastline, which includes many kinds of habitats. Many of these have been heavily impacted human activities including industry, construction of houses, tourism, agriculture, hunting and fishing, boating, and air strips, to name a few (!).

loggerhead turtleThe decimation of the loggerhead turtle population (as well as the monk seals) has gotten perhaps the most attention in regard to tourist-related development that threatens wildlife in Greece, the sandy beaches where these ancient sea creatures lay their eggs flooded with lights and loud amplified music from hotels, driven on, punctured with beach umbrellas that destroy nests, etc.

These beaches are, however, also habitat for other creatures, including birds and flowering plants, and sand dunes as well, which have also been heavily affected by tourism. Other coastal habitats include marshes, brackish lagoons, rocky areas, and sea cliffs. In recent years there has been a trend towards more protection of some coastal habitats in monk sealGreece, in part through funding and encouragement from the European Union.

Another kind of habitat in Greece is the gorge, of which there are many in Greece. Though they are all different, depending on the local topography and region, they all have the advantage of being land mostly off bounds to building and grazing activity. In many of them specially adapted flowers and shrubs grow, as well as trees on places where the slopes are not precipitous. Mixed forests often develop in gorges that do not develop where animals graze upon the most edible plants, hence eliminating them. A good example of this is the Vikos gorge in Ipiros (Epiros) in the Pindos mountains. Many birds also breed in gorges, such as eagle owlchoughs, crag martins, eagles and eagle owls, griffon and Egyptians vultures, and others. Mammals also find protection in large, wooded gorges.

Olive groves of the older type, with old gnarled trees with many holes in them, and which still exist in Greece here and there, also provide habitat for nesting birds, and the ground below the trees with many flowers, including orchids.

Such ancient orchards can be found on the island of Lesvos/Mytilini, (which claims to have 11 million olive trees), on the large island of Evia, and in the Mani region of the Peloponisos (Peloponnese).

oxalis are invasiveOld stone walls in olive orchards also provide habitat for birds, lizards, snails, geckos, etc. In places where herbicides are used, a very invasive yellow-flowered oxalis (which resembles clover) can be seen blanketing the ground under olive trees. Resistant to the herbicide, it takes over, where otherwise one would see a multitude of wildflowers.

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