Cyclades islandsSailing Greece Paros island Greek Sun Yachts

Paros is found in the centre of Cyclades and presents big tourist movement.

It is surrounded with golden sandy beaches, the traditional colour, the white houses and the infrequent monuments. For this reason each summertime the island accepts thousands visitors and sailors who want to rent a yacht and travel around the island.

Sailing Greece Paros island Greek Sun Yachts
Sailing Greece Paros island Greek Sun Yachts

Antiparos has acquired tourist that prefer the island for the beautiful landscape and spotless beaches. Known as a quiet and unspoiled island, it has seen its tourism developing in the past few years and hotels are now lining its waterfront.

However, it still has kept its natural beauty and has many nice and unspoiled beaches to offer, with crystalline waters and golden sand. As its name says (anti-Paros: opposite Paros), the island of Anti Paros is facing the island of Paros, only 4 nautical miles from the main harbour of Paros and 1 mile from the famous beach called Pounda (on Paros). Both islands are separated by a narrow channel.

Sailing Greece Paros island Greek Sun Yachts
Sailing Greece Paros island Greek Sun Yachts
Sailing Greece Paros island Greek Sun Yachts
Sailing Greece Paros island night Greek Sun Yachts

Paros has three bays that cut deep inland – the sheltered Paroikia Bay, with the island’s capital that serves as the main sailing port and as a yacht charter base; bay which shelters the little town of Naoussa, and the flat Marmara bay. Antiparos is the small island of Despotiko, with a sheltered harbour on the south. It is is reachable only by a little caique (small fishing boat) leaving from Parikia, Paros’ main harbour, or Pounda, Paros’ most famous beach. You could sail these islands by renting a boat with Greek Sun Yachts and discover all their beauty.

GREECE is a unique place to choose for your summer holidays.



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The Greek islands are an ideal place for summer holidays and the best way to explore them is to rent a charter a sailing boat in Greece.



Sailing Greece with GreekSun Yachting Charter

Greece's Island Groups

Greece's roughly 6,000 islands and islets (227 of which are inhabited) are scattered far and wide across the eastern Mediterranean. Most are in the Aegean Sea (south and east of mainland Greece), while a few are in the Ionian Sea (west of the mainland). The islands are divided into distinct clusters:

  • The Ionian Islands, are Greece's northwest gateway to the Adriatic and the rest of Europe — they've had more foreign invaders and rulers than anywhere else in the country. The main island is Corfu (Kerkyra in Greek), with a bustling, architecturally eclectic main town and a lush, green islandscape dotted with attractions and beaches.

  • The Saronic Gulf Islands ( Argosaronikos ), conveniently wedged between the Peloponnese and Athens, ooze lots of island charm and give you a chance to get away from it all without actually going very far. Hydra, my favorite, is in this group.

  • The Sporades Islands, due east of Athens, are dominated by the giant Evia island, which is attached to the mainland by a bridge. Thickly forested and less touristed by international visitors, the Sporades are a popular and handy weekend getaway for Athenians.

  • The Cycladic Islands (or simply Cyclades ) — a bit farther south, between Athens and Crete — are the prototypical "Greek islands," boasting chalk-white houses with colorful windowsills and doorways; rocky, sun-parched landscapes; delightful beaches; old-fashioned white windmills topped with tufts of grass like unkempt hair; and an almost overwhelming crush of international visitors. Mykonos and Santorini are the two best and most famous of the Cyclades. Near Mykonos is the archaeological site of Delos (one of the most important locales of the ancient world).

  • The Dodecanese Islands, at the sunny, southeastern end of the Greek lands, are more rustic and less developed than the Cyclades. Their proximity to Turkey and historic ties to Venice give them a hybrid Turkish-Venetian flavor (though the population is mostly ethnic Greek, these islands merged with Greece only after World War II). Rhodes, with an appealing and very real-feeling Old Town, is the biggest of these islands.

  • The North Aegean Islands, relatively untrampled and remote-feeling, lie roughly between Turkey and Thessaloniki (at the northern end of mainland Greece). The southernmost of these, Samos, is a particularly handy springboard for Turkey, as it's very close to the Turkish port city of Kusadas? (near the remarkable ancient site of Ephesus).

  • Crete is Greece's biggest island and practically a mini-state of its own (in fact, from 1897 to 1913 it was an autonomous state within the Ottoman Empire). While many of Greece's smaller islands merit a day or two of fun in the sun, Crete could occupy even a busy traveler for a week or more. Historically, Crete was home to the Minoans — the earliest advanced European civilization, peaking around 1950 B.C., centuries before "the ancient Greeks" of Athens. While Crete's modern main city, Iraklio, is drab and uninviting, the rest of the island offers an engaging diversity of attractions: Minoan ruins, scenic mountains, enticing beaches, characteristic rustic villages, and dramatic caves and gorges (including the famous Samaria Gorge).



Even if you are having no sailing experience we can offer you a sailing yacht with a captain.

Experienced sailors can enjoy the strong winds in the Aegean Sea, while others might choose the mild winds and safer bays of Argosaronicos Gulf, Sporades islands or the Ionian Sea. In few words, sailing in Greece can offer all the pleasure a sailor might seek in summer holidays.



Sailing-Greece

The long charter season starts as early as March when air temperatures rise above the seawater temperatures, which has a stabilizing effect. Around mid-May the Azores High gradually becomes more dominant and the Euro-Asian High loses its influence, resulting in very stable weather.

July and August peak in high temperatures and sun hours – the high season for chartering!

In October/November the Azores High becomes less dominant and frontal systems – followed by cool air masses – start entering the East Mediterranean from the north. The contact with the relative warmer seawater will subsequently lead to an unstable atmosphere and showers.

The islands of Cyclades are famous across the world for their wild beauty and unprecedented seaside; the dense forests of Pelion lie so close to the sea;Ionian islands are described as jewelry of nature with physical wealth.

All you need to do is to share with us your personal preferences; we shall suggest suitable itineraries and other options, fulfilling all your needs.

At every island or port you visit you may combine sailing with a different experience, like visit ancient monuments, gain knowledge about local culture which differs in every region, enjoy the wild night life of Greek islands or appreciate the traditional cuisine.