This was one of the strangest backgammon championships of Azogires history as father and daughter got first and second prizes.
Wednesday, 25 August 2010
HALE STORM IN THIS YEARS BACKGAMMON CHAMPIONSHIP
This was one of the strangest backgammon championships of Azogires history as father and daughter got first and second prizes.
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
2010 ANNUAL SPRING BACKGAMMON COMPETITION IN AZOGIRES
Tuesday, 8 September 2009
The Russian Church


How did a Russian Church end up in Azogires?
The church was built in memory of a man who, before his death, had requested it be built in its present location. The church was designed by the man’s brother and his family arranged for his wishes to be fulfilled and the church built. The original plan was to call it Agios Eftixis but since there was already a church in the area with the same name, the local priest prevailed on the benefactors to change the name.
The priest persuaded them to adopt the current name for the church because while he had been visiting the grave of that saint in Euboia, where the body of the saint who died in 1740 is said to lie uncorrupted, he allegedly saw a “possessed” boy being cured. He says he saw the boy being brought to the tomb of the saint and while the boy was put on the grave he started floating a few centimetres above the floor and acting in a crazy manner. When the boy left the church he was fine and cured. On the strength of this the priest persuaded the family to name the church after St John the Russian.
More details of St John the Russian can be found here:
http://www.roca.org/OA/39/39g.htm
Although there was apparently no record of there previously having been a church on the site of the Russian church, during the construction three graves were unearthed, one of which was believed to have been a Byzantine grave with a plastered interior.
Saturday, 18 July 2009
St George's mysterious companion
The story of St George and the dragon is well known and he has two churches dedicated to him in Azogires. However, if you look at the pictures above, the upper picture, the icon of St George in of Agios Georgios/Agios Nicholas in Anidri, differs from the lower picture, the icon of St George in the church of Agios Georgios in Azogires, the church just down the hill from the Alfa Cafenion. The Azogires icon, as is the case with the vast majority of such icons, doesn’t have the young boy with the jug or glass in his hand, riding on the horse behind St George. Who then is this mysterious figure?
According to Piotr Grotowski at
http://www.icon-art.info/book_contents.php?book_id=84
there are three versions of the tale of the young boy.
Version 1)
During their invasion of Paphlagonia (on the southern coast of the Black Sea) the Agarenes (Arabs) took many people into captivity, among them a young boy who was a servant in the
Version 2)
The cult of Saint George was propagated in Paphlagonia, especially in the place called “Potamos itoi i Oikiakos”, where a church of the saint was situated, to which numerous pilgrims were coming. A soldier lived there, named
Version 3)
In Mytilene on
Although the third version is known only from late manuscripts, the facts described in it can be related to the situation on the islands of the
Also on Crete, which soon after Cyprus became a Western colony (after the Fourth Crusade Boniface of Montferrat, who has been granted Crete, sold it to Venice) the subject of St. George saving the youth from captivity appears in the middle of the 13th century. One of the oldest examples can be seen in the fresco from
So there you are.
Tuesday, 30 June 2009
Sunday, 21 June 2009
Monday, 11 May 2009
Olive Grafting
This is what I have been doing recently. We do this grafting with olive trees every April/May.
We go to a wild olive tree that does not make fruit and we graft onto it a tamed one. This allows us to make use of the strength of the wild olive root stock while choosing the type of olive we want.
A cut is made in the bark of the wild tree and into that slot we insert a sprig of the type of olive we want to grow, as is shown in the example above, prepared and photographed in the Alfa Kafenion. Then we wrap the graft in string very tight and we seal it with black earth - mavropiles. This particular soil is like cement, it seals almost anything and we used to make rooftops from it in the old days - water can not get through which is why we use it to graft. By keeping out the air and the water the tree survives. This is called kentrisma and we do it with all trees.
Tuesday, 28 April 2009
The flowers of Azogires April
What we show won’t necessarily be rare or unusual flowers but they will be Azogires flowers.
All the flowers above were photographed on 13 April 2009 and all were within 200 metres of the Alfa Cafenion.







