Here we are in our 
Stone House on the Hill, this week 
celebrating our first year as part time ex pats in Greece. 
With most of our major projects completed, we’ve slowed our pace and indulged 
in blissful, idle hours ~ most of which we’ve spent gazing out over our small 
terraced olive grove and the view we have up the Mani coastline just beyond it; 
our own little slice of Greece’s Peloponesse peninsula
|  | 
| Dusk at The Stone House on the Hill | 
Many of you have followed along or been a part of the journey that brought us to 
this Stone House and you’ve stuck with us as we’ve turned it into our own. Some 
through the blog and others in real life, real time. Your companionship, 
encouragement and enthusiasm have been most appreciated. 
‘You are never to old to set a 
new goal or dream a new dream.’
    - C.S. 
Lewis
It was back in 2014 when we got serious about focusing that somewhat fleeting 
daydreaming of ours into an action plan. We - this 60-something duo – decided it 
was time for a ‘final fling’, a ‘new challenge’, a ‘project’, before we got too 
old to have one. We’d accumulated many daydreams during our travels but kept 
coming back to the idea of. . .
Growing Olives Instead of Old 

Last December 15th as we sat with the sellers, an array of others, (three 
attorneys, our realtor and the Notary) in the Notary’s cramped second-floor 
office in the nearby village, we moved that daydream into reality. 
As vivid as if it were yesterday, we recall those pages and pages of 
documents being read aloud (a legal requirement here) in Greek and translated to 
English. Then payments (both for the home purchase and costs associated with it) 
were made and handshakes offered.
The purchase process that had taken months to get in order, was over in less 
than an hour. . .
. . .then, ‘but, of course’ as they say here, we all – buyers, sellers, 
realtor and attorney - went to the cafe next door for a drink!
|  | 
| Celebrating the sale | 
Finally, that Grecian stone and concrete temptress was ours – ten days before 
Christmas.  We’d  nailed that daydream  - the one that had slipped between our 
fingers earlier in the year -- and made it reality. 
|  | 
| The Stone House on the Hill | 
Recalling those first few days, we’ve laughed at what a stark reality we’d 
purchased. It was rather a bleak stone house, both literally and figuratively. 
Cold (we ran out of fuel for several days that first stay – both central heat 
oil and wood), empty (we gave away most of the old well-used furniture and the 
new hadn’t yet been delivered) and rooms with gray stone accents around white 
ceiling, walls and floor that didn’t make for a warm and fuzzy feeling. With no 
television or internet – it also felt a bit lonely. That didn’t deter us from 
the vision we had for this place. . .
|  | 
| December 2014 - The Stone House on the Hill | 
As the days became weeks, and weeks stretched into months the 
The 
Stone House on the Hill has evolved into our 
Stone Home on the Hill. New furniture, paint 
and decorating touches and a bit of hard labor, by us and others (not to mention 
two cats who adopted us) made for some remarkable changes even with this 
part-time life we’ve had here.
|  | 
| One Year Later - Stone House on the Hill | 
Changes in latitudes, changes in attitudes
Just as the house has changed, so have we.  This Greek adventure has moved us 
from our world, filled with family, friends and the familiar in the United 
States’ Pacific Northwest, into a dual existence – living two decidedly 
different lifestyles on opposite sides of the globe.
‘Let’s be honest. Retirement abroad is not for 
everyone. A totally new environment. Distance from relatives and long-time 
friends. Culture clashes. Health care issues. Language barriers. But it’s also 
possible to enjoy a higher standard of living at a lower cost in foreign 
locations of natural beauty, appealing culture and great charm.’
                                                                              -- Forbes.com
|  | 
| A neighbors night out | 
By living part of the year ‘there’ and part ‘here’ we’ve enriched our lives with 
new friends; both Greek and other ex pats (from a variety of countries) and have 
neighbors who are friends as well at both of our homes. 
During the months we’ve been in Greece, we’ve developed new daily routines 
and honed new and forgotten skills. We’ve gotten back in touch with the basics 
of our childhoods– stringing a clothesline, drying clothes on the line, washing 
dishes by hand, living without television, putting together the miniscule pieces 
that come in a box and turning it into shelves or coat racks or other items.
|  | 
| We learned to harvest olives - it is hard work! | 
Little successes are noted with pride; like learning bits and pieces of the 
Greek language. . .I know the days of the week and can count to six. We can both 
order wine and say ‘please’ and ‘thank you’. Vocabulary victories occur 
daily!
Two sets of friends from the Pacific Northwest visited us this fall. We 
explored areas and eateries, sharing quality, unrushed time together; proving as 
the old saying goes, that ‘the road to a friend’s house is never long’. . . 
okay, so the flight is rather long, but you get the idea!
As for ‘distance from long time friends and family’, as 
Forbes 
cautioned. . .well, technology has made that simply, nonsense.  Thanks to 
internet, Skype, Facebook and email, we are able to stay in touch with friends 
and family. My early 2016 calendar ‘back home’ is filling with social 
engagements and appointments that have been arranged while I am here in Greece 
as easily as if I’d been at the computer back there.
The doors we open and close each 
day decide the lives we live.
- Flora Whittemore
 
Opening any new chapter in life often means ending or modifying others. Our 
increased time in Greece required that I resign from a board of directors for a 
non-profit educational agency on which I had served for 15 years. That was 
tough.  It also sidelined my freelance writing for a time.
 
The Scout, who used to focus on the logistics of life (investments 
and finances among them) as well as finding travel deals from Seattle has had to 
expand his calculations to international finances, thinking both in dollars and 
euros. And I’ve written previously of how this base in Europe has given him a 
whole new candy-shop of travel options to research.
|  | 
| Dusk in the Village of Stoupa | 
We’ve discovered the joys of village life with its laid-back pace. As we get 
to know people in the area trips to town take longer as we must stop and visit, 
or give a quick hello to someone we know. We refer to businesses by the owners 
name, “Let’s go to Yiannis’ and Eleni’s tonight” . . . “Let’s see if Ellie has 
fresh calamari” . . .’'We need to stop at Dimitri’s for nails’. 
|  | 
| Slow travel in The Mani | 
Our pace has slowed here – a stark contrast with life back in the states.
|  | 
| Our olive crop waits for the press | 
Little did we know when we purchased this home and its 15-tree olive grove how 
attached we’d become to this agricultural lifestyle. Harvesting our first crop 
of olives was an unforgettable experience. We are already looking forward to 
next year’s crop.
Dwell in 
Possibility.
         -- Emily 
Dickinson
 
We are looking forward to new adventures in Greece during our second year 
here and hope you’ll be back regularly to share them with us. We are off to 
Cairo this coming weekend so will have tales to tell from there as well as more 
stories from Greece in future weeks. Until then, safe travels to you and yours~ 
Some of you who’ve signed up to receive these posts in your email seem not to 
have gotten some of the recent ones, if you could take a minute and reply to 
this post, saying, “got it” we would appreciate it greatly.
Linking up this week:
Photo 
Friday 
Travel Photo 
Thursday – 
Wordless 
Wednesday
Our 
World Tuesday
Mosaic 
Monday – 
Through 
My Lens