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Samos reviews (21-30 of 50)

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Overall Rating

Very Good Hotel

Overall Rating

Very Good Resort
Pythagorion  >  Evelin Hotel And Apartments

Travel Date: June 07

Submitted in June 2007 by: Lin Jones - Horam

Operator: Thomson

Studios at hotel Evelyn are very clean but fairly small and basic.(no corksrew, knife to cut bread etc) However, hot water with good pressure all of the time and 2 towels each not the norm for Greece. Pool area quite nice but they do need to get more new su...

Studios at hotel Evelyn are very clean but fairly small and basic.(no corksrew, knife to cut bread etc) However, hot water with good pressure all of the time and 2 towels each not the norm for Greece. Pool area quite nice but they do need to get more new sunbeds as some are very tatty. The airport behind is not a problem but the road noise can be annoying with lots of squealing brakes and hooting at the traffic lights. George at the pool bar is always smiling and Maria on reception in the afternoon is agreat mine of information. Hotel owners a bit strange, not the usual Greek friendliness.

We ate at many of the places recommended on this site but really liked Appolonia the best as it was so comfortable.We walked up to the top of the hill in front and also to Ireon and back but on the whole it was too hot for walking.The bus to Samos town stops right outside the studios and is a very good ride for three euros return per person.


Overall Rating

Average Hotel

Overall Rating

Average Resort
Samos Town  >  Hotel Galaxy

Travel Date: January 07

Submitted in June 2007 by: Rich Jill Kent

Operator: Other

We stayed at the Galaxy Hotel on the recommendations from others on this website and I thought I would fill in the gaps that I would have liked to have known about before we came. The Hotel is ok, the rooms are quite small but clean, as usual the room alloc...

We stayed at the Galaxy Hotel on the recommendations from others on this website and I thought I would fill in the gaps that I would have liked to have known about before we came. The Hotel is ok, the rooms are quite small but clean, as usual the room allocation is a lottery some rooms on the top floor facing the town are lovely, others at the back are gloomy and overlooked. When we arrived we were allocated a ground floor room with a pool view, we felt really overlooked as anyone around the pool could see right into our room. I asked for a change but was told there were no other rooms available. We had been up since two in the morning and after unpacking fancied a siesta (it was siesta time) The Eagles, Hotel California was blasting out from the bar and we couldn't sleep. I like the Eagles but when the CD started over again I had had enough and said I was not prepared to stay in that room. The receptionist could see I was far from happy and magically found another room at the top of the hotel away from the noisy pool area, it was quiet and had a view across Samos and all was well. So once you have got yourself a nice room you have to steel yourself before entering the bathroom. We saw 2 of the bathrooms for ourselves and they were the first thing mentioned by other guests that we met. Firstly they are very small, they are also very dark (which may be a blessing as you can not see the mould encrusted tiles until your eyes have acclimatised) they have no window and the extractor fan did not work (in either room that we saw) The ceiling is dark wood and the tiles are orange!!! It is probably the worst bathroom we have seen in over 20 years of visiting Greece although I am sure that are worse out there somewhere.

Ok, so once you have a nice room and have come to terms with the bathroom, what about the rest of the hotel, the town and other resorts. Well, generally the hotel is good, it has a very nice pool, good quality loungers, tables and chairs and nice gardens. The receptionists are friendly and helpful. Breakfast is buffet style and consists of bread, jams, honey yoghurt, cereal, cheese, meats, eggs (hard boiled) tea coffee and juice (more like squash) You can eat this inside, around the pool or in the gardens and can have as much as you want

It is a five minute stroll down the hill into the town where there are plenty of shops, bars and restaurants. Samos Town looks good from a distance but it is not really a tourist resort or as picturesque as some other resorts in the island. On the other hand it is very Greek, so if you ant to experience the culture it is a good base. The thing which spoilt Samos Town for us is the very busy dual carriageway separating the sea front from the shops and bars, there is nowhere in the main bay to sit right by the sea and have a drink or a meal, you have to take in the view looking across the busy main road. Having said that if you go east past the port and round the corner there are some bars and restaurants where you can sit by the sea, the sunsets are particularly spectacular from here.

We didn't get all around the island in a week but if we went again we would definitely stay in Kokkari, although if you want a beach holiday and have young children the sea may be a bit wild on the north coast. Pythagorian seemed a nice place although the beaches were small and packed and that was at the beginning of June. Samos was quite breezy while we were there, I am not sure if that is typical but we got the impression that it can be a tad breezy a fair bit of the time.

Despite the dire warnings at the welcome meeting we hired a scooter for the week, we hired a 250cc scooter and it cost £10 per day, 50cc scooters were about £7 per day. The main roads on Samos are very good and it is easy to get around, there are some nice walks too, get a map and head off into the mountains, there are some lovely views.

We did have one dodgy meal in Samos Town but the food was generally good and prices quite cheap. As a guide a meal for 2 with a starter and main course and beer or wine was about £14.00. We liked Steps - east end of town and up the hill a bit - nice views over Samos from here. Avli - off the High Street west of the main square, and The Garden - in the middle. Don't forget to go the bar with the yellow seats to watch the sunset - see above.

We went with Kosmar, in January we booked to go to Pythagorian but at the last minute (May) they changed our holiday, no apology just a letter addressed Dear Client saying that our accommodation had changed. The new accommodation was £80 each cheaper than we paid when they made the change but they refused to charge us less saying it was the same price when we booked originally. When we said we would cancel they said we would forfeit £200 being our deposit. Be very aware when booking with Kosmar, fine if things go to plan, but they really do not want to know if there is a problem and they do not respond to your letters either.

Hope this helps your holiday planning for Samos.


Overall Rating

Excellent Hotel

Overall Rating

Excellent Resort
Pythagorion  >  Villa Anna

Submitted in April 2007 by: paul 51 pat 29+vat

Operator: Other

villa anna fab place fab family that own it excellent rooms and facillities pool bar great for relaxing and long sunny afternoon get togethers with other guests and yannis, lilian and there parents who were very friendly and fun to be with, the family and s...

villa anna fab place fab family that own it excellent rooms and facillities pool bar great for relaxing and long sunny afternoon get togethers with other guests and yannis, lilian and there parents who were very friendly and fun to be with, the family and staff are very helpful and the food at the snack bar is excellent if we wanted yannis would always open the bar at night too. near the airport but no problem as no early or late flights and very good fun to watch while lazing round the pool. (oh and yes there are mozzies but not just at villa anna, as some may have appeared to think, mozzies are very common in all of greece ! ) Pythorgoria has fantastic restaurants and bars especially four seasons for food and remezzos for drinks,

we have been to samos and villa anna 6 times and will keep returning over and over again as it is our 2nd home


Overall Rating

Excellent Hotel

Overall Rating

Excellent Resort
Kambos / Votsalakia  >  Smaragda Apartments

Travel Date: June 06

Submitted in January 2007 by: John and Wendy Morgan - Harlow, Essex (70 and 64)

Operator: Manos

Smaragda and her family have made us so welcome over the past five years at their spotlessly clean, well equipped appartments that they have become firm friends. We are visiting again in June 2007. Have to say that some of the best appartments we have sta...

Smaragda and her family have made us so welcome over the past five years at their spotlessly clean, well equipped appartments that they have become firm friends. We are visiting again in June 2007. Have to say that some of the best appartments we have stayed in anywhere in Greece.

Kambos has just about everything you need, except a pharmacy - just hope that you don't need one, but car hire is easy and we have visited almost everywhere on the island now - or we think we have - until we find somewhere off the beaten track.

Chester's has become a favorite eating place, mainly because of the warm welcome, but most of the tavernas are pretty good and fairly tradionally Greek.
Jo and Nick were expecting their first baby in September 2006, so hope that we shall see another addition to this lovely family.

Looking forward to returning, but keep quiet about this island, don't want it turned into another Zante, Rhodes, or Corfu!


Overall Rating

Good Hotel

Overall Rating

Very Good Resort
Samos Town  >  Aeolis Hotel

Travel Date: September 06

Submitted in December 2006 by: Sandra and Neil - Didcot

Operator: Thomson

We went to Samos in late Sept/early Oct 2006, knowing nothing about the island before booking. We wanted to stay somewhere Greek, but not too quiet and the brochure descriptions of Samos Town seemed to offer what we wanted.

Accommodation
We stayed...

We went to Samos in late Sept/early Oct 2006, knowing nothing about the island before booking. We wanted to stay somewhere Greek, but not too quiet and the brochure descriptions of Samos Town seemed to offer what we wanted.

Accommodation
We stayed in the Hotel Aeolis, which is on the harbour front not far from the ferry terminal. We asked Thomson for a sea-front room at the time of booking, but as we booked quite late we were told that all the rooms allocated to Thomson had already been booked. Disappointingly we had a room round the back of the hotel overlooking the shopping street. The balcony was tiny and there was a huge tree in front of it cutting out any light and making the balcony chilly and unusable. There was noise from the street in the morning as the shops opened and more annoyingly at about 2 am when people leaving the bars started their motorbikes under our window! However, another guest who had a room nearer the front of the hotel told us that he was kept awake by the music from both the Aeolis bar and the bar next door, so maybe a sea-front room wouldn't have been so good after all! The room was a basic Greek hotel room which was starting to look a bit tatty round the edges - single beds, a tiled floor, a shower built over a bath with a shower curtain (with reasonable water pressure and constant hot water) and thin towels - extras were a so-so hairdryer and a rather old and very noisy fridge. The room was cleaned every day (including Sundays) and the towels were changed daily and the bed linen changed every other day. The reception desk was manned 24 hours and the receptionists were friendly - one male receptionist enjoyed testing my very rusty Greek!

The bar was very modern-looking with comfortable seats inside and outside overlooking the sea. It was very popular with the young locals, which meant that loud music was played throughout the evening, which we found off-putting However, in the day time and early evening it's a pleasant place to sit and have a drink. The roof terrace of the hotel had a small pool, which was big enough to swim in if no one else was in it (which at that time of the year they weren't, as the water was unheated and therefore not pleasant to swim in!) There were also sunloungers up there overlooking the sea, but there was a breeze up there all the time, which could be quite chilly once the sun left the roof top. Also the pool bar was unattended most of the time, so it was hard to get a drink when we wanted one. Breakfast was only served until 10 am (it was served on the roof terrace for the first week and then moved to the ground floor in the second week) - we missed it most days as we like to lie in on holiday. We had breakfast three times - if we got there early there was a small selection of hot food (scrambled egg, sausages), but if we got there too late the hot food had all gone. The other choices were the usual cold buffet of bread rolls, tinned fruit, yoghurt, honey, fruit juice (not fresh) and not great coffee, so we didn't feel we missed much by not having the breakfast!

Eating out
We went to Gagou Beach quite a few times over the fortnight, which is a twenty minute walk from the hotel (turn right onto the harbour road and follow the coastal road until you see a sign to Gangou Beach pointing downhill). The beach is quite small and pebbly and sunloungers are set out along the beach. There is a restaurant and a couple of bars by the beach. We went to the Vergina Restaurant for lunch, which overlooks the sea - they had a good choice of snacks and main courses. A typical (for us) lunch of two fresh orange juices, two Greek salads and a portion of chips (!) came to 16 euros. One of the waiters was also responsible for the orange sunloungers on the beach in front of the restaurant. A sunlounger cost 3 euros for the day. Beware - the Vergina wasn't open on Sundays in late September and there weren't any other cafes around Gagou Beach open, so we had to walk all the way back to Samos Town to get something to eat!
In Samos Town itself there is a good choice of restaurants for evening meals, but not so many if you just want a snack-type lunch. Most of the bars in Pythagoras Square (the square with the statue of a lion on the harbour front) serve drinks and ice cream or yoghurts, however, the Samion Café had a good selection of sandwiches, salads, etc (and huge portions!) A vegetarian club sandwich with chips, a tuna salad and two bottles of Greek beer came to 12.50 euros. Sitting outside any of the bars in Pythagoras Square is a great place to people watch and just look at the sea!

We tried most of the restaurants listed on other reviews and found that the quality of the food was similar in most of them, but the ones away from the sea front offered better service (we didn't feel so rushed). Our favourites were Garden (from Pythagoras Square turn right onto the harbour road and turn right by the Aeolis Hotel, take the 2nd turning on the right into the shopping street - the restaurant is on the right, it's well-signposted), Steps (there are signs to Steps on the harbour road between the Aeolis and Samos Hotels - look for a car rental place on one corner and a 'Chinese lantern' bargain basement-type shop on the other) and Avli (turn left out of Pythagoras Square and walk along the harbour road past the National Bank of Greece, then turn right by the Bank of Greece, then turn right onto the shopping street and Avli is two or three shops up on the left next to the Alessi homeware shop). Garden is set in a sheltered courtyard and the woman who serves is very friendly without being too overly attentive. I wasn't impressed with every meal I had in Steps - the chicken had been cooked from frozen, although I did like the baked potatoes. One evening they played jazz music instead of Greek music, which made a nice change and, of course, the views over the town at night make up for the slightly mediocre food. Beware on windy nights though! A typical meal of a Greek salad, two souvlaki main dishes and 1 litre of house wine from the barrel came to 20 euros. Avli was the most expensive of the three restaurants and seemed to serve the smallest portions, but the setting was very pleasant - a nicely designed courtyard, which was completely covered (ideal for rainy or windy evenings). It was one of the few restaurants to offer a vegetarian option and the waiter was very friendly and chatty.
Some of the bars and restaurants (particularly on the coastal road between Samos Town and Gagou Beach) had closed by the time we arrived on 20th September, so we weren't able to try some of the places recommended in other reviews.

Bars
We tried various bars for an after-dinner drink. The Museum Café (continue walking down the shopping street from Avli and turn left into a small park) was a very quiet bar in the pleasant surroundings of the municipal gardens in front of the museum. I can only guess that the reason it was so quiet in the evenings was the location - it's quite a way from the main bar area. We also went to the Hotel Samos bar, which was popular but the clientele was a bit older than the Aeolis and the music was much quieter. It's more or less the last bar on the harbour road and that section of road is a bit quieter, as the youngsters on their mopeds don't come that far down to pose in front of the bars! I tried some of the Kaimaki ice cream - it is known as 'antiseptic' ice cream and did have a strange almost mentholly taste, but is served with a very sweet cherry sauce which takes away the antiseptic flavour. I don't think I'd have it again!
We went to Café Europe (next to the Aeolis) a few times as they showed live football on an outside screen, and it was mainly full of Greek men watching the football - we felt we couldn't talk without fear of disturbing the football fans! One evening after the football finished the owner put on some Joe Cocker, which made a nice change!
The average price of drinks in Samos Town: a large lager was between 3 to 3.50 euros; half a litre of house wine was between 2.60 and 4 euros; a coffee was between 2 and 2.50 euros; and a small bottle of water was 1.50 euros.

Beaches
We visited three beaches on Samos: Gagou, Pythagorio and Kokkari. All are pebbly beaches with rows of sunloungers on them. Gagou is the smallest, but was never crowded. The sea was a beautiful clear blue and quite warm for the time of year - much more comfortable than the hotel swimming pool. The worst bit was getting in and out of the sea - the pebbles were big and very slippery. I invested in a pair of rubber shoes (all the tourist shops in Samos Town sell them), but still managed to slip on a big pebble getting out of the sea. Kokkari and Pythagorio have a similar problem, but there was a small walkway built into the sea on Pythagorio beach with a step ladder going into the sea. However, the sea around this walkway was dirty with lots of litter and seaweed floating around - not as clean as Gagou. A sunlounger at Pythagorio cost 2.50 euros for the day. Kokkari has two beaches - one with sunloungers and lots of bars behind and another beach to the east of the bars and restaurants had nothing on it, but is nice if you want to get away from the tourist trappings.

Both Pythagorio and Kokkari are small tourist resorts with an almost endless row of waterfront bars - the ones in Kokkari are literally on the waterfront, in the middle of the village where there is no beach. Kokkari still retains traces of the fishing port it once was and is pretty. There didn't seem to be much to keep you occupied for a fortnight. Pythagorio appeared to be the most touristy of the two places, with lots of shops dedicated to tourists. The waterfront bars have a through road to the harbour running in front of them and there is the constant sound of aeroplanes taking off and landing (as the airport is very near) and the noise from the ferries! Both Kokkari and Pythagorio are easily reached by public bus from Samos Town. Samos Town to Kokkari takes 15 minutes and the fare is 1.20 euros each way. Samos Town to Pythagorio takes 20 minutes and the fare is 1.30 each way. (Take the 5.15 pm bus back to Samos Town for a different route - via Mitilin - and see some inland villages. This journey takes about 40 minutes and the fare is 1.80 euros.)

Trips
We went on two Thomson-organized tours: the island tour and the trip to Ephesus. The island tour cost 39 euros per person, however, there were additional costs of 3 euros entry into the Temple of Hera, 3 euros to walk into the Epalinos Tunnel and 1 euro entry into the wine museum, which we weren't informed of by the Thomson rep when we booked our trip. Some of the stops didn't really seem worth it - the Temple of Hera is really just a field with some pillars and broken remains scattered around it. The Greek tour guide did her best to make it interesting, but her visual aids of some tatty photocopies from an old history book didn't help to convey how impressive the temple once was! We didn't attempt going into the Epalinos Tunnel as the guide has warned us that it's very narrow and slippery. Those who did go in, couldn't have gone very far as they only had 5 minutes or so before the coach left. It was interesting to hear from the guide about its construction, but we could have read about it from a book, as we didn't see anything! The monastry was in pretty surroundings and the guide told us a little about the Greek orthodox religion - we had a short amount of time to look around the church in the grounds and there was a gift shop in the grounds. There was a mid-morning stop at a hill top café where we were given a free bowl of locally-produced yoghurt and honey that was delicious.

We then drove through Karlovassi, which is an ugly town - it's not a tourist resort, it's an industrial port - and had lunch at Potami. The food was OK and there was a selection, including some vegetarian dishes, but it was overpriced and there wasn't waiter service. The tour guide gave us the options of having lunch at that restaurant or going to a snack-bar café up the hill or walking down a waterfall and going to the beach (sadly there was not time to do more than one thing!) After lunch we went to a pottery shop and saw a demo by a woman making a pot. There was lots of time to shop (everything was very touristy, but hand made if you like that kind of thing). Then we went for a drive around the less-developed part of the island - we saw lots of signs of fire damage. The rep pointed to traditional villages somewhere up a hill, but unfortunately we didn't visit them.

We stopped at Kokkari for an hour and had a coffee by the water and the final stop of the trip was the wine museum on the outskirts of Samos Town, where the guide gave us a very informed introduction to the wines of Samos and then we had a short amount of time to try them. If you only buy one wine to bring back with you try the delicious honey-flavoured sweet wine produced by local monks (apparently the Pope drinks it!) The trip was slightly marred by the fact that there were three coaches doing the same tour at the same time (an English-speaking one, a German-speaking one and a Dutch-speaking one). The English-speaking one always arrived last at each place and we had to wait for the tour guide to finish talking to the German-speaking tourists before she spoke to the English-speaking tourists, which meant that we were hanging around when we first arrived and then having to rush back onto the coach at the end! This was most annoying at the wine museum where we turned up much later than the other two coaches, but had to leave at the same time as them, not giving us much time to taste the wines, let alone look around the museum! However, the English-speaking guide (Sarah, I think) on our coach (an English woman who lives on Samos) was very informative about life on Samos in a chatty way and she made the trip worthwhile.

The trip to Ephesus cost 79 euros each and it was a long day (8am to 7 pm). The ferry takes approximately 2 hours each way. We had one and a half hours at Ephesus with a guide - there was no time to wander around on our own. It was very crowded (even though it was early October) and also very hot , with no shade or breeze. (The toilets at Ephesus were the cleanest I've ever seen - you pay 50 cents to go, but an attendant cleans the cubicle before you go in, so it's worth it!) We were then taken to a restaurant next to the ferry port and served a set menu of salad, chicken or meat ball kebabs and fruit for 9 euros (the food wasn't particularly good and the portions were small and it was very rushed). I would advise people to go off on their own for lunch, if you don't want to go to the carpet museum after lunch (we didn't!). We had two free hours in Kusadasi after lunch - there is not much to see there, mainly jewellery and carpet shops. We didn't like the place - it's very expensive and the pressurised approach to get tourists into bars, restaurants and shops is very off-putting - we were so happy to get back to laid-back Samos! There are some designer-brand shops in the port along with a duty free shop (euros seemed to be accepted everywhere, so we didn't need to take any Turkish currency). Next time we wouldn't go with Thomson - we would organize it ourselves as there are lots of shops selling ferry tickets on the harbour road in Samos Town and there are taxis which will take you to Ephesus and at Ephesus you can hire an audio guide. The ferry back was a bit rough and many people were looking very queasy!

Other information
- The sunset at around 6.30 pm at the end of September. Leave Gagou Beach at 6.15 pm to get pretty views of the sun setting over Vathi from the road near Gagou Beach on the way back to Samos Town.
- For the most-generous free bar snacks buy a drink in the Hotel Samos bar - one night we were given a plate of salami stuffed with feta with each drink we ordered (almost a meal in itself) - a pity we'd already had dinner!
- Samoan wines are very pleasant - the house wine that is served in a jug in most restaurants can be a bit hit and miss, but on the whole they were drinkable (the worst we had was the house red in Di Napoli - pure vinegar!). The bottled wines that you can buy in most off licences are very good quality - I like dry white wine and found the Samena, Doryssa and Ageri wines very pleasant (you can try these in the wine museum).
- Beware of buying imported goods from the international shops in Samos Town, which include Benetton, Body Shop and Alessi. I bought an unusual corkscrew in Alessi for 57 euros (£39.50) and found out that it only cost £23 in the UK!
- The post office is quite a walk out of the centre of Samos Town - further down the harbour road from the bus station, but you can buy stamps for post cards at the touristy shop nearest to Pythagoras Square (next to the 'Chinese lantern' bargain basement-looking shop).
- We explored the steep, narrow streets of the old part of Samos Town, that is known as Vathi. It's a pretty and peaceful place to escape from the tourists and the traffic (although we were amazed at how fast some cars were driving down alleyways that were only just wide enough for a car to get down!).

We had a lovely holiday on this small and quiet island that hasn't lost its Greek character to tourism. The only thing I would change is to book the Hotel Samos earlier to guarantee a sea view room!


Overall Rating

Average Hotel

Overall Rating

Good Resort
Kambos / Votsalakia  >  Hotel Sofia

Travel Date: September 06

Submitted in November 2006 by: Leo and Anna

Operator: Other

By the end of our holiday at the beginning of October Kambos was getting to the end of its season. It was also incredibly windy so sitting on the beach was difficult as the sand blew everywhere. We did sit round the pool at the Sophia hotel on the free Sunb...

By the end of our holiday at the beginning of October Kambos was getting to the end of its season. It was also incredibly windy so sitting on the beach was difficult as the sand blew everywhere. We did sit round the pool at the Sophia hotel on the free Sunbeds but we thought it was very poor cushions for the beds were not available and we hope the owners read this review and change this policy for next year. The other negative was the number of cats that roamed the hotel who were regularly fed by the ";Mrs Sophia";. Sometimes you wondered who were most important the cats or the guests and if you do not like cats then you will have a problem staying here. There were lots of good points about the hotel the rooms were adequate with a television being cleaned most days, the staff always had a smile for you and the poolside bar was a lovely focal point to socialise with the other guests. Also for us it was wonderful no children staying here which meant peace and quite. Kambos is very much a couples resort rather than a family one.There are some excellent tavernas here and one of two low key bars but no bus service so car hire is recommended to explore the island. The roads are very hilly and bendy. Apart for the little shortcomings overall we thought the Sophia was good value for money.


Overall Rating

Very Good Hotel

Overall Rating

Excellent Resort
Kambos / Votsalakia  >  Agrilionas Aparthotel

Travel Date: September 06

Submitted in October 2006 by: Dave and Lynn Shipstone Buxton Derbys

Operator: Manos

Accomadation was very good, bins emptied every other day, towels changed every other day and sheets twice a week. The pool was lovely and never over crowded our apt overlooked the pool in fact it was the one in the brochure picture. The beach was lovely a m...

Accomadation was very good, bins emptied every other day, towels changed every other day and sheets twice a week. The pool was lovely and never over crowded our apt overlooked the pool in fact it was the one in the brochure picture. The beach was lovely a mixture of sand and shingle but only a very short walk from apts.The supermarket next but one to apts was very well stocked with everything you needed and the lovely lady also rented out her sunbeds and umbrellas on the beach over the road for 5euros,(2beds and 1 Brolly).

All the tavernas were good we didnt have a bad meal in any we tried but we found Chesters was the best as it seemed a little more upmarket than the others and the prices were on a par with allthe others. The Blue Bucket and Finnikers with the Palm tree right in the middle were also very good as was Georges and Nostos they were all a lovely stroll from the apts about 15 mins but after you had had a big meal was nice to walk back,and plenty of shops on the way.We found the New Center bar about 2 mins from apt very good quite noisy as it had 2 big screens to watch football, but Paraschos the owner had the sound turned down and played 60's music in the background,we met up with other people every night for a drink but if you went home early it wasnt noisy in the apt.

We hired a car for 3 days from Hermes rent a car, Stefanos was very helpful they have 2 offices in the resort one very near the rooms but the other on the way to resturants which stefanos manned,we went all over the island and saw some lovely places very mountainous but very scenic,we went to Pythagoreio and Samos town, went to the Potami waterfalls and Karvalasi, buses are very limited but the taxi service is very good and they have a price list so you know exactly what your paying,it was 5 euros into ornos which is the port for Marathokampos lovely little place for a morning or go in at night for a meal. We also did the famous Captains BBQ well famous in the area it was a brilliant day and the food delicious it is advertised all round the resort and is the same price with Manos who we booked with, well worth going on.It can be a very windy island but as it was so hot it was very welcome we only had one very bad day for the wind.

All in All we had a fab holiday.


Overall Rating

Poor Hotel

Overall Rating

Good Resort
Kambos / Votsalakia  >  Pelagos Apartments

Travel Date: September 06

Submitted in October 2006 by: P + J Hardman - Sheffield

Operator: Other

It's easy to see why Thomson ";dropped"; these apts from their 2006 brochure, and apparently they wont be in Kosmar's 2007 brochure.

Briefly, the accomodation (room 37) was easily the poorest we've ever stayed in in Greece (We've been using Kosmar f...

It's easy to see why Thomson ";dropped"; these apts from their 2006 brochure, and apparently they wont be in Kosmar's 2007 brochure.

Briefly, the accomodation (room 37) was easily the poorest we've ever stayed in in Greece (We've been using Kosmar for the last 8 years)The rooms on first inspection seemed ok, nice and big and airy, but the bathroom.....well, to start.... a lethally sharp glass shelf right next to the shower tray is not up to modern health and safety standards, especially with no shower curtain to stop the floor becomming the slipperiest i've ever encountered, the shower head attachment (broken) and again lethally sharp, You literally have to undress to use the toilet (unless you like your clothes/underwear soaking wet. There were only hand towels provided to dry-off with.

The beds were infested with bed bugs...the rooms themselves had ";RIVERS"; of ants parading through them up and down walls and also on the food preparation areas. At night the lights around the pool were permanently switched off, which wasnt so bad, except that the owner ";Hosed down the pool/patio area along with the stairs (marble) turning all guests into budding Torvil and Deans.

Around the pool were open service hatches/hose pipes etc etc just left in the walk ways, Apart from that it was just ";peachey";. And before you ask....No we didnt complain, But this is only a word of warning to those of you with kids, think twice before you book the Pelagos Apts. Otherwise we found the resort/beaches/food/tavernas pretty much as, has already been described previously. Very Good.

Hermes car rental was easily the best deal (approx 308 euros for 11 days) FULLY INSURED with NO Hidden Clauses for a new Fiat Panda 1.3 5 door a/c. The Guy was so helpful and honest. There is a fairly quiet music bar, can't remember its name, but it's across from a fast food place (Called Mc Bon's) The couple that run the place make the best Pina Colada's in the world, they're amazing, ps watch out for his homemade firewater that he gives you a taste of....Oh my God...it's eye-watering. We also found some of the ";REAL"; Greek hospitality on Samos that is only hinted at on other Greek islands.

All in all Samos is great, The Pelagos Apts ???? Well, I'll leave you to make up your own minds.


Overall Rating

Very Good Hotel

Overall Rating

Excellent Resort
Kokkari  >  Hotel Venus

Travel Date: September 06

Submitted in October 2006 by: Paul Maltby - Nottingham .

Operator: Thomson

Overall an excellent holiday.

A really nice GREEK resort.Not loud or brash,just plenty of local tavernas serving really good food and a handfull of bars around the village full of chilled out tourists and very friendly locals. This is not a place for...

Overall an excellent holiday.

A really nice GREEK resort.Not loud or brash,just plenty of local tavernas serving really good food and a handfull of bars around the village full of chilled out tourists and very friendly locals. This is not a place for the party crowd, or beach gods. Most people here spend thier days out walking around this scenic island then enjoying thier meal in a relaxed setting.

The Hotel Venus lives up to its high (small and friendly) rating. The rooms ARE small but very clean and the staff are very friedly. The pool is clean and there are plenty of sunbeds, the snack bar is good and you don't get ripped off for the drinks and food. The only note of warning is book a balcony room, as none balcony room are in the attic and are said to be very, very, very small! P.S If you get chance, make sure to take at least one meal at the BASCILICA at the far end of the harbour/waterfront, GREAT food.


Overall Rating

Good Hotel

Overall Rating

Very Good Resort
Kambos / Votsalakia  >  Hotel Sofia

Travel Date: September 06

Submitted in October 2006 by: Pauka and Jonathan 51 ;53 Harpenden

Operator: Other

Th Sophia Hotel was a pleasant 2 star hotel ideally located offset from the main road but only 2 minutes from the beach and nearest tavernas. The rooms perhaps could have been brighter with not much of a view and a bathroom with all the usual Greek plumbing...

Th Sophia Hotel was a pleasant 2 star hotel ideally located offset from the main road but only 2 minutes from the beach and nearest tavernas. The rooms perhaps could have been brighter with not much of a view and a bathroom with all the usual Greek plumbing problems. But otherwise breakfast was different every day although there was no choice. An excellent pollside bar, the staff were all friendly and Kambos was a great place to chillout. Lovely surrounding scenery and good for walking.

Car hire is recommended. The resort is not ideal for family holidays as the children are likely to get bored. No fast food outlets and only a couple oflow key music bars. One world of warning the owners of the Sophia Hotel have adopted lots of cats and if you do not like cats you may find them a nuisance.

All round a nice stress breaking holiday.


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