Hello Greece .... time for an Internet Reality Check

in #travel7 years ago

We now know that our journeys take much longer than we anticipate. If we know we want to arrive at our destination in the daylight and we know that we will want to have a sail even in very light winds, it will increase our traveling time by quite a few hours. Sailing to Greece from Italy was no exception, we had to have the engines on quite a lot of the journey as the wind just refused to blow more than 10 knots.
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Sailing in quiet seas is only restful if you are not wishing to rush anywhere. Learning to relax and slow down is, I have decided, part of this journey, the journey of life. Lilly was loving the boat, the space, the warmth and the breeze up at the front of the boat. She had really made herself at home.

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We were heading for Gouvia in Corfu. A large marina with port police so we could check into the country. This time, we hoped for an easy time. The sail was easy, we were getting used to the overnighters by now. We saw a few dolphins but not a lot of other wildlife as we headed into Greek waters. We arrived around lunchtime and decided to top up with fuel before getting into the marina. This we did, surprised that the diesel was more money than Italy, and both more than Falmouth (which is really overpriced)…. We topped up the tanks and radioed in to be escorted to a berth.

Our timing was not good, the marina was hosting a large race and had no room for us. I was secretly a bit glad because the weather was really hot and being crammed in next to lots of people without a breeze I find rather claustrophobic. We saw there were quite a few boats anchored outside the marina in a little bay. Perfect … lots of room and beautifully clear water. Hurray … we could swim at last.

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What a bonus! the anchorage was perfect. We could walk the dog on a quiet part of the town, we could dinghy into the marina and the town for supplies, we could call in at the chandlery. This was a top spot. We had arrived in Greece and already everything looked promising. That first swim was heaven!

We spent the next few days doing some boat jobs. Mending the loos (by now both had broken), checking equipment, making mosquito defences, checking the internet in preparation for work and of course cleaning and sweeping. (We now have the daily pleasure of brushing up dog hair … always amazes me how much hair a short haired dog can produce).

We sailed around the corner to Corfu town to go and find out about buying a local sim for the phones and our internet router. Corfu town has beautiful buildings, pavements, squares and lots of trees and park areas. It was a shame that on the Saturday we arrived every 100 yards there were piles of rubbish around the bins, whin I say piles I mean mountains of rubbish around the bins. We wondered how long the rubbish had been there. It was very different to Falmouth, can you imagine piles of bin bags…. The seagulls would have a field day. Luckily there didn’t seam to be any rubbish loving gulls around or even cats scrabbling after the rubbish. We hoped this was not a sign of the times (the rubbish not the lack of gulls or cats.

The next day was a Sunday and walking Lilly in the morning we realised the rubbish had gone. Wow, they must have been working all night to clear that lot. We were amazed and delighted.

Buying data for our internet router was not an easy process. It actually took me 3 days to buy something … and then it didn’t work in the router. By this time we had begun to realise our internet usage was going to have to change dramatically.

In the UK we had a great “all you can eat’ data package from THREE. For £23 we had had as much internet as we wanted in our router. This provided us and our appliances (2 computer, 2 iPads and 2 phones) with internet. We had no idea how much we used.

We knew that when we were abroad Three would restrict our data to 13gb. This sounded plenty but after 2 weeks it had ran out. And we hadn’t watched any youtube videos. In the UK whilst planning our trip, we had been watching 2 or 3 youtube videos a night (we don’t have a television). We had found lots of great videos of people sailing around the world, families, friends, couples, this had really put fire into our plans, feeding the dream, helping us learn about all of the things we would need for our own mini adventure.

I rang Three to ask how much data we usually used. I was astounded. We would quite easily use 100gb a month. It was not surprising that 13gb had run out. Even without the videos. How were we going to manage?

With one router sim and two phone sims I then realised we could have 39gb a month on our current plans. But they informed me that after 2 months of continual use abroad they would stop our plans. If we were to come back to the UK it would reset it and our allowance would start again. So in the long term this was not going to work anyway, we had to find another solution.

I investigated the local companies, Wind, Cosmote and Vodafone. The best I could find was €80 for 40gb and you can top up on line. We bought one but then found we couldn’t use it in the router. We could use it in the phones and we could tether the computer to it but it was less than satisfactory. I then realised I could buy a usb data sim for the same money. This would work for my computer so we just needed to decide what would be the best way forward for the phones and would we be able to have something in the router that would allow Paul to use his iPad with all of our weather and navigation apps.

We had never even considered this being an issue. We had always taken our internet for granted. I just can’t imagine life with restricted access. I just wonder how people can watch tv on their phones???

As I work online it is important that I did find a solution. No solution means no mini adventure .... so I wasn't going to except no for an answer. We had come this far I wasn't going to be defeated by an internet issue.

I knew that Vodafone did a 50gb sim in the UK but the best I could get from Vodafone in Greece was 6gb (for about the same money).

We have not yet got our final solution to this problem … I will keep you updated. We are trialling various methods, we will see how things go. For now I am allowed 2 x 1 hour computer sessions a day plus my video calls for work. What is annoying is I have unlimited phone calls and unlimited texts, which I hardly use any of, why I cant have unlimited data I just don’t know. We have a router with a big antenna which we currently cant use. Luckily everywhere where we have stayed has had good 3g usage. I am positive the solution is just around the corner and I am just about to bump into it!

Meanwhile we are enjoying the swimming, the fresh tomatoes and the hot weather. Do you know, I haven't had cold feet in well over a month.

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Sailing from Italy to Greece sounds like a dream! Lilly seems to enjoy herself so much in the sun and beautiful scenery.

I'm sure you'll be able to sort the troubles with the wifi router out, what will be your destination after Greece?

I've resteemed your post! Keep up the good work!

Hi Traveleranna,
We think we will probably stay in Greece and Turkey for the next couple of years. There is so much to see and do. We love the island hopping and just living slowly!

That sounds divine! Living the dream!

Getting tens, or even hundreds of GB/month over ordinary cellphone plans will probably be expensive no matter what country you buy the SIM in. You should monitor the usage and figure out what's stealing most bandwidth.

Video meetings probably eat a lot. Is it really needed to use two-way video in the meetings? We often turn off video and mute the sound when we don't have anything to say, even when participants are sitting on unlimited bandwidth. If you absolutely must have the video on, try at least to sit as still as possible.

Other things that shouldn't eat a lot of bandwidth may sometimes do ... like, fetching mail should be really light-weight, particularly when using IMAP, but somehow my previous phone was eating up the quotas simply by continuously checking for new mail.

Also, go to land and find hotspots for getting the most bandwidth-intensive tasks done.

According to the new "roam-as-home"-rules, it should be possible to use the home provider, the exception is if you have moved abroad and is obviously abusing the "roam-as-home"-rules. Two months ... well, perhaps that's within the framework, but sounds a bit harsh if you ask me. Get two SIM-cards and send one of them to a friend in the UK every month to "refresh" the quotas.

I'm sure there exists some smart solutions for IP-over-phone or IP-over-SMS that one can (ab)use ... :-)

Hi Tobixen, I have just signed up to Uk Vodafone business and have got 100gb for £36 . .... the best vodafone would do for me in Greece was 6gb for €20 .... such a big difference! I am hoping they will let me run with it.

I think 100gb for £36 is pretty amazing, I should consider becoming a UK Vodafone business customer :-) I can well understand that they want to put strict limits on long-time-roaming. Perhaps the idea on having two subscriptions and sending the SIM-card by mail to some friend in the UK who could use it a bit there would be an idea? :-)

yes exactly, what is annoying though is that I first signed up to this as a customer, not as a business, it was going to cost me £60 a month, so i thought i would check if business would do a larger sim. They don't but they will give you 40% discount. Why don't they tell people about this?????

Phone calls and sms'es are for free while data is expensive nowadays due to the increased demand for data. The operators earn their profit by taxing the data, while there is little to earn on being competitive on phone calls or SMSes nowadays.

It used to be opposite, first time I had a phone I spent really lots of money on SMS'es until I discovered they were bloody expensive! Some few hundred bytes of data, that ought to be almost for free to send, right? :-)

It is such a mine field ... i don't know how long it will be until data is a better price.

i read your all blog posts . I also love to travel but mostly in India.i am inviting you to come India and explore the beauty of India too. welcome friend.

thank you, would love to, but we have said that while we have Lilly we will stay in Europe ... although she is really loving the sailing so that might change I guess. Thank you for reading my blogs.