CRETE Magazines Oct. 2014 | Page 19

Ε Ξ Ω ΦΥΛ Λ Ο the United States. A special gift arrives in late July from Gianna and Theodore Angelopoulos, who make a generous donation to the Samaria Foundation in support of the Walk. The final breakdown of the more than $25,500 raised by “Walk the Gorge” shows the following random statistics: 90.2% of the funds come via solicitations by Greek-American walkers 9.8% of the funds come via solicitations by non-Greek walkers 23.6% of the total is from donors with a Cretan and/or PAA connection 11.9% of the total is from Greek-American donors (non-Cretans) 35.5% of the total raised comes from the Greek-American community 64.5% of the total raised comes from the non-Greek-American community 22.1% of the total received via checks/cash donations 77.9% of the total received via online donations 7.7% of the total raised comes from PAA chapter donations A salute must go to the men, women and children who walked the Samaria Gorge as participants in the Walk the Gorge Fundraiser and whose dedication to the cause raised so much money for charities on Crete. Here is a list of those who registered: Elizabeth Billis; Shawn Custer; Kim Humphreys; Patria Kunde; Peter and Alexandra Manos and their daughter Christiana; Demetri Former PAA President Manousakis Mazacoufa; Rose Miller; Gloria entertains Gorge walkers with Moschona; Katina Nicolacakis, her stories about his family and the husband Jim Myers, and their chilwinery. dren Angelique and Victor; MaryAnn Somers; Ellen Sturgis; Tina Tzanakis; Mike Vlass; and Lynda Weaver. A well-deserved Άξιος! to each of them. It would be a wonderful testament to the volunteers within the PAA, the PYA and other pan-Cretan organizations if “Walk the Gorge” is embraced as a way to extend the philanthropic reach of the membership. The structure is there and the precedent has been set. All it takes is a commitment similar to what the original walkers—more than half of whom have no Cretan legacy—made in the summer of 2014. K The Samaria Gorge C arved out of the limestone, dolomite and marble rock of Crete’s White Mountains, the Samaria Gorge starts on the Omalos Plateau at Xyloskalo 4,025 feet (1,227 meters) above sea level and continues for approximately 9 miles (13.5 km) to its end. There is another 2 miles (3.2 km) of flat, open plain from the end of the national park before reaching the village of Agia Roumeli on the Lybian Sea, which runs along the southern coast of the island. The total distance from Xyloskalo to the village is approximately 11 miles (18 km). According to Greek mythology, one of the Titans living on Crete slashed the land with his knife to create the Gorge. According to another story from the ancients, Cretan-born Zeus placed his throne atop Mt. Gygilos, which guards the entrance of the Gorge and the huge boulders at the foot of the mountain are the result of his thunderbolts . . . and, if these stories are to be believed, they are the same rocks that lie along the river bed, which hikers make their way through the Gorge today. This part of Crete is marked with the imprint of the hands of time: natural processes, often violent and extreme such as catastrophic earthquakes, have molded the mountains and the seas, shaping the land of the Aegean and of Crete. The White Mountains of Crete, just like all the Greek mountain ranges, are just one link in a great chain of mountains created millions of years ago along with the alpine orogenesis, the process that built mountains from the Pyrenees to the Himalayas. Today, the Gorge is a protected area within the Samaria National Park, which was created in 1962. Since then, people across the globe have visited the Gorge for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hike it, marvel at its magnificence and explore its ancient geologic formations, rare forests and endangered plants and wild animals found nowhere else but in this part of Crete. K COVER STORY The t-shirt worn by all Walk the Gorge walkers and coveted by those who wish they had walked says it all. The full-length version of Demetrius Mazacoufa’s article can be found at www.pancretan.org. KPHTH | WWW.PANCRETAN.ORG 19