Luxe Beat Magazine NOVEMBER 2014 | Page 23

Travel Nearby is the Myknonian Folklore Museum, displaying period furniture (most from the 19th century) that gives a sense of how middle class residents lived. Also here: tools, weapons, lighting devices, tapestries, ceramics, photographs and related artifacts. Facing the old harbor is the Archaeological Museum, which houses collections from various excavations. These include funerary statues and grave stelae, pottery, clay figurines, jewelry and small objects – all dating from the 2nd and 1st centuries B.C. Of special interest is a large relief from the 7th century B.C., decorated with scenes from the capture of Troy: the descent of Greeks from the wooden horse and warriors attacking women and children. Our favorite stroll was through photogenic Little Venice, so named for the medieval houses with balconies that overhang the water. Pirates frequented Mykonos during the 16th and 17th century, and it’s believed that they loaded and unloaded their booty in this area. We saw boutiques, restaurants and cafés – and Petros Pelican, the Mykonos mascot. The first Petros was rescued after a storm in 1954 and lived on the island for more than 30 years. When he died, the loss was felt so deeply that a replacement was soon found – and a tradition was established. In the center of town, in the area known as Tria Pigadia, was the Aegean Maritime Museum, where exhibits include models of ships from the pre-Minoan period to the early 20th century, navigational equipment, maps, a collection of ancient rare coins with nautical subjects and thousands of rare books. In the garden are reproductions of ancient gravestones from Delos and Mykonos related to shipwrecks and sailors lost at sea. neighboring Music Café. Near the museum, our guide pointed out the famous Tria Pigadia, the three wells for which the area is named. According to legend, if a virgin were to drink from all three wells, she would find a husband; a more recent story says that if a visitor drinks from the vV