A Response to a Reaction by Ian Shires to our
Report on the Deterioration of Camping Finikes
Barry and Margaret Williamson
24 March 2015
Our Report on Camping Finikes can be found at:
http://www.magbaztravels.com/content/view/1650/375/
Ian Shires is staying at Camping Finikes and he makes the following
comments in his blog, well down a long article at:
http://bessyonthemove.weebly.com/greece-2015.html
This is a verbatim copy of Ian's writing:
“Sadly the couple
from one motorhome took it upon themselves to publicly criticize the camp and
it's owner in a very vicious and malicious way.
They said that for
the money the camper gets a small muddy parking spot and the use of unheated
and unhygienic toilets and showers. “The first shower we were assigned had
a resident snail and a pile of its droppings.” They went on to say that
door catches were not working, kitchens were dirty, a freezer caught fire,
fresh eggs cost €2.40 for 6, the bar is not open for socializing. We could go on...
they did.
To misquote
Shakespeare, “Methinks they doth protest too much”
To prove we are
also well educated, the real quotation from Hamlet Act 3, scene 2 is: "The
lady doth protest too much, methinks.”
We feel compelled
to balance those comments from our own experience.
First of all the
camp is a Summer campsite. That is why the floors are tiled and there are
windows in the showers. It is also why the kitchens have no doors. Yes a
freezer did catch fire... just as any other electrical equipment could.
Everyone was generously compensated and the following day a new freezer was
installed.
In the local shop,
free-range eggs are on sale at €0.70 each. That makes them about double the
price of the camp eggs! Eggs from Poland, or wherever, are of course cheaper...
older but cheaper.
One day there was
a rather pretty frog in our toilet. We thought this was funny and something to
rejoice about.
In winter people
are expected to clean their own toilets and showers. By the way, we have not
found another campsite in Europe where you get your own toilet AND shower.
Parts of the camp
are muddy when it rains. This is not surprising when you know the amount of
rain we have had this winter in Greece. Luckily the gravel roads allow the
water to drain and within a day they are dry again.
We have
photographic evidence that this campsite has not changed at all since we first
came here six years ago.
Why suddenly start
criticising it now. And why the malicious implications about the campsite
owner. They cannot have any proof about their accusations.
We will leave it
here with a comment that other campers have read their remarks and are
disgusted with their attitude.”
This is our reply:
Rather than being 'the couple from one motorhome', we regret that Ian
didn't give our names and a link to the original 'Report on the Deterioration
of Camping Finikes' which is on our own website. His relatively few readers
would then have had the opportunity to understand that this Report was written
by a couple with 20 years (the anniversary is tomorrow) of experience of
continuous travel by motorhome, bicycle, motorbike, van, caravan, train, ship
and aeroplane. This includes using campsites in every country of Europe, in
Morocco,Tunisia and Turkey, and on three one-year round-the-world journeys. We
have also stayed on every campsite in Greece that is open in winter, including extended
periods at Camping Finikes in Finikounda where we were its very first winter
campers.
'Other campers' at Camping Finikes are said by Ian to have read our
'remarks', but does this include the full report? If so then they, unlike Ian,
should have realised that the main burden of our writing was aimed at illegal
financial and employment activity at Finikes, not just the symptoms of poor
investment. Over half of our Report was focussed on the crackdown by Greece's
new government on tax avoidance and the use of 'black labour', rather than concern
with a handful of campers exploiting Greece's alarming economic decline by finding
a cheap place to stay for the winter, along with cheap diesel and a good
exchange rate. Cheap-skaters on the thin ice of a collapsing economy?
Ian does not identify 'other campers' at Camping Finikes by ethnicity
or number. We have no such problem: when we stayed at Camping Triton II (near
Nafplio), several weeks after leaving Finikounda, no less than 14 campers (10
German and 4 Dutch) told us that they had also camped at Finikes. Some of them were
regulars, who intended to stay until April but left because of the conditions
we describe in the Report. These conversations at Triton II were informal
discussions, initiated by them over a number of interactions in the laundry,
kitchen, etc. Speaking in German (except for the Dutch), they were motorhomers
and caravanners who did not know our website, had not read our Report, had not
heard our opinion. All said that they would not be returning to Finikes. By
coincidence, a group of three of their vehicles left Finikes exactly when we
did, two days before New Year.
Camping Triton II is everything that Finikes is not. There is a
resident owner/manager who speaks both English and German and is always
available. The pitches are wide with hardstanding, the roads paved and drained.
It is well lit at night, inside and outside. The trees are high enough and well
enough doctored to present no problem. Shade is provided in summer (but not in
winter!) by removable awnings on a permanent metal framework. Every pitch has a
hook-up point (with safety cut-outs) and a tap. The modern toilets and showers
are cleaned every day and every door locks; the showers have instant hot water,
as do the taps at the kitchen and laundry sinks. The hygienic kitchen contains
an industrial sized fridge and a freezer for use by the campers, as well as gas
rings for cooking under a range with lights and extractor fan. The laundry has
a fast, industrial-size, good quality washing machine and drier.
The cost is €300 for a month or £7.25 a day (less than Camping Finikes)
and this includes multi-point free WiFi throughout the camp. There are even further
reductions for longer stays.
In defending Finikes, Ian makes no mention of the lack of receipts, the
long absences of the Greek owner/manager (in Athens or in Munich) and, most
particularly, of the parlous position of the 'English Winter Guardian' (EWG)
who is illegally left in change. Did Ian ever speak to the EWG about conditions
on the campsite? Was Ian ever even interested in the EWG's experience and
opinion? Everything we wrote in our Report about conditions at Finikes followed
from the failing interest of the Greek owner in the site, from which he
preferred to make money, rather investing in its improvement. In
business-speak, this is called a 'cash cow' or 'milking the cows'. Perhaps in
Greece this should be changed to 'goats'?
Admittedly, some Greek campsites open in winter do not meet the
standards that are expected in western Europe. However, unlike Finikes all the
campsites we know do have a resident owner, or a properly appointed and paid
manager, to deal with customer payments, issue receipts and take action if
there were complaints. The campsites do not have an absentee owner leaving an
illegal foreign worker unofficially in charge.
Everything we wrote about the campsite was discussed with the English
Winter Guardian; indeed some of the points and experiences came from him.
We must refute a couple of Ian's comments. If he doesn't know another
campsite in Europe with individual toilets and showers, it's simply because he
doesn't know many campsites. We could point him to sites with such facilities
in Germany, Sicily, Spain, Scandinavia … and where campers are not expected to
clean the toilets and empty their own bins of used toilet paper. Where do they
put this waste at Finikes?
As to the eggs, many campers who saw the disgusting and very restricted
'free range' conditions at Finikes refused to buy them at any price, resulting
in a glut that were by no means fresh. But these are mere details, like Ian's
assertion that the gravel roads soon dried (they didn't). That doesn't cover
the soft pitches – but the water did. Mud, puddles and lack of hygiene were major
complaints of the Germans and Dutch who left.
Overall Ian ignores most of the points we made in our Report. For some unknown
reason, he simply makes excuses for the poor conditions. This is, of course,
the kind of attitude that has led Greece into the crisis it finds itself in
today: ignoring the major problems and excusing the minor ones!
Finally, in using the Shakespearian quotation, 'The lady doth protest
too much, methinks' (having first corrected himself), Ian becomes the 'me' in
the 'methinks' and thereby puts himself in the role of the speaker, Queen
Gertrude, the mother of Hamlet. Since the 'lady' in the quote is acting the
part of Gertrude in the play-within-a-play, watched by the real Gertrude, Ian
may be talking to himself, or at least to an imagery self. Nor does he seem to
realise that the meaning of words changes with time. The modern usage of the
word 'protest' is clear enough, but in Shakespeare's days it was nearer to the
modern usage of 'vow', 'affirm' and 'declare solemnly'.
If we did that 'too much', we take it as a compliment! Can it be that a
little education is a dangerous thing?
Here's a picture from Ian's own website showing his closest
collaborators planning their next foray into controversy, perhaps this time taking
on what they call the 'nicotine police'.

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