A Scorpion In My Slipper

Marjory, Jim and Wallace fighting off pesky black scorpions in their house rental in the Mani

WHEN we left the comfort of our Scottish village for a long odyssey in Greece, we expected tricky situations now and then, but we never anticipated loads of scorpions sharing our Greek abodes with us. And other trials were equally disconcerting and scary. All part of having an adventure in a hot location? Absolutely, but only up to a point.

In the clutch of rural houses we rented in the southern Peloponnese for four years, there were things we never imagined: finding the bones of a recently slaughtered cow in the huge refuse bin across the road from the house; kounavia (like pine martins) and rats in the attic roof space of one old house, doing circuit training on the bedroom ceiling every night; one petulant Greek neighbour regularly shooting his rifle at nearby almond trees in pursuit of songbirds. The list could go on and on. And it gave me plenty of material for my Greek travel memoirs and funny tales to dine out on much later.

Wallace the Jack Russell was not amused by scorpion incursions and tended to head for the hills

But the scorpions were by far the creepiest interlopers. In the Mani (the middle peninsula of the three that hang down from the southern mainland), the black scorpion is prevalent. Though often not as noxious as the beige variety, it is still capable of a toxic nip. They plagued us in almost all our houses, hiding under household objects, in slippers, under the bed, in the shower recess, or sitting on the front door step – ringing the bell, if they could actually reach. Our Jack Russell terrier Wallace ran a mile when he saw them, and so would we, except we didn’t want to turn our backs on them. (See my book extract).

When we complained to our various landlords about critter infestations, they were often indifferent: a shrug, an arm wave, a comical grimace. One genial Brit in our first year took delight in saying: ‘Well this is Greece, not Kew Gardens.” Indeed.

While we adore Greece, it is also a place where things are unpredictable, chaotic, bureaucratic, downright illegal too at times. Some mash-ups you could sort, some you couldn’t.

Often we had to turn a blind eye to some rural shenanigans, like one neighbour who organised a small tanker truck to siphon out his large vothros pit (septic tank), but then ordered the driver to empty the sewage over another neighbour’s olive grove somewhat further away, instead of taking it away. Why? To save on transport costs? A sniffy act of revenge? Who knows? It was an olive grove we sometimes walked through with the dog. Not any more after the effluent dispersal. Even Greeks themselves encountering weird happenings would shrug: “This is Greece. Nothing goes to plan.”

But maybe that’s the appeal of living in Greece, the idea that every day brings you an experience you’ve never had in your life before. And isn’t that what adventure is all about, going well beyond your comfort zone and maybe learning a thing or two in the process, or being mortally zapped by a petulant scorpion, viper, kounavi, or the odd, disgruntled expat?

In the interest of balance, however, we also had very many memorable and entertaining experiences and the opportunity to befriend warm, generous and eccentric Greeks, who also featured in abundance in my books. Our four-year odyssey (three years in the Mani, one in Koroni, Messinia) ended up being one of the best things my husband Jim and I had done in our lives.

My first book about our adventures, Things Can Only Get Feta, covered the first year of our odyssey and has regularly been in bestseller charts on Amazon. It is currently on an Amazon ebook promotion (99p) for December in the UK store. (see link below).

To get you in the mood, I’m sharing a short edited extract from the book, dealing with scorpion lodgers. I hope you enjoy it.

There’s A Scorpion In My Slipper

ONE afternoon, Jim came in from a walk with Wallace and found me crouched beside the open storage area under the stairs – motionless.

‘What are you doing there?’

‘Scorpion!’ I said, my voice as tight as a circus high-wire.

‘What’s it doing?’ he asked, taking Wallace’s lead off and shutting him in the bedroom.

‘What do you think it’s doing?’ I was soaked in sweat and my knees aching from crouching on floor tiles for 20 minutes. ‘Skulking in the corner, sending Tweets from its mobile phone?’

‘Very cute. Let me see.’ He crouched down beside me and I pointed to the black critter in the corner.

‘Holy Mother! It’s got an erection, if you see what I mean.’ Only a man can see a scorpion and think of sex. The poisonous black tail was certainly very up though, and jabbing in our direction.

I’ve been trying to keep an eye on him all this time. We can’t let him escape or we don’t know where he’ll end up.’

‘Okay, calm down. I’ll look for the insecticide,’ said Jim and he ran upstairs and rattled about in the kitchen cupboards. He took so long that I thought I’d faint.

When we first came to live in our hillside village, a few of the expats took great delight in winding us up about noxious critters– especially scorpions. And Desmond our landlord hadn’t helped matters at the beginning when he mentioned finding scorpions in the stonework here before renovation. I knew then that we were destined to meet this hideous creature that looks almost prehistoric – the outsized claws, the pitch-fork tail at the back; half-crab, half-devil.

We had heard a story from an English expat called Derek, who seemed to be something of a scorpion magnet, having been bitten twice in a matter of months. The second scorpion, beige-coloured and more deadly, bit him painfully on the stomach while he was lying in bed. Derek claimed the critter must have hidden in his pyjamas while they were hanging on the washing line earlier. His wife managed to get the scorpion into a jar for identification and it required a midnight scramble to Kalamata Hospital, where he was not in good shape – and neither was Derek. Placed on an antibiotic drip, he survived the attack.

We were warned by Desmond not to leave objects lying on the floor in the house for more than a few days because if scorpions did come into the house they would hide under them. This was the first time Desmond confessed to possible scorpion interlopers. I had been clearing out the space under the stairs and moved a gym bag that had been there for weeks when the scorpion skittered out.

Jim came running back down the stairs, a spray can in his hand. ‘Okay, let’s hit it with this,’ he said, and sprayed enough insecticide under the stairs to poleaxe a brown bear.

‘Thank God we got rid of that,’ he said, after disposing of the scorpion outside.

‘They travel in pairs, you know,” I told him, recalling something I’d read.

‘Nonsense, of course they don’t.’ But if there’s one rule in life it’s this: whenever you say a thing won’t happen, it generally does. A few days later I walked into the bedroom and screamed like a woman confronting a hooded intruder with a machete. Jim came running in.

‘What is it?’

‘There’s a scorpion in my slipper!’ I shouted. Crawling around the inside rim of my sheepskin slipper was another black scorpion, bigger than the first one, its tail up and quivering in my direction.

As it happens, I found a third black scorpion some weeks later, trying to crawl into a crack in the stonework around the front door. Only its long tail was hanging out. This was the biggest one yet. We started to live in fear of more of them.

We told Desmond later about our scorpion infestation. ‘You’ve been leaving objects on the floor for too long and not moving them around the house like I told you to,’ he muttered like some grand master of the telekinetic arts….

  • From the book Things Can Only Get Feta © Marjory McGinn

To buy a copy of Things Can Only Get Feta click on https://mybook.to/ThingsCanOnlyGetFeta

For more information about Marjory’s Greek memoirs and two novels set in Greece, please click on the Greek Books tab on her website https://www.bigfatgreekodyssey.com

Or on her Facebook author page: https://www.facebook.com/MarjoryMcGinnWrites

The author always loves to hear from readers on her website and reviews of books are also kindly appreciated.

Thanks for stopping by.

© All rights reserved. All text and photographs copyright of the authors 2010-2024. No content/text or photographs may be copied from the blog without the prior written permission of the authors. This applies to all posts on the blog.

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How does Wallace handle 15 minutes of fame? Madly, of course …

Wallace surfing caption here

Wallace’s surfing antics always draw an audience. 

IT was supposed to be a relaxing few hours at a long sandy beach near Koroni, in the Messinian peninsula.  It was around 32 degrees and steaming.

We picked the quiet end of the beach and couldn’t wait to jump in the water. Wallace wasn’t interested in trying out hang-five manoeuvres on his small red surfboard today but more intent on grabbing the board by its side handle and trying to swim to shore with it.

While we were engaged in a game of tug-of-war with Wallace and the board, two guys strolled along the sand and stared at our watery antics. They looked Greek and I assumed they’d probably never seen a Jack Russell terrier before.

Then one of them shouted in a London accent: “Hey, didn’t you write that book? Isn’t that Wallace?”

“You mean the Feta book?” I shouted back. Okay, I had to be sure.

They nodded. “We recognised Wallace straight away.”

Is Wallace so recognisably crazy, I thought? Obviously, yes! It gave us a good laugh anyway.

“We loved the book, by the way.” That bit was good at least.

The two boys were from the UK, staying at a nearby holiday villa, and had read the book a few months earlier.

“He’s so cute!” said the other guy. “We’ve got a Jack Russell as well.”

“Is he mad like Wallace?” I asked.

“He’s… em, quieter than Wallace.” Very diplomatic!

With impeccable timing Wallace decided to demonstrate crazy for a bit and ran up and down the shoreline with the surfboard clamped in his teeth. Kids were giggling and sunbathers running for cover. It’s exhausting for everyone really which is why we don’t take him to the beach very often. Wallace has always loved the beach and is a tireless swimmer. I suspect he also likes the attention.

Wallace out of sea caption

A Jack Russell terrier like Wallace is equally eccentric in the sea and on dry land

I think he always has. It’s in his genes! His Edinburgh breeder, Anne, told us recently that Wallace is related to Moose, the first Jack Russell to play Eddie in the US sitcom Frasier, after an American bought one of her dogs and took it over the pond. I used to watch Frasier regularly and fell in love with the dog. That’s why I always wanted one. What was I thinking?

Eddie dog in Frasier caption

Eddie the JRT terrier in Frasier 

“He’s just like he is in the book, isn’t he?” said one of the lads, chortling.

“Oh yes,” I sighed. “You bet.”

It’s always heartwarming to meet readers of Things Can Only Get Feta wherever they crop up and one of the great joys of being a writer. Wallace in particular has won quite a few hearts due to his appearance in the book. We recently met a lovely couple from Surrey who have a Jack Russell of their own and while on holiday in the southern Peloponnese, drove all the way from Kalamata to Koroni (over an hour’s drive) just to see Wallace. Overshadowed by a Jack Russell? It’s okay, I’ll get over it!!

The easy charm of Koroni

 

Wallace and Marjory at window caption

Wallace and Marjory looking at the world from a Greek window

 

We are currently based just outside Koroni in a small Greek house for the summer. It’s around 200 years old, with an archetypical style: white with blue shutters and shady balconies everywhere. It’s in a lovely location in an olive grove with distant views of the sea. In the garden we are growing tomatoes, peppers and aubergines. There are also clumps of oregano, mint and marathos, fennel growing nearby.

When the owner comes to strim the grounds, the air is full of fresh herby aromas. There are fig, lemon, orange, apricot and almond trees as well and several grapevines already drooping with fruit.

Garden at Koroni caption

Grapevines and roses in our Koroni garden

There are old rose bushes growing as well, planted by the owner’s grandmother, and it’s not hard to imagine how pleasant it would have once been here with the whole family gathered on the balcony enjoying one of the many light breezes that sweep up from the sea most afternoons and cool the tip of this peninsula.

As with most of rural Greece, there have been critters as well. Jim has already found two large scorpions in the garden and pulverised them, I’m afraid, with a breeze block. We also saw a snake slither under a metal baking tray beside the old fournos (woodfired oven) in the garden, while we were tidying up. Not sure what kind of snake it was (a deadly ochia, horn-nosed viper perhaps?) we made a hasty few calls to the owner who came along her brother, who was equipped with a long bamboo pole (snake sorting implement). He threw back the tray to reveal … well, a rather tiny snake, and not worthy of all the fuss we made about it. The family were very gracious about calling them out and we even got a short snake handling/despatching lesson, which I hope we’ll never need.

Koroni town caption

A view of Koroni town with its old castle and harbour through the olive groves

Koroni has proved to be a very friendly and laid-back town. This lower part of the peninsula (left hand one of the three southern prongs), facing the Ionian sea on one side and the Gulf of Messinia on the other, feels more like a Greek island at times rather than the mainland. It has a casual charm about it: a row of tavernas along the waterfront, as well as bars and cafes, while tucked away in the narrow backstreets that ascend to the old castle are traditional kafeneia, ouzeries, bread shops, general stores, and some nice churches as well. In my next blog I will feature some of our favourite places in Koroni.

Wally in pink caption

Wallace showing a more demure side to his personality 

Wallakos 

Wallace has been given a new name while we’ve been in Koroni. In the Mani, where we stayed for three years, he was called Vassie. But one of our lovely friends here, Stavroula, who is fond of dogs, decided to call him Wallakos, ‘little Wallace’, which is cute and we have started using it as well. But sometimes Big Wally seems more appropriate!

GREEK BOOK IN NORTH AMERICA

My book about living in the Mani, Things Can Only Get Feta (Bene Factum Publishing), is available in North America, paperback and Kindle. It’s available on Amazon.com and through Barnes & Noble and Longitude Books. Longitude kindly featured it last month in its June Newsletter and on its blog page called A Favourite Spot. If you read the book and like it, please think about putting a small review on Amazon. It will be much appreciated. Thanks to all the North American readers for your support.

For details about the book and other places to buy it and for reviews and articles, please visit our Big Fat Greek Odyssey website, book page

Visit Amazon to buy the book (Kindle version – new edition). A new edition of the paperback will also be available shortly.

Thanks for stopping by and your comments on the blog are always appreciated.

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© All rights reserved. Text and photographs copyright of the authors 2014. No content/text or photographs may be copied from the blog without the prior written permission of the authors. This applies to all posts on the blog.



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