Refuges are places where one feels protected. They may be the only human-made structures that settle into nature without disturbing it. Hidden near mountain slopes and forests, they were built to welcome tired walkers from the city, offering clear air and a kind of tranquility most people are, in one way or another, searching for.
These mountain refuges open onto a world far removed from everyday life, one that brings you into direct contact with the elements in all their force and beauty. Their walls hold the memory of hikers, climbers, and nature lovers, along with the scent of trahana, hot Greek coffee, and burnt wood.
Snow-covered, remote, essential, yet never truly lonely, they fill with backpacks and tents, with conversations and long glances cast toward the changing colors of the landscape. They hold the story you will tell by the fire, the book you will read by a window, the mountain water that will quench your thirst, and the pleasure of simple moments that arrive unannounced.
A refuge is all of that, and more. Unless you have experienced one, no description quite does it justice. From the rugged Vardousia range to the commanding peaks of Tymfi, from the mist of Dirfys to the remoteness of Agrafa and the proud ridgelines of Tzoumerka, these refuges remain where they have always been: patient, understated, and quietly waiting for the next person who will keep them company for a while.
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