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Saronic, Argolic & Athens sailing holidays
The Peloponnese - and with it the Argolida - was once linked to Attica by the Isthmus of
Corinth and now breached by the Corinth Canal and is a vast and mountainous peninsula that
was known in the Middle Ages as Morea. These two landmasses enclose the Saronic Gulf,
which is by far the most famous sailing and charter area in Greece due to its proximity to Athens.
A second excellent yachting area is the Argolic Gulf (see map below).
Methoni Fortress
The Peloponnese landmass itself is made up of high peaks, inland basins caused by subsidence
and irrigated coastal plains.
At the centre, between 600m and 800m - above sea level, lie the pasture lands of Arcadia.
The eastern coastal plain, the Argolida, Argolis or Argolid, which is dominated by the citadels of Argos and Mycenae,
is devoted to cereals, as well as orchards and market gardens.
The southern coast is split into three promontories; the longest, an extension of the Taygetos massif, is Mani ,
a wild limestone region inhabited by people of spirit.
Taygetos is flanked by alluvial plains, free from winter frost: Lakonia round Sparta and Messinia round Kalamata.
The smiling fields produce grain and early vegetables while the figs and olives of Kalamata are well known for their quality.
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