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Kathará Dheftéra - Clean Monday
Seafood for Clean MondayKathará Dheftéra - Clean Monday follows immediately after the Sunday that Carnival lands on and therefore the date changes each year depending upon when the Greek Orthodox Easter lands.
This is the first day of Lent and the start of the fasting period. The Orthodox Church maintains the rules that during the seven weeks of Lent no meat or fish (that is, fish with backbones) should be eaten. Also no animal products such as milk, cheese, butter and eggs. Oil and wine should be omitted too, except on a Saturday and Sunday. This is why it is known as Clean Monday because it's the first day of a complete purge at the start of Lent.
Home made kites for Clean MondayEven if the majority do not seem to adhere to these rules for the whole seven week period, Clean Monday is definitely a day for special Lenten food.
Families take to the hills with picnics of octopus, squid, taramasalata, olives, spring onions, radishes and lettuce. Especially baked on this day is a large, flat loaf called ‘Lagána’ and this is used to dip in to the taramasalata.
Greek Dancing and Plate SmashingThe other special activity on this day is to fly kites from the top of the hills. And on Hydra families head for the corner of the coast road that over looks Vlichos beach where there are excellent thermals to life the kites. Added incentive to go to Vlichos for the day is "Marina's Taverna" which serves all the right food and gives a party every year with lots of traditional Greek dancing including, rarely seen these days, unorchestrated plate smashing.
Kites have traditionally been handmade, (although shop-bought kites are definitely on the increase) and the Greek regulation kite is hexagonal. Narrow strips of wood are used and tied together in the middle by string. A large piece of paper is then stuck to the hexagonal shape and individually decorated. Fringes and tails of coloured shiny paper are then added and an extremely long ball of string attached. So by early afternoon, wind permitting, kites of every colour are to be seen from far and wide.