Caroline and myself enjoying our picnic dinner on the dam at Marathon
the large dam at the modern village of Marathon
me hugging the reconstructed pillar at the small archaeological site outside of MarathonWeek 6 has been just as busy, challenging, and rewarding as the first 5 weeks of the dig. It’s getting very hot here- near or over 100 degrees every day! But we are working hard and pushing through the heat until the end. At this point in the excavations, many of the diggers are getting tired and starting to think of home more and more often, and sometimes tensions can run high in the trenches! Soon, however, we will all start to think of the end of the dig, and the mood here will become more nostalgic. I can’t believe how fast the time is going by! It seems like each day I’m here goes faster and faster, so I’m searching for those moments of thick time when I can slow down and truly appreciate this journey.
This week was my fourth and last in the trench we call Beta Theta, and I finally hit my forte this week. All week I was digging in an area in Beta Theta West that seems to be part of a Byzantine era building, but we are still very unclear about what purpose the building would have served. I was digging on a shelf-like area that was mainly comprised of modern fill (like much of the dirt in Beta Theta). I found very little pottery, but I worked hard on the passes in my little area. Each time an excavator removes a layer of dirt from an area, it’s called a pass. Typically, passes are from 3-10cm in depth and ideally they are flat and the level is consistent throughout the entire area. Not to brag, but the passes I took in the shelf area of Beta Theta West were PERFECT! It seemed like every time one of my supervisors came by they commented on how beautiful my dirt was. It was cleanly swept, flat, and consistent in its depth. Although it was almost sterile (without any pottery), it was most certainly good-looking.
The reason I was so proud of this pass is because it served as a marker for the progress I’ve made since being here. When I first started digging, I had no idea what I was doing. I had never used a pick before, I didn’t know that we had to sweep our dirt and keep it clean and neat, and I didn’t know that the work would be so physically demanding. The passes I took during our first rotation were obviously the work of a beginning digger. But as time has passed, my skills as a digger have improved a great deal, unbeknownst to me until this week. To receive compliments from the supervisors in Beta Theta is no small accomplishment, either. Many diggers have expressed the feeling that Beta Theta is the most intense trench, especially because there is just so much dirt to move in such a short amount of time. Needless to say, my head has gotten a bit big this week- I’m a very proud digger!
This weekend was abnormally relaxing and there was a serious lack of misadventure compared to most of my weekends thus far in Greece. The latter phenomenon can be explained by the fact that my usual weekend travel companion, Kenny, ventured to Vienna this weekend, and for some reason I never have misadventures unless I’m with Kenny…Instead, this weekend I took day trips with friends on both Saturday and Sunday. My good friend, Caroline, has to leave next Wednesday, so she requested a day trip to a beach in Northern Attica (the region of Greece in which Athens is located) on Saturday. Unfortunately, about 10 minutes after we started driving the rental car it started to smell and stutter, and we had to push it back to the rental car agency…quite a site in the middle of bustling Athens. This may sound like the beginning of a misadventure, except that after we returned the faulty car the kindly Greek rental car man gave us a better car at no cost, and we were on our way successfully. Steve, Dwanna, Caroline, and myself ventured up to the northern part of Attica and found an unnamed beach where we spent the better part of our afternoon napping, swimming, and sunbathing, and afterwards we headed towards the modern village of Marathon. We saw a very small archaeological site there that was more of a memorial to an old temple. One pillar of the temple at Marathon had been re-erected and stood as a marker of the location of the ancient temple, but there wasn’t much else to the site. After taking some pictures on the pillar, we drove into the village and got a picnic dinner that we ate on top of the large dam in modern Marathon. It was a very relaxed, enjoyable day!
The next day Alice, her friend Pete, and I all took a day trip to another beach! We visited Lefkandi, the town where Alice and Caroline dig during the end of August through September. The beach here was absolutely wonderful because it was clean and there were no other tourists to be found- it was all local people! So I spent a second day napping, swimming, sunbathing, and picnicking on the beach. It was a very pleasant weekend.
Now that I’m hitting my stride in the trenches, it seems like 2 weeks is not enough time to continue digging! I’m enjoying every second I have in Athens (sweltering sauna that it is) and I’m trying to spend my weekends doing things that I really enjoy. For example, this weekend (in the +100 degree weather) there was no better place I could have been besides on the beach with my friends. I’ll start my final rotation soon, and then it’s all over! Hopefully the “beginning of the end” feeling won’t set in too soon- I still have a lot to do, see, and dig up before I can leave Greece and feel satisfied!
This week was my fourth and last in the trench we call Beta Theta, and I finally hit my forte this week. All week I was digging in an area in Beta Theta West that seems to be part of a Byzantine era building, but we are still very unclear about what purpose the building would have served. I was digging on a shelf-like area that was mainly comprised of modern fill (like much of the dirt in Beta Theta). I found very little pottery, but I worked hard on the passes in my little area. Each time an excavator removes a layer of dirt from an area, it’s called a pass. Typically, passes are from 3-10cm in depth and ideally they are flat and the level is consistent throughout the entire area. Not to brag, but the passes I took in the shelf area of Beta Theta West were PERFECT! It seemed like every time one of my supervisors came by they commented on how beautiful my dirt was. It was cleanly swept, flat, and consistent in its depth. Although it was almost sterile (without any pottery), it was most certainly good-looking.
The reason I was so proud of this pass is because it served as a marker for the progress I’ve made since being here. When I first started digging, I had no idea what I was doing. I had never used a pick before, I didn’t know that we had to sweep our dirt and keep it clean and neat, and I didn’t know that the work would be so physically demanding. The passes I took during our first rotation were obviously the work of a beginning digger. But as time has passed, my skills as a digger have improved a great deal, unbeknownst to me until this week. To receive compliments from the supervisors in Beta Theta is no small accomplishment, either. Many diggers have expressed the feeling that Beta Theta is the most intense trench, especially because there is just so much dirt to move in such a short amount of time. Needless to say, my head has gotten a bit big this week- I’m a very proud digger!
This weekend was abnormally relaxing and there was a serious lack of misadventure compared to most of my weekends thus far in Greece. The latter phenomenon can be explained by the fact that my usual weekend travel companion, Kenny, ventured to Vienna this weekend, and for some reason I never have misadventures unless I’m with Kenny…Instead, this weekend I took day trips with friends on both Saturday and Sunday. My good friend, Caroline, has to leave next Wednesday, so she requested a day trip to a beach in Northern Attica (the region of Greece in which Athens is located) on Saturday. Unfortunately, about 10 minutes after we started driving the rental car it started to smell and stutter, and we had to push it back to the rental car agency…quite a site in the middle of bustling Athens. This may sound like the beginning of a misadventure, except that after we returned the faulty car the kindly Greek rental car man gave us a better car at no cost, and we were on our way successfully. Steve, Dwanna, Caroline, and myself ventured up to the northern part of Attica and found an unnamed beach where we spent the better part of our afternoon napping, swimming, and sunbathing, and afterwards we headed towards the modern village of Marathon. We saw a very small archaeological site there that was more of a memorial to an old temple. One pillar of the temple at Marathon had been re-erected and stood as a marker of the location of the ancient temple, but there wasn’t much else to the site. After taking some pictures on the pillar, we drove into the village and got a picnic dinner that we ate on top of the large dam in modern Marathon. It was a very relaxed, enjoyable day!
The next day Alice, her friend Pete, and I all took a day trip to another beach! We visited Lefkandi, the town where Alice and Caroline dig during the end of August through September. The beach here was absolutely wonderful because it was clean and there were no other tourists to be found- it was all local people! So I spent a second day napping, swimming, sunbathing, and picnicking on the beach. It was a very pleasant weekend.
Now that I’m hitting my stride in the trenches, it seems like 2 weeks is not enough time to continue digging! I’m enjoying every second I have in Athens (sweltering sauna that it is) and I’m trying to spend my weekends doing things that I really enjoy. For example, this weekend (in the +100 degree weather) there was no better place I could have been besides on the beach with my friends. I’ll start my final rotation soon, and then it’s all over! Hopefully the “beginning of the end” feeling won’t set in too soon- I still have a lot to do, see, and dig up before I can leave Greece and feel satisfied!










































