General Info |

Air Junkies in Paradise
When most people think of a holiday in Greece, they think of the islands. But I’d been there and done that. I wanted to get a taste of the real Greece, so I started researching mainland Greece. The Peloponnese, a large peninsula in southern Greece that covers about 8,300 square miles, is known as "the heart and soul of Greece." The Peloponnese is rich in history and natural beauty. It has a mountainous interior, an enchanting coastline and charming villages. With dry, warm summers, mild sea breezes, good food, a fascinating culture, friendly people and plenty of opportunities for outdoor recreation, including paragliding, the Peloponnese has everything I look for in a vacation destination.
Last year, the Peloponnese suffered devastating wildfires that will impact of the region for many years, but that didn’t deter me. I Googled "paragliding and Peloponnese" and found Flying Paradise at the top of the list. Paradise is in the eye of the beholder, so I was a bit skeptical about Flying Paradise. But I started an email correspondence with Christophe Dubois, the owner of Flying Paradise, and I was so impressed with how responsive and helpful he was, that I bought two tickets to paradise.
Base camp for Flying Paradise is Epidavros, a small village on the Aegean Sea, about eighty miles southwest of Athens. There are literally hundreds of archeological sites in the area. But Epidavros is most famous for the fascinating Asclepios archeological site, a renowned healing center, built in the 4th century B.C. The ancient amphitheater at Asclepios seats 14,000 and the view, aesthetics and acoustics of the theater are remarkable. From the top row of the theatre, you can actually hear the unamplified sound of a match struck at center stage. What a thrill is to get a birds-eye view of the site as you fly over it under a paraglider.
Flying Paradise operates out of the Hotel Apollon, a relatively small hotel on a quiet beach, with views of the mountains and the sea. The hotel is modern, clean and comfortable. The restaurant serves great food and the bar is open for drinks and coffee at all hours of the day or night. They even have shaded lawns that are perfect for folding your paraglider. The staff is especially friendly and accommodating to pilots, who made up most of their guests, when we were there.
When Christophe first came to Epidavros, he surveyed the area by motorcycle, looking for potential flying sites. He moved tons of rocks to create and open eight private paragliding sites. All the sites, exclusively for guests of Flying Paradise, are within a twenty-to-forty minute drive from the hotel. The launches are rocky, but well groomed, and I love the fact that you can land almost anywhere, due to a good system of roads, maintained for the farmers to care for their goats and tend to their olive trees.
The Flying Paradise team is passionate about pilot safety. Christophe has a list of rules and he makes sure his guests follow them. You must have a radio, a reserve and a speed bar and you should have good launching skills, including a strong forward launch. Flying Paradise provides every pilot with a list of emergency numbers and contact numbers (for retrievals) and a list of key emergency phrases in Greek. Pilots come from all over the world to fly with Flying Paradise, which really adds to the overall experience. By the time you leave, you will have expanded your paragliding "family."
The skill level of the pilots ranges from newly rated pilots to competition pilots and everyone gets what they came for. The staff of Flying Paradise understands that their guests come to fly, so their first priority is to see that everyone, regardless of skill level, gets to fly as much as they want. On a typical day, Christophe will meet the pilots at the hotel after breakfast, usually between 9:00 and 10:00. Already having checked the wind conditions, he’ll direct the pilots to one of his "minibuses" and drive to one of the nearby launches. With eight sites to choose from, the chances of flying are pretty good. You can easily reach cloud base (6,000-8,000’ ASL) and fly as far 60 miles. But the conditions are not so strong that you’ll feel uncomfortable in the air.Flying Paradise provides a supportive environment, where pilots of all skill levels can challenge themselves and improve their skills.
The drivers are very knowledgeable about the conditions and geography and they are an important part of the team. If you're a novice pilot, you can have as many sled rides as you please, with a driver available to drive you back to launch. If you're more experienced, you can head out on one of the well-established XC routes, with a driver on-call for retrieves. Midday, you can either fly back to the hotel (usually about fifteen miles) and land on the beach, or return in the minibus, for a tasty Greek salad and some fresh-squeezed orange juice from one of the nearby orange groves. After lunch, you can hang out at the hotel and enjoy the beach, go into town for some shopping or head back up for an afternoon flight or two. The last flight of the day is typically from Tin Tin where you can land on the hotel’s beach and have a beer, swim and shower, before dinner.
My favorite flights were from a launch called "Ted’s Café." Although there’s a bail-out LZ in a clearing among some olive trees, about 2,000’ below launch, it’s not too hard to get high enough to fly around the hill with enough altitude to make it to the soccer field, a popular alternate landing site. From here, you can fly on to the famous amphitheater. If you still have some altitude, you can either try for an out and return flight or head over the pass to the hotel. This is where I usually lost it, but next year, my goal it to make it all the way to the hotel.
Nightlife in and around Epidavros is relatively quiet. I like to start each evening with "happy hour" at the Apollon’s open-air bar, overlooking the beach. My drink of choice is Ouzo, an anise-flavored liqueur, widely consumed in Greece. After a couple of drinks, you can either dine at the hotel or at one of several very good restaurants in Epidavros, approximately six miles from the hotel. My favorite restaurant, Kalojericho ("Monk’s House") is just around the corner from the hotel. Like many restaurants in the area, it offers open-air dining in a garden-like setting. The cuisine goes beyond the typical kabobs and moussaka found on most Greek menus. They offer subtlety-seasoned meats and fish, savory stews and garden-fresh fruits and vegetables. The Peloponnese has one of the most historic wine-growing regions in Greece and the wines are an excellent compliment to the cuisine. A perfect day in paradise usually ends back at the hotel, with more drinks, or coffee, in the bar.
Only twenty-five miles from the hotel, the town of Nafplio is definitely worth seeing. Nafplio, is literally one of the loveliest towns I’ve ever visited, with its marble paved roads, stunning architecture and looming castles. Formerly the capitol of Greece, Nafplio is a pleasant place to spend a day enjoying the excellent tavernas, bars, restaurants and shops in the steep and narrow streets overlooking the sea.
This is an ideal place to bring your non-flying friends and family. Use of Flying Paradise’s ten mountain bikes, sea kayaks snorkel equipment/wet suits (all in good condition), sightseeing trips, tandem flights for non-pilots, as well as transportation to and from the village every evening, are included in the fee. Who needs Club Med? My only regret is that I didn’t make some time to kayak along the coast, do a little snorkeling or take a bike ride along the back roads. Maybe next time…
What’s missing? Well, there are no worries about rides to the sites, no worries about retrieves, no rainy days, no parawaiting and no paradriving. It was flyable every day when I was there and, if you choose not to fly, there are lots of other fun things to do and interesting places to visit within an easy drive of the hotel.
Flying Paradise lives up to its name. I had some of the best flights I’ve had in years on this trip and the entire adventure was great fun. I will definitely return to Flying Paradise.
When most people think of a holiday in Greece, they think of the islands. But I’d been there and done that. I wanted to get a taste of the real Greece, so I started researching mainland Greece. The Peloponnese, a large peninsula in southern Greece that covers about 8,300 square miles, is known as "the heart and soul of Greece." The Peloponnese is rich in history and natural beauty. It has a mountainous interior, an enchanting coastline and charming villages. With dry, warm summers, mild sea breezes, good food, a fascinating culture, friendly people and plenty of opportunities for outdoor recreation, including paragliding, the Peloponnese has everything I look for in a vacation destination.
Last year, the Peloponnese suffered devastating wildfires that will impact of the region for many years, but that didn’t deter me. I Googled "paragliding and Peloponnese" and found Flying Paradise at the top of the list. Paradise is in the eye of the beholder, so I was a bit skeptical about Flying Paradise. But I started an email correspondence with Christophe Dubois, the owner of Flying Paradise, and I was so impressed with how responsive and helpful he was, that I bought two tickets to paradise.
Base camp for Flying Paradise is Epidavros, a small village on the Aegean Sea, about eighty miles southwest of Athens. There are literally hundreds of archeological sites in the area. But Epidavros is most famous for the fascinating Asclepios archeological site, a renowned healing center, built in the 4th century B.C. The ancient amphitheater at Asclepios seats 14,000 and the view, aesthetics and acoustics of the theater are remarkable. From the top row of the theatre, you can actually hear the unamplified sound of a match struck at center stage. What a thrill is to get a birds-eye view of the site as you fly over it under a paraglider.
Flying Paradise operates out of the Hotel Apollon, a relatively small hotel on a quiet beach, with views of the mountains and the sea. The hotel is modern, clean and comfortable. The restaurant serves great food and the bar is open for drinks and coffee at all hours of the day or night. They even have shaded lawns that are perfect for folding your paraglider. The staff is especially friendly and accommodating to pilots, who made up most of their guests, when we were there.
When Christophe first came to Epidavros, he surveyed the area by motorcycle, looking for potential flying sites. He moved tons of rocks to create and open eight private paragliding sites. All the sites, exclusively for guests of Flying Paradise, are within a twenty-to-forty minute drive from the hotel. The launches are rocky, but well groomed, and I love the fact that you can land almost anywhere, due to a good system of roads, maintained for the farmers to care for their goats and tend to their olive trees.
The Flying Paradise team is passionate about pilot safety. Christophe has a list of rules and he makes sure his guests follow them. You must have a radio, a reserve and a speed bar and you should have good launching skills, including a strong forward launch. Flying Paradise provides every pilot with a list of emergency numbers and contact numbers (for retrievals) and a list of key emergency phrases in Greek. Pilots come from all over the world to fly with Flying Paradise, which really adds to the overall experience. By the time you leave, you will have expanded your paragliding "family."
The skill level of the pilots ranges from newly rated pilots to competition pilots and everyone gets what they came for. The staff of Flying Paradise understands that their guests come to fly, so their first priority is to see that everyone, regardless of skill level, gets to fly as much as they want. On a typical day, Christophe will meet the pilots at the hotel after breakfast, usually between 9:00 and 10:00. Already having checked the wind conditions, he’ll direct the pilots to one of his "minibuses" and drive to one of the nearby launches. With eight sites to choose from, the chances of flying are pretty good. You can easily reach cloud base (6,000-8,000’ ASL) and fly as far 60 miles. But the conditions are not so strong that you’ll feel uncomfortable in the air.Flying Paradise provides a supportive environment, where pilots of all skill levels can challenge themselves and improve their skills.
The drivers are very knowledgeable about the conditions and geography and they are an important part of the team. If you're a novice pilot, you can have as many sled rides as you please, with a driver available to drive you back to launch. If you're more experienced, you can head out on one of the well-established XC routes, with a driver on-call for retrieves. Midday, you can either fly back to the hotel (usually about fifteen miles) and land on the beach, or return in the minibus, for a tasty Greek salad and some fresh-squeezed orange juice from one of the nearby orange groves. After lunch, you can hang out at the hotel and enjoy the beach, go into town for some shopping or head back up for an afternoon flight or two. The last flight of the day is typically from Tin Tin where you can land on the hotel’s beach and have a beer, swim and shower, before dinner.
My favorite flights were from a launch called "Ted’s Café." Although there’s a bail-out LZ in a clearing among some olive trees, about 2,000’ below launch, it’s not too hard to get high enough to fly around the hill with enough altitude to make it to the soccer field, a popular alternate landing site. From here, you can fly on to the famous amphitheater. If you still have some altitude, you can either try for an out and return flight or head over the pass to the hotel. This is where I usually lost it, but next year, my goal it to make it all the way to the hotel.
Nightlife in and around Epidavros is relatively quiet. I like to start each evening with "happy hour" at the Apollon’s open-air bar, overlooking the beach. My drink of choice is Ouzo, an anise-flavored liqueur, widely consumed in Greece. After a couple of drinks, you can either dine at the hotel or at one of several very good restaurants in Epidavros, approximately six miles from the hotel. My favorite restaurant, Kalojericho ("Monk’s House") is just around the corner from the hotel. Like many restaurants in the area, it offers open-air dining in a garden-like setting. The cuisine goes beyond the typical kabobs and moussaka found on most Greek menus. They offer subtlety-seasoned meats and fish, savory stews and garden-fresh fruits and vegetables. The Peloponnese has one of the most historic wine-growing regions in Greece and the wines are an excellent compliment to the cuisine. A perfect day in paradise usually ends back at the hotel, with more drinks, or coffee, in the bar.
Only twenty-five miles from the hotel, the town of Nafplio is definitely worth seeing. Nafplio, is literally one of the loveliest towns I’ve ever visited, with its marble paved roads, stunning architecture and looming castles. Formerly the capitol of Greece, Nafplio is a pleasant place to spend a day enjoying the excellent tavernas, bars, restaurants and shops in the steep and narrow streets overlooking the sea.
This is an ideal place to bring your non-flying friends and family. Use of Flying Paradise’s ten mountain bikes, sea kayaks snorkel equipment/wet suits (all in good condition), sightseeing trips, tandem flights for non-pilots, as well as transportation to and from the village every evening, are included in the fee. Who needs Club Med? My only regret is that I didn’t make some time to kayak along the coast, do a little snorkeling or take a bike ride along the back roads. Maybe next time…
What’s missing? Well, there are no worries about rides to the sites, no worries about retrieves, no rainy days, no parawaiting and no paradriving. It was flyable every day when I was there and, if you choose not to fly, there are lots of other fun things to do and interesting places to visit within an easy drive of the hotel.
Flying Paradise lives up to its name. I had some of the best flights I’ve had in years on this trip and the entire adventure was great fun. I will definitely return to Flying Paradise.
When to go to Epidavros |

The conditions for paragliding are at their best in Epidavros, from mid-March through early July and from the end of August through early November. You really can’t go wrong if you plan a trip during this time, although May and September are usually the best months for flying. As you might expect, it is cooler in April. In May, the sea starts warming up, the days are longer and the thermals are stronger. Although the water stays warm through October, the days start getting shorter.