




Yesterday I went up to Grammos, and I need to write this before the feeling fades. The scenery up there doesn’t just look good. It shuts you up. Snow everywhere, spread across the slopes like it wants to hide every sign of people. The air cold but clean. It wakes you instead of weighing on you.








I wasn’t alone. Four of us went, and yes, we even took our mountain bikes into the snow. It was madness in the best way possible. Tires sliding, sinking, fighting for grip. Every climb felt like a workout, every downhill like a reward. Not easy at all, but the kind of challenge that sticks with you.
Grammos has always had a tougher personality. It’s not the mountain where you snap a few photos and then go for a warm drink. It’s a place with history carved into it. From the battles of the Greek Civil War to the deep isolation that shaped whoever lived or fought there. Walking and riding through that snow, I kept thinking how this mountain doesn’t forgive easily. But it gives back something honest.
The view over the lakes, the peaks, the endless firs fading into the white, felt unreal. These are not scenes you capture on a phone. You must be there. You must hear the silence. Watch the fog rise and vanish. Feel the mountain operating with its own rules while it lets you pass through.






What stayed with me wasn’t only the landscape. It was the reminder that places without noise, rush, or anything unnecessary still exist. Places that bring you down to earth instantly. That show you how small we are, but also how lucky when we are in front of something this pure.
I don’t know if Grammos is for everyone. But I know that anyone who reaches it, especially with snow under their wheels and three good friends by their side, leaves different. And for me, that’s more than enough.



















