Home / Hiking / Photos of Zakros GorgePhotos of Zakros Gorge Zakros Gorge Ano Zakros, a large village in East Crete, 38 kilometres south of Sitia. Here we start our hike to the Gorge of the Dead or Zakros GorgeAn old traditional house in Zakros, its yard full of flowers. If you have time, walk around the narrow village streets to discover its pretty sightsWe leave Zakros and walk along the road to Kato Zakros and its beach. We’ve decided to enter the gorge by the second entrance, 4 kilometres from Ano ZakrosIt’s mid-February and the whole of Crete is covered in a thick carpet of grass and yellow Bermuda buttercups, while olive trees are found almost everywhere on the islandIn Crete the winters are mild and become milder the further east and south go you. Many wildflowers like this anemone bloom from late January onwardsThis signpost is located at the point where we leave the tarmac road to enter Zakros Gorge. Don’t follow the dirt track behind the signpost, but the first one next to the bus shelterHaving walked along a dirt track for a while, we come to Zakros Gorge and start climbing downThe path is clear and there’s no danger of getting lostThe descent takes about 10 minutes. The slope is steep and you have to be careful not to slip on the stonesThe first hikers from our group have reached the bottom of the gorge and are waiting for the rest to catch upAbove us rise the sheer sides of the gorge where vultures and hawks nest. Vultures are called “skares” in East CreteIn the steep cliffs of the gorge are many caves, to which the ancient inhabitants of Zakros would laboriously raise their dead to bury them. This is why the gorge is known as the “Gorge of the Dead”In winter the water level in the gorge depends on recent rainfall. In summer, however, the riverbed is dry, making walking easierSmall waterfalls form in places, tiny but beautifulThere are no crossings from one bank to the other. You have to improvise by jumping from stone to stoneA borrowed baton in one hand and a stick in the other, Maria tries to cross the river without wetting her shoesThe crossing over, there follows a bright grin of successThe vegetation in Zakros Gorge is so dense you can’t leave the pathIn some places you may need to scramble over a rock, but it’s not too difficultAfter the first kilometre, the path becomes easier and in some places you walk in the shade of the trees, a great relief in the hot summer monthsSophia with her pretty rucksack is only 11 years old, but she walks easily and sure-footedly along the pathA strange plant attracts our attention. In Crete it’s called “ta stivania tou lagou”, or “hare’s boots”, because it looks a bit like hare fur. Its Latin name is Aristolochia cretica (Cretan Birthwort), endemic to Crete and KarpathosNo, it’s not an ancient Minoan throne hidden in the bushes. If I remember right, it’s a stone fountain at a rest area in the gorge. We saw others too, but they were all dryThe entrance to the gorge from Kato Zakros. We walked down it from Ano Zakros to Kato Zakros, but you can also go the other wayThe river widens near Kato Zakros and flows more slowlyHere the footpath ends, giving way to the dirt track to Kato Zakros and its beachMap of the footpaths in Zakros areaA small flock of sheep in the fields around Kato Zakros, a common Cretan pictureAn old olive tree which somehow seems to have split into four different boles. The older the olive tree, the stranger the shape of its trunkThe Kato Zakros archaeological site with the Minoan Palace of Zakros, which is much smaller than Knossos or Phaistos, but whose excavation produced many important findsThe rainwater has formed little pools in the archaeological siteAll the hikers gather in the only taverna in Kato Zakros which is open in the winter. They are members of the “Friends of the Mountain and Sea” climbing club from HeraklionStraw umbrellas waiting to offer their shade to summer tourists on the beach of Kato ZakrosLeaving wintery Zakros behind us, we board the coach to return to Sitia Read more about Zakros Gorge Read more: Zakros Hiking | Crete Pictures © explorecrete.com All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or copying without permission is prohibited.