The destination
Greece is defined by the way its landscapes stay with you. Whitewashed Cycladic villages set against open sea and intense light. Athens, shaped by ancient architecture and the enduring presence of the Parthenon — where layers of history are woven into daily life rather than preserved apart from it.
From there, the Aegean unfolds — islands each with their own character, where movement between them feels natural and the pace is guided by light, wind, and sea. Crete brings a different scale entirely. Santorini and Mykonos offer two distinct expressions of island life. Rhodes carries traces of its medieval past in its architecture.
We know Greece closely — its properties, its people, and the access that most visitors never reach. What is possible here goes considerably further than what is publicly available.
In Greece
These are examples of what we have arranged and what is possible — not a fixed itinerary. Your journey takes its shape from the conversation.
Heritage
The site secured exclusively for the evening. Tables set among the columns, the city below, no other guests. Arranged for a single family — an evening that cannot be repeated through any public channel.
Maritime
A vessel and crew selected for your group, with a route shaped around where you want to go — private coves, islands with no road access, and evenings ashore in places most visitors never reach.
Culinary
Access to kitchens and chefs who do not accept public reservations. Meals arranged through direct relationships — in private settings, at hours the restaurant would otherwise be closed.
Islands
Mykonos, Santorini, Paros, Naxos — each with its own character. Movement between them structured around your pace, with private transfers and properties selected for setting rather than category.
Cultural
Private introductions to collectors, archaeologists, and figures in the city's cultural world. An Athens that exists outside what guidebooks describe — accessed through the right people.
Crete
Mountains, coastline, and the remnants of one of Europe's earliest civilisations — explored with a guide whose knowledge goes considerably deeper than any standard introduction.
Spring
April — June
Warm days, quiet islands before high season. Athens at its most comfortable. Ideal for those who want Greece without crowds.
Summer
July — August
Peak season on the islands. At this level, the crowds are manageable — private access, private vessels, and properties that separate you from them.
Autumn
September — October
Our preferred season. Light still warm, sea still swimmable, islands returned to themselves. The best version of Greece for those who have been before.
Continue exploring