Walking the Aristotle Trail above Olympiada
Few walking trails carry quite the cultural weight of the Aristotle Trail. Named after the philosopher who was born in nearby Stagira, it climbs above Olympiada through fragrant pine and scrub, opening up wide views over the village and the bay below.
There's something quietly profound about following a path named after someone who first tried to make sense of the natural world, whilst the natural world unfolds around you in such vivid terms: wildflowers pressing through rocky ground, the Aegean catching the light far below, the smell of warm pine resin in the morning air.
It is the kind of walk that stays with you long after you've returned home.
Walking in the heart of ancient Macedonia
Most visitors to northern Greece stop at Thessaloniki and go no further. Those who push on into Macedonia discover something different altogether: a region that carries its history openly, in its landscapes as much as its ruins, and that rewards the curious traveller in ways the more frequented parts of Greece simply cannot.
This is the land where Alexander the Great was raised, where Aristotle taught, and where the Macedonian kingdom left its mark on the ancient world. That history doesn't sit behind glass here. It is in the soil underfoot, in the names of the trails you walk, in the villages that have stood on the same ground for centuries. Walking through it feels less like sightseeing and more like reading a landscape that has a great deal to say.
Olympiada sits at the centre of all of this. It is not simply a convenient base for walking; it is a place that belongs to the landscape around it, shaped by the same history and geography that makes the walking so absorbing. That connection between village, trail, and region is what elevates a week here above a straightforward walking holiday, and what brings people back.
The evening warmth of Olympiada
The walking is why you come. The evenings are why you want to come back.
After a day on the trails, Olympiada has a particular gift for unwinding its visitors. The village is small enough to feel genuinely local, and the welcome at its tavernas is warm and unhurried. Fresh fish, simply prepared, local wine, and the particular satisfaction of food eaten in good company after a day spent well outdoors.
Olympiada remains a place that has held onto its character, and that is one of the most rewarding things about spending a week here.