Destination Overview
Lemnos
Lemnos is the North Aegean's best kept secret — and one of Greece's most rewarding islands for travellers who know what they're looking for. It is large, unhurried, and genuinely itself. The landscape is unlike the typical Greek island postcard: broad plains and golden hills rolling down to the sea, wide sandy bays with shallow turquoise water, volcanic outcrops, reed beds, and a horizon that feels enormous. The capital, Myrina, has one of the finest harbour towns in the Aegean — a neoclassical seafront, a Byzantine-Genoese castle perched above the sea, and a long beach that begins where the main square ends. Lemnos has almost no mass tourism and has not been shaped by it. The tavernas serve food that reflects the local land and sea. The villages are genuinely inhabited. The beaches — and there are dozens of them — are rarely crowded even in summer. Mythologically, this is the island of Hephaestus, god of fire and the forge. Archaeologically, it holds Poliochni — one of the oldest urban settlements in Europe.
