In the Golden Step: A Walk Through the Heart of Crete, the famous walking correspondent Christopher Somerville undertakes a gruelling hike from the east to the west of Crete, relying entirely on a rather dodgy map, a compass & a walking stick -&, of course, on the famed hospitality of the Cretans. For Christopher Somerville this was a kind of pilgrimage, a journey unlike any he had undertaken in 20 years of travel writing. It was an expedition where he traded the usual comforts & certainties for a real physical & mental challenge, with no mobile phone or any other technological aids. The only plan for his journey was to begin in the east at Easter & finish at Whitsun in the extreme west, at the Monastery of the Golden Step
- whose gold step, legend says, can only be seen by those who have purged themselves into purity. During his 300-mile walk, he tackled four mountain ranges, high slopes & the numerous gorges of the west. Speaking only basic Greek & trying to follow a poorly way-marked path, Somerville had to rely on his own instincts when climbing mountain passes & crossing high plateaus, where villages are scarce & each night`s accommodation was uncertain. He saw a Crete not many tourists encounter.