After
Rhodes,
Kós
is the
second
largest
and most
popular
island
in the
Dodecanese,
and
there
are
superficial
similarities
between
the two.
Here
also the
harbour
is
guarded
by an
imposing
castle
of the
Knights
of St
John;
the
streets
are
lined
with
grandiose
Italian
public
buildings;
and
minarets
and palm
trees
punctuate
extensive
Hellenistic
and
Roman
remains.
Although
its
hinterland
for the
most
part
lacks
the wild
beauty
of
Rhodes'
interior,
acre for
acre Kós
is the
most
fertile
of the
Dodecanese,
blessed
with
rich
soil and
abundant
ground
water.
Mass
tourism
has
largely
displaced
the old
agrarian
economy
amongst
the
population
of just
over
28,000,
and
outside
the main
town and
Kardhámena
this is
very
much a
family-holiday
isle,
where
you can
turn the
kids
loose on
pushbikes.
Except
for Kós
Town and
Mastihári,
there
aren't
many
independent
travellers,
and from
early
July to
early
September
you'll
be lucky
to find
any sort
of room
at all
without
reservations
far in
advance,
or a
prebooked
package.
The
tourist
industry
is
juxtaposed
rather
bizarrely
with
cows
munching
amidst
baled
hay, and
Greek
Army
tanks
exercising
in the
volcanic
badlands
around
the
airport.
All
these
peculiarities
acknowledged,
Kós is
still
definitely
worth a
few days'
time
while
island-hopping:
its
handful
of
mountain
villages
are
appealing,
the
tourist
infrastructure
excellent
(including
such
amenities
as
regular
city
buses
and
cycle
paths)
and
swimming
opportunities
are
limitless
-
virtually
the
entire
coast is
fringed
by
beaches
of
various
sizes,
colours
and
consistencies