In Crete, celebration is never quiet. Weddings, baptisms, football victories, national holidays — and sometimes no reason at all — end with a sky full of fire. Every few nights, the island lights up with fireworks that crack like cannon fire, often joined by the mpalothies gunshots that have become an unofficial soundtrack of Cretan pride.
People cheer. Dogs do not.
From Heraklion to Agios Nikolaos, every blast ripples through walls and windows — and through the nervous systems of thousands of pets and farm animals. To humans it’s noise; to them it’s catastrophe.
A Tradition of Sound, Not Silence
Noise is woven into Cretan celebration. The kapetanioi once fired into the air to honor life and defiance, and that rhythm of thunder never stopped. Fireworks arrived later, replacing rifles in cities but keeping the same volume.
The difference is that now, the explosions come from every direction: weddings, beach parties, village festivals, national holidays — even spontaneous Friday nights. The frequency has grown, but the discussion around it hasn’t.
While some European cities have switched to low-noise fireworks, Crete still favors the full-volume variety — the kind that shakes mountains, car alarms, and small hearts alike.
How Animals Hear the Celebration
A dog’s hearing is at least four times more sensitive than a human’s. Cats detect even higher frequencies. Horses and goats can feel vibrations through the ground before the sound even reaches them.
So when the first firework bursts, animals don’t just hear it — they absorb it. Adrenaline spikes, breathing quickens, muscles shake. Some run. Some hide. Some simply collapse under the stress.
Veterinarians across the island report the same calls every holiday: dogs escaping yards, cats disappearing for days, livestock injuring themselves in panic.
“It’s not about training,” one vet in Heraklion told me. “It’s biology. They can’t understand why the world suddenly explodes.”
What Owners Can Do
Until Crete finds a quieter way to celebrate, pet owners are left to prepare. A few small steps can turn chaos into something survivable.
1. Create a safe space.
Choose a quiet, enclosed room — a bathroom, hallway, or interior bedroom. Close windows, draw curtains, and turn on white noise or a TV.
2. Stay calm.
Animals read your tone more than your words. Speak normally, move slowly. If you panic, they will too.
3. Physical comfort helps.
Wrap small dogs in a blanket or a snug vest to steady their heartbeat. For cats, leave an open carrier nearby — a safe cave is better than forced cuddles.
4. Keep IDs on.
Panicked animals can bolt through doors or fences. A collar or microchip is the best insurance against loss.
5. Talk to your vet.
For pets with chronic anxiety, mild sedatives or natural calming aids can help — but only under professional advice.
What Crete Could Do
The island doesn’t need to give up its light shows. It just needs to modernize them.
Low-noise fireworks exist. They sparkle, shimmer, and photograph beautifully — without the sonic assault. Cities in Italy, Spain, and even some parts of Greece have started using them.
If Crete adopted similar options, no one would miss the explosions — except maybe a few traditionalists who mistake volume for emotion. The celebration would still shine; it would simply stop shaking the neighbors’ walls.
Local municipalities could also:
- Publish firework schedules so pet owners can prepare.
- Limit hours for loud fireworks (no more 3 a.m. surprises).
- Promote awareness campaigns about animal stress during festivities.
These are small, achievable acts of empathy — and they don’t cost more than the fireworks themselves.
Between Joy and Fear
The contradiction is hard to ignore. We call fireworks “celebrations of life,” yet for many living beings they feel like the opposite.
Every time the sky bursts open, the island’s animals huddle in corners or flee into the dark. Mojito, a Cretan hound from Nea Alikarnassos, trembles through every festival night — a living reminder that the sound of happiness shouldn’t hurt.
Noise may be part of Crete’s character, but compassion should be too. The island that nurtures so much life — from goats on cliffs to stray cats sleeping under taverna tables — can surely find a way to celebrate without terrorizing its own heartbeat.
Crete has never needed noise to prove its joy. The laughter of a taverna, the crackle of olive wood in a winter stove, the hum of bees in spring — these are sounds worth keeping. The rest? We could turn the volume down a little.
Because love of life should never make life hide.
View Comments (0)