Orea Crete (Ορέα Κρήτη) is more than a tourism concept—it is a bridge linking people to place. It offers a deeper connection to Cretan identity, far from mass tourism, while strengthening the local economy, supporting small producers, and protecting the island’s natural resources.
The program’s strategy, shaped by experience and enriched through cooperation with local stakeholders, rests on several pillars:
- Mapping and Planning – Recording new routes, identifying points of interest, and designing teaching farm locations, with special trails around them.
- Bilingual Digital Map – Providing easy access to routes and visitable farms across Crete.
- Teaching Farm Guide – A practical handbook covering definitions, ethical guidelines, laws, and implementation steps.
- Pilot Workshops and Knowledge Exchange – Hands-on sessions for farmers, breeders, alternative tourism operators, and agritourism hosts.
- Educational Visits – Trips for local farmers to exemplary teaching farms in Greece.
- Networking – Connecting producers with cooperatives, artisan workshops, and each other.
The long-term aim is for teaching farms to become living classrooms—passing down Cretan agricultural traditions, local culture, and stewardship of the island’s landscapes and heritage sites, from stone shepherd huts to Minoan watchtowers. The vision is a Crete where every visit to a teaching farm is a step into history, culture, and community.
From Mountain Trails to Working Farms
At its heart, Orea Crete connects the island’s agricultural life with tourism, opening new possibilities for travelers seeking authenticity. It creates a network of themed trails and model farms where each stop is a chance to engage directly with the land.
Visitors can walk parts of the E4 European Long-Distance Path, follow the “Wine Roads,” visit farms that still use traditional methods, and learn firsthand about cultivation and animal husbandry. The experience extends beyond landscapes and flavors—immersive workshops invite guests to make cheese, tread grapes, bake sourdough bread in wood-fired ovens, or gather aromatic herbs from the slopes of the White Mountains and Psiloritis. Many of these activities unfold alongside festivals and village gatherings that preserve tradition while creating new bonds.