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Temenia Fire Contained; However, it Left a Lasting Mark

Over 200 firefighters, assisted by helicopters and locals, battled the Temenia fire near Kandanos-Selino in Crete. The fire is now contained.

  • The Temenia fire broke out on July 26, 2025, near Kandanos-Selino, Crete
  • Flames burned over 20 kilometers of land, including olive groves and farms
  • Firefighters contained the main blaze but continued to fight flare-ups
  • Over 200 fire crew with 40 vehicles involved, alongside helicopters
  • Local volunteers and residents played a key role
  • Losses include four homes, one church, and widespread agricultural damage
  • Emergency repairs underway for power, water, and phone services
  • Municipalities supported with extra equipment and vehicles

A New Morning in the Ashes

For tourists traveling through the villages of southwest Crete, summer promised sun and green hills. On July 27, 2025, a different story unfolded near Temenia. It began as a sharp, smoky haze on the horizon. Within hours, fields once bursting with olives and wild herbs vanished behind flames. The Temenia fire spread rapidly, covering more than 20 kilometers, forcing firefighters and villagers alike into a race against the wind.

By Sunday, the main blaze stood under control but far from peaceful. Teams faced stubborn flare-ups where roots smoldered and blackened branches sent up new plumes of smoke. Two helicopters spun overhead, dropping water since early morning. The burn scars, still cooling, stretched across farmland and skies that once drew quiet, curious travelers.

The Cost and the Courage

The fight demanded more than water and luck. Over 200 firefighters, their faces streaked with ash, arrived from across the region. Forty fire trucks trundled through charred valley roads, joined by teams from EMODE, the specialized emergency unit. Local municipalities sent in their gear, determined to stop any new fire from swallowing what remained.

What the flames spared, the effort often strained. Crews worked around the clock as strong winds threatened to undo progress. Fresh crews rotated onto the line. Meanwhile, the real losses began to settle: four family homes, a small church, beehives, livestock, and years of crops. For many, recovery will take seasons. Power lines sagged and water mains buckled, forcing technical crews to work alongside rescue teams, patching networks late into the humid night.

  • Over 200 firefighters mobilized
  • 40 firefighting vehicles dispatched
  • 2 firefighting helicopters tasked with continuous water drops
  • Additional resources from local municipalities
  • Technical teams assigned for rapid repairs

The response wasn’t just official. George Tsapakos, deputy regional governor for civil protection, called local support crucial. “The contribution of volunteers and residents was immense,” he confirmed, as municipal workers rushed to map damages and document what families had lost.

Aftermath in the Temenia Hills

Now, as daylight returns, travelers see more than burnt fields. The village spirit lingers, breaking through the scent of smoke. Volunteers, many still in work clothes, walk the edges of blackened olive groves. Engineers replace bent water pipes and string new lines for electricity and phone service. The task isn’t glamorous, but it is steady.

Photos from the area reveal scenes that mix heartbreak with grit: destroyed hives, singed livestock corrals, the silent shell of a chapel. Strong winds complicated every effort, and even as the main fire lines hold, vigilance remains the order of the day.

Temenia beehives damaged by fire.

Tourism along Crete’s southern trails often promises calm, rustic beauty. In these days after the Temenia fire, visitors witness a community knit closer by hardship. Recovery here is daily, practical, and shared—painting a new, determined portrait of life in the heart of Crete.

Categories: Crete Featured
Iorgos Pappas: Iorgos Pappas is the Travel and Lifestyle Co-Editor at Argophilia, where he dives deep into the rhythms, flavors, and hidden corners of Greece—with a special focus on Crete. Though he’s lived in cultural hubs like Paris, Amsterdam, and Budapest, his heart beats to the Mediterranean tempo. Whether tracing village traditions or uncovering coastal gems, Iorgos brings a seasoned traveler’s eye—and a local’s affection—to every story.
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