On the northern slopes of Andros, Greece, a half-day tour threads between Stenies village and Kourtesis Wine Estate, offering a close-up of the island’s maritime history and viniculture. Andros, the second-largest island in the Cyclades, lies a short ferry hop from Rafina on the Attica coast.
You begin in Stenies, a stone-paved village once home to shipowners and captains. The route takes you along narrow alleys lined with neoclassical mansions—granite foundations, plaster facades, wrought-iron balconies—where carved lintels and family crests hint at wealth earned on the high seas. The Bisti Mansion is the standout: a preserved captain’s house where maritime paraphernalia and oil paintings recount voyages to the Black Sea and Levant. Key features here are the mansions’ courtyards, the flagstone lanes, and the village’s elevated terraces that open to sea views.
Leaving the village, the landscape shifts to gently rolling vineyards and scrub-studded terraces. Kourtesis Wine Estate occupies an airy slope where low rainfall, strong meltemi winds, and limestone-rich soils give Andros wines a compact mineral profile. On the estate, the guided tour explains pruning, grape varieties local to the Cyclades, and microclimate management on steep terraced plots. Key vineyard features include dry-stone walls, long vine rows, and a tasting room that frames vineyards through wide glass.
This half-day balances history, geology, and sensory pleasure. You’ll learn how volcanic and limestone substrates influence acidity and minerality, and why winemakers on small Cycladic islands harvest early to preserve aromatic freshness. The tasting pairs local whites and limited-production reds with traditional Andros delicacies—aged graviera, spicy tomato spreads, and soft sheep’s cheeses—creating contrasts that reveal the island’s flavors.
Practicalities are straightforward: the tour lasts about four hours, returns to accommodations, and includes pickup and drop-off. It’s a walking-friendly itinerary—expect short uphill stints and a few uneven pavements—so comfortable shoes are essential. Summer brings intense sun and meltemi breezes; spring and fall are ideal for bloom and harvest glimpses. Photography opportunities are abundant: mansion façades, vineyard terraces, and the sea framing the horizon.
Small group sizes and local guides make the visit personal; guides point out surviving shipowner inscriptions, old boathouses, and family-run cooperatives that bottle only a few thousand liters a year. The tasting is led by estate staff who explain barrel ageing, amphora experiments, and why the island’s winds keep molds at bay. The tour supports local producers by channeling direct purchase opportunities and respectful visiting practices and harvest participation.
Why book it? This is a compact, expertly guided way to feel Andros—its seafaring past and its emerging artisan wine scene—without committing days to island travel. For travelers based in Andros Town (Chora) or island ports, the half-day tour is a concentrated primer on what makes this Cycladic outpost quietly compelling.