Related questions: Jellyfish in Loutraki

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I am planning a trip to Greece at the end of July, the beginning of August, I look very strongly towards Loutrak. I read that last year there was an invasion of jellyfish in the Gulf of Corinth. How is the situation this year? Maybe you should look in a different direction?
6 years ago  •  2 subscribers 1 answer
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Don't worry, hotels have created anti-jellyfish services, which in the morning, before the arrival of vacationers, disperse all jellyfish. ) Farther...
Sorry, if my question is out of the general theme, but nevertheless, I dare to ask. A couple of times when I came out of the sea, I had a burning sensation in small areas of the skin. After a couple of hours, the burning sensation subsided, but a medium-sized red rash appeared. It was all gone in about a day. How much I didn’t peer into the water, I didn’t see jellyfish there (like they said that they didn’t exist in Middle-earth?), write off contact allergies from small pinches of local fish - the same is somehow too much. Everything would be trifles, but only after arriving home, I was again sprinkled in the same locations. Now I’m thinking - just wait until it passes, stomp to a dermatologist, or just someone encountered something similar in Middle-earth and knows what it could be?
12 years ago  •  20 subscribers 32 answers
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There are a lot of jellyfish in the Mediterranean Sea! They may be so small that you can't even see them. It is strange that the houses were sprinkled again. Try to drink diazolin or another anti-allergic drug, if it does not help, you will have to go to a dermatologist. Z.Y. And by the way, algae are also not harmless. In one hotel in Kemer, a colony of such toxic algae spread on ropes that held the buoys. Half the hotel was walking around with burns, and the staff warned not to grab the buoys ... Farther...