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Five Seasons Yachting

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Five Seasons Yachting

Bora winds are strong and dry northeasterly winds that can affect the island of Corfu in Greece during the winter months. These winds can be particularly intense, with gusts reaching up to 120 km/h, and can cause disruptions to transportation, including maritime travel. However, they are also known for their cleansing effects on the atmosphere, as they blow away pollution and create clear skies. Bora winds can also bring cooler temperatures to the region, providing relief from the heat and humidity of the summer months.
Tramontana winds are cool and dry northerly to northwesterly winds that can affect the island of Corfu in Greece. They are most common during the winter months and can bring cooler temperatures and clear skies to the region. However, they can also be strong and gusty, with speeds reaching up to 60 km/h, and can cause disruptions to transportation and other activities. Tramontana winds are also known for their health benefits, as they are believed to have a purifying effect on the atmosphere and improve respiratory conditions.
Jugo winds are moist and warm southeasterly winds that can affect the island of Corfu in Greece. They are most common during the winter and early spring months and can bring heavy rain and storms to the region. Jugo winds are also known for their effects on human behavior, as they are believed to cause headaches, lethargy, and mood swings. However, these winds can also bring much-needed moisture to the region and support agricultural production.
Mistral winds are dry and cool northwesterly winds that can affect the island of Corfu in Greece. They are most common during the summer months and can provide relief from the heat and humidity of the season. Mistral winds can also create choppy seas and strong currents, which can affect maritime transportation and water activities. However, these winds are also popular among windsurfers and other water sports enthusiasts, who can take advantage of the favorable conditions they create.
Corfu combines a major airport (CFU), strong yacht-service infrastructure (notably around Gouvia), and quick access to classic Ionian hops — Paxos channels, Sivota area, and south toward Lefkada on longer weeks.
Ioannis Kapodistrias (CFU) serves international flights. Pre-book taxis or arrange a base transfer in July–August; traffic from the airport into Gouvia/Town can spike at peak hours.
Typical Maistros (NW) afternoon breeze in summer. Corfu geography can bend and funnel wind between headlands — read local notes for the Paxos strait and west-coast gusts.
Popular: Corfu → Paxos (Gaios/Lakka) → Antipaxos (weather permitting) → north/south along Epirus coast or return via Sivota pockets — tailor to your comfort with cross-traffic and depth.
Often rated friendlier than Cyclades peak summer: shorter legs available, many bolt-holes. Still study charted shallows and ferry lanes — the Ionian is forgiving, not automatic.
Accepted skipper certificate, competent second crew member, originals at check-in. If your experience is borderline, hire a skipper for the first days — Corfu weekends can be busy.
Expect limited visitor berthing and premium pricing. Many crews visit by shore trip from nearby bases rather than treating the Old Harbour as a home marina for the week.
May–June and September offer balance. High season brings more flotillas and dayboats around Paxos — patience at quays helps.
Popular for families. Watch beam in tight quays and confirm marina berth dimensions — some village jetties are monohull-first.
Possible for faster crews and stable weather, but it is a packed schedule. Many prefer a tighter Corfu–Paxos loop with time ashore rather than racing miles.
A dense yacht-service cluster north of Corfu Town: chandleries, repairs, and charter fleets. Helpful for check-in/check-out logistics; evenings can be lively.
Crossing an international border by yacht is not casual: you need correct clearance procedures, flags, and papers. If unsure, stay within Greek waters and plan Albania as a future formal cruise.
Expect ferries, hydrofoils, and taxi boats. Keep a sharp radar/lookout plot and avoid cutting tight across commercial lanes.
Both work; Town offers atmosphere and specialty shops, Gouvia can be faster for yacht quantities. Stock extra water before a hot week.
Popular spots get crowded; use adequate scope and watch for chain tangles at peak times. Have a polite plan if you need to leave quickly.
Corfu Town has the widest options; smaller villages may have limited hours. Carry seasickness and basic first-aid for remote anchorages.
Practice stern-to with long lines if your week includes village quays — Corfu Ionian harbours use this style frequently.
Inventory is large — filters for cabins, air-con, deposit packs, and transparent mandatory extras (when operators publish them) save comparison time.
Default no on standard charters — plan daylight arrivals, especially with ferry lanes and unlit coast sections.
With FDP (Free Deposit Pack), you have the chance to avoid a full security deposit and lock in your funds. Just pay 20% upfront (non-refundable), and experience a hassle-free journey. * The price of the FDP rises to 25% if booked less than 30 days before the charter.