Valentine's Garden High Tea




15th & 16th February Celebrate Valentine's Day a different way this year: With your beloved or with your friends, join us at the Tea Room overlooking Cyherbia's gardens for a real English High Tea, including our own home made sweet and savoury delights, tea and champagne! Book your place by private message please.
Cost: 20 euro p.p

Directions to the herb garden: From Nicosia/Larnaca, take highway Ayia Napa-Paralimni, take exit 63 Ormidia/ Avgorou by the overhead bridge. Pass Ormidia stadium into the village going right towards the centre. At T-junction where the cafes are turn right, then left, follow signs Avgorou. Pass water reservoirs, another 5 km towards Avgorou you’ll pass Zorbas weddings hall (sign is only in greek ΖΟΡΠΑΣ). 300 m. after Zorbas turn right onto the stone road leading to the herb garden after 1 km.

From the Paralimni—Ayia Napa areas, head for the village of Frenaros, taking the road to Liopetri. Just out of Frenaros take the right turn to Avgorou. Head into the village keeping the cemetery on your left, turn left at the main street junction. Follow this road through the center of the village towards Ormidia. As you leave Avgorou, take the white stone road on the left after the second speed bump.


For further Information Tel : 99915443

Kids Theatre - Dreams about Venice



From 21 of February up to 23 of February 2014 tours in Cyprus puppet theatre of shadows and actor “Reflection” from Moscow! 
Arlekin , Pierro and Columbine invite children and their parents to the colorful carnival pop-show «Dreams about Venice»!!!
The ball is in full swing...Bright costumes, faces, hidden behind the masks… Two Cavaliers are trying to find the grace of single lady. Butterflyflies, classical music is performed by a musician-virtuoso.This is a dream or reality? Who plays a: people in puppet or doll in people? The answer lies in your imagination.
Best miniatures with the puppets, clowning, tricks with flowers, rooms with interactive audience participation, tricks, pranks and jokes are waiting for you:
21 of February in Paphos – 18.30 in 1 st Lyceum School,
22 of February in Nicosia – 11.00 in Theatre Satiriko,
22 of February in Larnaca – 17.00 in Theatre Skala,
23 of February in Limassol – 10.30 in Agios Athanathios Theatre.

Age – from 5 and up.
Duration – 50 minutes without intermission.
Price – 12 Euro.
More information : 96 30 2770 and on webwww.magictheatre.ru

February Competition



This Month's Competition Question 
Sponsored by
CYHerbia 

Q: Apart from the herb garden, what is Cyherbia's other main attraction?



You will find the answer on the Cyherbia Website :www.cyherbia.com


Please post your answer in the comment section under this post.

The prize will be a Goodie bag of herbal products and the Winner will be announced on the 28th February :0) 

The sound of a thousand closing doors - Paula Manoli-Gray



I find it so heartbreaking driving around Larnaca and seeing yet another shop has closed down, and as dramatic as it sounds, it feels akin to a kind of death.

The closures are happening at such a frighteningly rapid rate, and sometimes it really surprises me which stores have fallen victim to the economic massacre. Shops I had thought were popular or doing well are suddenly empty with the horrible big, red 'for rent' sign plastered on the front. I now find that sign so ominous and loaded with deeper meaning… representative of how the owners struggled, and a black mark added to the unemployment statistics. Each shop is more than a shop, it's lives and livelihoods, and I find myself wondering who the people behind the shop window are; how many people they employed both visibly and behind the scenes, and how they will now all cope. It just goes to show that you really never know what is happening behind closed doors.

It must look terrible too for visitors. Some shop rows - such as the one that leads towards the police station and seafront – are almost completely empty. They look abandoned, sad, pitiful and ugly, but most of all, desperate. For me, they really are the defining symbol of how badly we are doing, just as they will be the symbol of prosperity when they are (eventually) full again.

I am not very mathematically or business minded (an understatement, the truth is I am completely useless at both!), therefore I cannot understand the mechanics of all this closure. Is it possible that every single business is suffering to the brink of collapse; that every single person is completely without money? Where has all the money gone if no one has it? If everything keeps on closing, what then happens? Where will we 'get stuff from'? Surely people still need some things and surely not every single person is at the point where they cannot afford to buy anything other than bread and milk? I am sure that sounds very dim-witted to a lot of people, but none of it makes sense to me.

In trying to see the silver lining, I wonder if this means there will be a real shake-up and change to our commercial face? We had lost the Larnaca of old when we replaced it with lots of international franchises. They were welcome for various reasons, but they also meant that Larnaca's town centre just became another cloned European town centre with exactly the same brands and shops that you can find in any other generic European town centre. I hope that after they have all fled our little town (as many have already done so), that local, independent shops will open in their place. Of course, there has to be a lesson learned here for local businesses – that they cannot charge extortionate prices and that to survive they have to respect the customer in both what they offer and how they treat them – something which was sorely lacking previously, and a reason that I – and I am sure others – stuck to the shops they knew from abroad whose prices were more reasonable.

We have many lessons to learn, and much regeneration to put into motion, and I hope this time, that we do it right, because we simply cannot go through this all again, and those lonely empty shops are crying out for life.

First appeared in The Cyprus Weekly, 01/02/14

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