Pink lagoons, snow-capped peaks, ancient gorges and forests that have never heard a lawnmower — welcome to nature at its most untouched
By CretaHub · 10 min read · Chania, Crete
Crete is the largest Greek island — and the Chania region alone contains more raw natural variety than most entire countries. Snow-capped mountains rising above 2,400 metres. Over 50 gorges carved by millions of years of water and wind. A lagoon with naturally pink sand. Forests sheltering species found nowhere else on Earth. If you came to Crete only for the beaches, you've barely scratched the surface.
No photograph does Elafonisi justice — and yet it's one of the most photographed places in all of Greece. The shallow lagoon separating the beach from the small islet turns a shade of luminous turquoise that looks computer-generated, framed by sand that carries a distinct pink tint from crushed shells and coral fragments. The water rarely exceeds knee depth for the first 100 metres, making it uniquely safe for children.
The islet itself is a protected nature reserve — home to rare orchids, sea daffodils and nesting loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta). Stay on the marked paths to protect the fragile ecosystem.
Best time to visit: May, June or September. July and August bring hundreds of sunbeds and crowds that completely transform the experience. An early morning visit in shoulder season, when the lagoon is still empty and the light is golden, is one of the finest things Crete has to offer.
Balos is where three seas meet — the Aegean, the Libyan and the Ionian — creating a shallow tropical lagoon of extraordinary colour. The sand is white and powdery, the water shifts from pale jade to deep turquoise, and the ruined Venetian fortress of Gramvousa on the nearby island adds a dramatic silhouette to the horizon.
You can reach Balos by daily ferry from Kissamos harbour (about 45 minutes each way) or via a rough 4x4 track and a 20-minute walk down a rocky path. The boat is far easier, and the approach by sea — rounding the headland to see the lagoon revealed below you — is genuinely breathtaking.
Insider tip: The ferry from Kissamos departs at 10:30am and 12:30pm in peak season. Take the first boat, spend 3 hours at Balos, and return before the midday crowds arrive. Bring your own food and water — the snack bar on the beach is expensive.
The White Mountains dominate the skyline of Chania and the imagination of anyone who has spent more than a day here. Named for the white limestone rocks that gleam under the Cretan sun — and for the snow that caps the highest peaks from November through May — the Lefka Ori contain Crete's only National Park, over 50 gorges, more than 650 plant species and a wild, timeless landscape that has barely changed in centuries.
The highest peak, Pachnes (2,453m), offers views stretching to the Libyan Sea in the south and the Aegean in the north on clear days. The ascent is demanding but technically straightforward for experienced hikers. Several mountain refuges are scattered across the range for multi-day treks.
Hidden gem: The Omalos Plateau at 1,000m elevation is the gateway to the Samaria Gorge — but it's also one of the most serene landscapes in Crete, ringed by mountains and home to traditional stone shepherd huts. In spring, it's carpeted in wildflowers.
Tucked into a natural bowl in the foothills east of Chania, Lake Kournas is a complete surprise in a landscape defined by salt water and gorges. The lake's colour shifts dramatically with the light — from deep emerald in the morning to brilliant turquoise at midday. Pedalo boats are available for hire, and the surrounding reeds shelter a remarkable variety of bird life. The tavernas on the shore serve fresh fish from the lake.
Crete's isolation over millions of years has produced a remarkable number of species found nowhere else on Earth. Keep your eyes open — you may encounter some extraordinary wildlife.
| Season | Landscape Highlights | Wildlife |
|---|---|---|
| 🌸 Spring (Mar–May) | Wildflowers blanket the mountains, gorges running with water, Omalos Plateau green | Orchids blooming, migratory birds arriving, Kri-Kri active |
| ☀️ Summer (Jun–Aug) | Elafonisi & Balos at peak colour, mountains sun-baked and dramatic | Sea turtle nesting, dolphins in the bay, Eleonora's Falcon |
| 🍂 Autumn (Sep–Oct) | Gorges reopen after summer heat, crowds gone from lagoons, olive harvest begins | Migratory birds passing through, vultures active on thermals |
| ❄️ Winter (Nov–Feb) | White Mountains snow-capped, dramatic storm light on the coast, Lake Kournas full | Resident bird species, winter wildflowers begin in February |
Book guided nature tours, jeep safaris to Elafonisi & Balos, and boat trips to the lagoons — all with trusted local providers.
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