Skarfos Bridge
Skarfos Bridge
We have been meaning to blog about the Venetian Bridges for some time, so today I thought I would start with Skarfos, as this is easily accessible and is the Western-most Venetian Bridge that I am aware of. Situated just off the road to Simou from the B7, it may not be the most spectacular bridge Cyprus has to offer, but there are enough other attractions nearby to make it worth your journey, as you shall see...
Read the article and chat about it below...
Read the article and chat about it below...
Web Designer / Developer. Currently working on Paphos Life.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
Re: Skarfos Bridge
O you are probably right, but there is no evidence of a river running there other than the bridge. Given that Cypriots will quite happily relocate entire villages, moving a bridge isn't totally unfeasible. That does however raise another question; why would they bother?
Web Designer / Developer. Currently working on Paphos Life.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
- LouiseCastricum
- Posts: 1790
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:10 am
- Location: Pegeia/Peyia/Πέγεια since 1994
Re: Skarfos Bridge
A short film about the Skarfos bridge, where you can still see how the river used to run.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JMOMJyHpdw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JMOMJyHpdw
Louise 

Re: Skarfos Bridge
Excellent! You are quite right. From above you can quite clearly see the old course. I really must get to grips with my drone.
Web Designer / Developer. Currently working on Paphos Life.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Another classic and interesting blog thanks, Dominic!
It makes it more emphatic, when one has been there themself (and also visited the same nearby abandoned villages you mention) in the ancient Toyota 2WD twin cab, taking photos and punching GPS coordinates into the Magellan Satnav for later group walks...
My gut feeling is that Skarfos Bridge hasn't been physically relocated. And neither has the river (feeding Evritou reservoir and dam) been intentionally diverted to bypass the bridge..
River courses over a long period of time (600 years approx, in this case) seemingly have a mind of there own! Browse this Wikipedia link to see where I'm coming from on this theory:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxbow_lake
Agreed, a lunch in sleepy Simou village square is nice afterwards! I only fancied a large cold Carlsberg, having earlier enjoyed a blow-out buffet breakfast at the Aloe (where I was staying). The guy brought my beer out and asked me if I fancied a plate of fat chips, LOL! Politely declined, as I was meeting up with friends for an evening meal later, so wanted to build up my appetite, not destroy it.
Cheers- AL
It makes it more emphatic, when one has been there themself (and also visited the same nearby abandoned villages you mention) in the ancient Toyota 2WD twin cab, taking photos and punching GPS coordinates into the Magellan Satnav for later group walks...
My gut feeling is that Skarfos Bridge hasn't been physically relocated. And neither has the river (feeding Evritou reservoir and dam) been intentionally diverted to bypass the bridge..
River courses over a long period of time (600 years approx, in this case) seemingly have a mind of there own! Browse this Wikipedia link to see where I'm coming from on this theory:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxbow_lake
Agreed, a lunch in sleepy Simou village square is nice afterwards! I only fancied a large cold Carlsberg, having earlier enjoyed a blow-out buffet breakfast at the Aloe (where I was staying). The guy brought my beer out and asked me if I fancied a plate of fat chips, LOL! Politely declined, as I was meeting up with friends for an evening meal later, so wanted to build up my appetite, not destroy it.
Cheers- AL

Gone but not forgotten...
- cyprusmax47
- Posts: 5235
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:10 am
- Location: Paphos area since 1982
Re: Skarfos Bridge
In not sure but I think to remember that the river 40 years ago was running under the bridge and on the side of it in good wet Winters. I believe that the Authorities moved the riverbed slightly away from the bridge in order that the trees and shrubs don't overgrow the little treasure. Also to protect the foundation of the bridge on the side where the river was already lay it open. If one goes on the google map satellite image clearly you can see the curved line around the bridge of the dense vegetation. But I will find out after the holidays from friends of mine living in Simou village if this can be confirmed.
Max
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Fabulous Blog again...........it's a shame that a large percentage of tourists don't venture much further than their sunbed .......there is so much to see ........Cyprus has such an interesting heritage ....
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Look very forward to learning more about that theory, Max! Makes emminent sense when you think about it, despite the fact that it shoots my own 'naturally meandering river' theory down in flames...
One strange feature that I've noticed from photos of these mediaeval Venetian bridges is that one side seems to be a very shallow approach, gradient wise. While the opposite side looks to be humungorously steep! What's all that about, I wonder?
Cheers- AL
One strange feature that I've noticed from photos of these mediaeval Venetian bridges is that one side seems to be a very shallow approach, gradient wise. While the opposite side looks to be humungorously steep! What's all that about, I wonder?
Cheers- AL

Gone but not forgotten...
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Well done for your independent research Al - not many people know of the term and concepts of meanders and oxbow lakes. In geology lessons we learn, and the Wiki article describes this too, that meanders only occur in the last stage of a river's course where the terrain is very flat and there is hardly a gradient/slope left. From the Youtube video you can see this is not the case here - there are even little waterfalls a bit upstream. In geological terms you have braided rivers a bit further upstream, followed by alluvial planes etc.
A little diagram here - best I could find for the moment w/o scanning my textbooks.
Nice blog - wasn't even aware of this bridge - thank you!
A.
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Is it not possible, I wonder, that the man-made installation of the Evritou reservoir and dam near Simou kind of altered it's feed river behaviour, causing it possibly to believe it was now in a flood plain area, so start meandering subsequently?
Flowing water always finds it's own fastest route from source to outflow, does it not? Not argueing, just interested!
Cheers- AL
Flowing water always finds it's own fastest route from source to outflow, does it not? Not argueing, just interested!
Cheers- AL

Gone but not forgotten...
Re: Skarfos Bridge
I shall ask the river next time I am down there. 

Web Designer / Developer. Currently working on Paphos Life.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
Living in Polemi, Cyprus with my wife and daughter.
- cyprusmax47
- Posts: 5235
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:10 am
- Location: Paphos area since 1982
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Evretou Dam was finished 1986PaphosAL wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2017 10:26 pm Is it not possible, I wonder, that the man-made installation of the Evritou reservoir and dam near Simou kind of altered it's feed river behaviour, causing it possibly to believe it was now in a flood plain area, so start meandering subsequently?
Flowing water always finds it's own fastest route from source to outflow, does it not? Not argueing, just interested!
Cheers- AL![]()

Max
Re: Skarfos Bridge
Perhaps the winters used to be much wetter in days gone by then, than they are most years now?
Dee
Dee