Friday, March 20, 2026

CYPRUS - THE LONLIEST ISLAND?

 



CYPRUS - THE LONLIEST ISLAND? - Cy Mail 20/3 by Morgan West


Cyprus is quite alone.

Not on the map; cartographically speaking, we’re surrounded. Turkey lies just 75 kilometres away. Syria is 100km distant. Egypt just a little further.

Here’s the bit where people always say, knowingly, “ah ha! Cyprus is the crossroads of continents!” And, geographically speaking, they’re right – if rather annoying.

Culturally, though, we’re a little isolated. Because, while Cyprus is undoubtedly a melting pot of peoples, its cultural orientation has long been Hellenic.

Now, before anyone gets on their high horse, we all know our island is a highly complex mix of cultures and histories, influenced by everyone from ancient civilisations to more recent powers. But in terms of language, religion and identity, we have long looked to Greece.

And yet Greece sits a very long way away: 800-ish kilometres across the Mediterranean. The place Cyprus culturally identifies with most closely is geographically very distant.  

We’re not alone in this. Alaska is culturally American, but sits thousands of kilometres from the US mainland. The Falkland Islands are British, despite lying more than 12,000 kilometres from the UK in the South Atlantic.

But what makes Cyprus different is that we’re not politically part of the country with which we identify most strongly in terms of culture. We may share deep cultural ties with Greece, but we’re a proud nation in our own right: a self-governing island with our own identity, our own story and our own strange position between continents.

And that geography shapes more than we realise.

But loneliness doesn’t always look like solitude. Sometimes it comes from isolation. And Cyprus, for all its neighbours, is a place defined by distance. By empty horizons and the long blue silence of the Mediterranean.

Perhaps that’s why islanders have always watched the seas and skies so closely – not just for ships and planes, but for clouds. And this weekend, those skies definitely have something to say…

After a week of rain, rain and more rain – great news for the dams, less so for spring plans – the unsettled pattern isn’t quite done with us yet.

In Nicosia, Friday brings a little afternoon rain with highs around 19°C. Saturday is similar, slightly cooler at 17°C with more showers, before Sunday offers a break: a mix of cloud and sun and a more comfortable feel. By Monday, though, a couple of showers return, keeping things changeable.

Limassol follows a breezier script. Friday sees afternoon rain and gusty conditions, with temperatures around 19°C. Saturday starts damp before easing, and Sunday brings brighter spells and a lift to around 18°C. Monday turns cloudier again, though temperatures edge up to 20°C.

Larnaca stays unsettled through much of the weekend. Friday sees showers and strong winds, with highs near 21°C. Saturday improves slightly with lighter rain, while Sunday brings the chance of an afternoon shower. By Monday, skies remain overcast but conditions settle.

Paphos sees the most dramatic weather. Friday brings heavy downpours and strong winds, followed by more rain on Saturday. Sunday eases into a morning shower and brighter conditions, while Monday keeps the risk of an afternoon shower, with temperatures steady around 20°C.

Ayia Napa remains breezy and unsettled. Friday and Saturday bring showers and strong winds, with highs around 16–18°C. Sunday offers a slight improvement with a chance of afternoon rain, while Monday sees increasing cloud and continued gusty conditions.

Up in Troodos, it’s still very much winter territory. Friday brings rain and sleet with highs around 5°C and freezing nights. Saturday stays cold with light rain, Sunday brings a couple of showers, and by Monday temperatures rise to around 12°C – though conditions remain unsettled.

On days like these, when the weather holds us in place, the island feels its size…

Cyprus has always been a meeting point. For centuries, people have crossed these waters, bringing languages, traditions and stories that still shape the island today. It’s why, for all its distance, Cyprus never truly feels empty.

And yet, that quiet sense of separation still lingers from time to time.

So, this weekend, as the rain keeps us closer to home, perhaps we lean into what we do best. A coffee, a conversation, a table filled with voices.

Because if the horizon reminds us how far away the world can be, the people around us remind us how close life in Cyprus can feel.