Kastrosykia Beach Preveza: Monolithi's End, Sunsets
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Kastrosykia Beach (Pidima Kiras), Preveza: The Southern End of the 22km Monolithi Sand, Where the Zalongo Monument and Ancient Kassopi Sit a Short Drive Inland
Greece | Kastrosykia | Zalongo, Preveza, Epirus
Kastrosykia is not a separate stretch of sand from Monolithi — it is Monolithi’s southern terminus. The 22-kilometre beach already covered in Monolithi Beach Preveza Greece runs from Komaros Cape at Mytikas in the north all the way down to the village of Kastrosykia, passing Kanali along the way. What this means in practice: a swim at Kastrosykia and a swim at Monolithi further north are technically the same continuous beach, separated by several kilometres but joined by an unbroken strip of sand the entire way. The specific section at Kastrosykia, also known locally as Pidima Kiras after the neighbouring village, extends for approximately 3.9 kilometres and ranks 5th among 101 beaches across the entire Epirus region.
The water deepens gradually from the very edge of the shore — the specific calibration that makes this section reliably family-friendly regardless of which exact point along the strip a visitor chooses. The water in summer reaches a comfortable 27 to 28°C, warm enough that regular visitors describe it as feeling like bath water on calm days. The beach faces west, which means the Ionian sunset happens directly into the sea rather than laterally — the specific orientation that every account of this stretch singles out as a highlight.
Getting There: 15–20 Minutes North of Preveza (18km), 45 Minutes South of Parga, Massive Free Parking Along the Beach Road
From Preveza, the drive north toward Igoumenitsa covers approximately 18 kilometres, taking 15 to 20 minutes. From Parga, the route south along the coastal road takes approximately 45 minutes. Free parking runs the length of the beach road, close enough to the sand that a long walk is rarely necessary regardless of where a visitor stops.
The Beach: 3.9km Sandy Strip, Gradual Entry, West-Facing Sunsets, Nisos and Asterias Camping With Olive Grove Shade
The section of beach immediately beside the Nisos camping ground, set within an olive grove, is specifically singled out by local guides as one of the most beautiful stretches of the entire Preveza-to-Parga coastline: wide, quiet, with natural shade from the olive trees, a restaurant operating in deep shade, and a section of the beach left open for visitors who bring their own umbrellas and equipment rather than renting. A second camping ground, Asterias, sits further along the same beach with similarly generous shade, its own restaurant, and a section of fine pebbles rather than pure sand.
The water is clean even when wind picks up waves — multiple visitor accounts specifically note that the beach stays visually attractive in rougher conditions rather than turning murky, a quality not every sandy beach on this coast shares. On windier days, the section becomes genuinely popular with people who enjoy playing in moderate surf, a different and complementary use of the same beach from the calm-water family swimming it offers most of the time.
Zalongo Monument: The Dance of Souli
The Zalongo Monument — a dramatic sculptural memorial on a hilltop a short drive inland — commemorates the women of Souli who, in 1803, chose to throw themselves and their children from the cliff rather than be captured by Ottoman forces during the Souliote War. The monument’s elevated position delivers a panoramic view across the Preveza plain and coastline, and the historical weight of the event it commemorates gives the otherwise relaxed beach day a specific point of contrast.
Ancient Kassopi and Nikopolis: Two Archaeological Sites Within Reach
Ancient Kassopi, the ruins of a Classical-era city built on a plateau in the mountains above this stretch of coast, includes a well-preserved theatre, agora, and residential foundations. Nikopolis — the city founded by Augustus to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, fought in the waters of the nearby Ambracian Gulf — is a substantial archaeological site closer to Preveza itself, with an odeon, basilicas, and city walls. Both sites are easily combined with a beach day at Kastrosykia for visitors splitting time between sand and history.
Kastrosykia Beach (Pidima Kiras) in Preveza is the southern 3.9km section of the 22-kilometre Monolithi sand — gradual entry, water warming to 27–28°C in summer, west-facing sunsets directly into the Ionian, ranked 5th of 101 Epirus beaches, Nisos camping in an olive grove (deep shade, own-equipment sections available) and Asterias camping with fine pebbles further along, clean even when windy (popular for wave play on rougher days), the Zalongo Monument (the 1803 Souliote tragedy) and Ancient Kassopi a short drive inland, Nikopolis nearer Preveza, 15–20 minutes north of the city, 45 minutes south of Parga.
Drive north from Preveza. Choose Nisos for olive-grove shade or Asterias for the pebbled section. Stay for the west-facing sunset.
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