How many people fly in and out of Cyprus each year?
Take a guess. A million? 10 million?
The actual figure is staggering: close on 13 million passengers pass through Larnaca and Paphos airports every 12 months!
Now, how many do you think arrive by sea? Because Cyprus, after all, has an astonishing maritime history; cruise ships are in and out of our harbours all the time.
But here’s the thing: in an entire year, barely 9,000 people travel to or from Cyprus by ship. For roughly every one person who arrives by sea, about 1,500 come by air. And more travellers pass through Cyprus’s airports in 24 hours than arrive or leave by sea in an entire year!
Historically, of course, our ports were crucial: ships laden with goods, émigrés and immigrants, tourists passing through en route to the east. Long before the age of aviation, Cyprus lay beside the great sea road to India – the imperial route that carried ships through the Mediterranean and the Suez Canal to the East.
But today, though still surrounded by water, Cyprus isn’t a sea nation at all. We’re now ‘air island’. Our airports link us to around 160 routes across more than 40 countries.
Which means when aviation shifts, the island notices.
Recent tensions in the wider region did lead some airlines to briefly adjust routes and schedules as a precaution. At Larnaca Airport a number of flights were cancelled or rerouted while carriers responded to changing airspace conditions – something that is increasingly common in global aviation.
But Cyprus’s air connections remain remarkably resilient. Airlines adapt quickly, routes reopen, and the steady flow of travellers continues to connect the island with the rest of the world.
Students leave, family visits, tourists arrive (and leave looking like lobsters!). Business, trade, holidays, diaspora – almost everything that connects Cyprus to the outside world happens 30,000 feet above the Mediterranean.
The island still sits in the sun, surrounded by the same blue sea. And those skies remain the vital bridge that keeps Cyprus linked to the wider world.
And so, as ever, we keep one eye on them.
The silver lining, of course, is that those heavens are finally starting to behave. The sun – if not yet our summer crowds – is on its way…
In Nicosia, Friday is slightly cloudy but mild, with highs around 20°C and a cool overnight dip to about 5°C. The weekend is much the same in both weather and temperatures, before Monday brings the capital a sunny 22°C.
Limassol sees similar conditions, hovering around 21°C with cloud cover through Friday and a windier Saturday on the way. Sunday turns unsettled with showers moving through, and then sunshine returns on Monday with highs holding near 20°C.
Larnaca follows much the same pattern: cloudy and mild on Friday with highs around 21°C. Saturday’s a little breezier with the chance of some rain, while Sunday sees passing showers and continued gusty conditions. But by Monday, sunshine returns and temperatures climb to around 22°C.
Over in Paphos the story is calmer. Friday’s a cloudy 20°C, followed by a mix of sun and cover on Saturday. Sunday may bring the odd shower, but conditions remain mild. And Monday settles into partly sunny skies with temperatures rising to 21°C.
Ayia Napa starts breezy on Friday with highs near 18°C. Saturday and Sunday bring gusts and the possibility of afternoon showers. And by Monday, everything’s brightening: sunshine and warmer temperatures of around 22°C.
Up in Troodos, Friday and Saturday remain chilly with daytime highs of 7°C, dropping below freezing overnight. Sunday brings a couple of showers and a modest warm-up, while Monday turns mostly sunny with temperatures climbing to about 13°C.
Either way, by next week our skies should at least be filling with sunshine. And while the island may sit alone in the Mediterranean, one thing always manages to reach Cyprus – the sun.

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