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27 Ekim 2010 Çarşamba

Walking ancient paths on the Lycian Way


The Turkey we encountered was far from the Turkey of the busy coastal towns



The sea looked tantalisingly close, but to reach it involved a scramble down a cliff with fixed ropes where, according to the guidebook, "a fall could be fatal". We took the easier option, joining the gathering group of walkers nursing beers at the cliff edge of Butterfly Valley, as the sun made its descent into the shimmering waters off the Turkish coast.


Butterfly Valley

Our goal was to walk four days of the Lycian Way, Turkey's first long-distance route, a trail of 316 miles that starts at Ovacik, near Fethiye, and ends at Antalya.
The walk is a classic journey through history. Among other things, it follows ancient paths and goat tracks Alexander the Great traced on his march through Lycia more than 2,000 years ago. Along the route are rock caves and tombs, relics of ancient civilisations and opportunities to stop at former strategic cities such as Xanthos and Patara, still home to staggering ruins of tombs and amphitheatres. Our walk would climb into the Babadag mountains, which follows the Teke peninsula (formerly Lycia) with the Taurus Mountains behind. South across the Mediterranean are views of the Greek island of Meis and on a clear day you can see the island of Rhodes.
We were six women of varying stages of fitness, accompanied by our "fixer" Suha and his friend Ahmet, both friends of Di, who organised our trip and who visits Turkey so often she is a virtually a resident of Kalkan. That first day combined all the components of adventure: dramatic weather (a hail storm), historic landmarks, breathtaking scenery, exhaustion and elation.
The seven miles we walked took us to elevations of nearly 2,625ft, reached through switchbacks up the mountainside. We passed through olive groves, small villages with pomegranate orchards and mulberry trees, and spotted the occasional wild tortoise. We crossed streams and springs, picnicked with views of the coastline as far as the eye could see, and walked through forests of flowering oleander, guided by the waymark signs of two splashes of paint, one red and one white, on trees or rock.
Eight hours later we followed a trickling stream into the beekeeping and farming village of Faralya. Once bed and dinner were secured, we strolled along an ancient cobbled track to the cliff overlooking Butterfly Valley, so named because of the Jersey Tiger moths that fed on the wild buddleia – though they now seemed few and far between. Later we feasted on trout caught from a pool at our guesthouse as stars began to fill the sky.
The next day began with a five-mile walk to Kabak. Civilisation suddenly came into view: a small guesthouse, Mama's, hidden by tangled bougainvillea, with a sign pointing us to the beach.
We found the route, stripped off and plunged into the sea, tired feet aching with the chill, but what a glorious moment – even though it added two hours to a long day.

From sea level we had a two-mile climb. Bit by bit the sea shrank behind us. Our steep ascent led through sweet-smelling pine forest as we followed a stream up past a waterfall. Onwards and upwards we went, finally emerging on the plain and into the tiny hamlet of Alinka. At the first house, a young boy tending sheep welcomed us. His mother made tea with wild sage and sugar while we sat in plastic chairs repaired with staples and string.
That night we stayed at Bayram's House in Gey, owned by the village's mayor, where, due to a mix-up, we found ourselves billeted in a dormitory with six mattresses on the floor. A quick swig of whisky bolstered our waning spirits and we sat down to the best meal of our trip: home- cooked lamb, borek (filo pastry filled with cheese and meats), yufka (a type of flat bread), salads and yogurt with bottles of chilled wine. Drifting in on the wind came the sound of music from the square. Our visit had coincided with a fiesta for the young men of the village about to start their military service.
The Turkey we encountered was far from the Turkey of the busy coastal towns. We'd walk for hours without seeing a soul; one day we passed just one man on an ancient tractor and two veiled women on a scooter. And everywhere we went we were treated with generous Turkish hospitality, passers-by offering us fruit, nuts or dates. One family even offered to kill a lamb for us.
On our last day, in order to reach the bay before Kalkan, we took a less-known section of the walk, neglecting to read up on our route in Kate Clow's essential guide, The Lycian Way. Had we done so we would have seen that the "narrow, dramatic cliff path along steep rocks involves some scrambling". We found this out for ourselves shortly after admiring a Roman aqueduct at Delikkemer. With the end of our walk and a hot bath almost within sight, we started the final rocky descent to the coast. Suddenly the track petered out and the only way seemed to be down sheer rock face. In a rare moment, everyone stopped talking and we lay flat, inching ourselves along a section of jagged rock with the sea perilously far below.
We made it. Our destination was in view. We left our precious waymark signs and marched to the hillside above Kalamar Bay. To reach our villa from this side of the hill we had to scale a mountain of rubble and climb over railings. Not a very dignified arrival but one that was far more satisfying than the usual taxi ride from Dalaman airport.

17 Eylül 2010 Cuma

Çalış Carnival 2011 – Car Boot Sale Sunday 26 September 2010

The Çalış Carnival car boot sales resume for the 2011 season with the next sale to be held on Sunday 26 September 2010 in Calis, Fethiye.
Çalış Carnival car boot sales Fethiye, Turkey are very popular
The first sale of the 2011 carnival year will be held in the car park behind Mado Ice Cream Parlour, Calis Seafront (next to the Lighthouse Restaurant and Bahar Hotel).


This is the first event of the 2011 Carnival year so if you have second hand gear to shift now is a great time to get it sold.
Stalls cost 10TL (a stall constitutes 2 tables width) and charities will not have to pay for their stall but are limited to one stall per charity.
You can bring your own tables or hire them from us as 2TL a table and 1TL for a chair.
All stall fees will go towards the Çalış Carnival 2011 and Carnival charities.

Get There Early but not TOO Early

The committee are unable to take advance bookings and reserve spaces as this has proved to be unmanageable in the past.
The allocation of stalls will therefore be on a first come first set up basis and stallholders should arrive no sooner than 7:00 am and no later than 8:30 am to secure a place.
The Zabita have informed the committee that new goods stalls/trade stalls and hot food stalls will not be permitted but craft stalls/hand made goods and second hand goods are fine.
The Zabita will be patrolling the sale.


The Carnival Committee would be really pleased to receive donations of any unwanted presents, household items, small furniture, bric a brac, books, clothing, plants etc for sale on their charity stall as they are running out of items to sell! For enquiries or donations please ring 0535 8554919 or 0536 3739520.

19 Temmuz 2010 Pazartesi

Ölüdeniz Beach- Fethiye


Ölüdeniz Beach is Mediterranean Turkey's most beautiful, also its most famous and popular.


Ölüdeniz (ur-LEW-deh-neez, "dead" or calm, sea"), only 8.5 km (5.3 miles) south of Fethiye over the mountains, is big enough to handle the crowds of swimmers and sunbathers, but not always the number of cars and buses that cram the narrow access road.

Paragliders leap from nearby mountaintops, soaring and floating above the beach and the sea, finally landing right on the beach. Tandem paragliding, where two people fly together in the same harness, is very popular.

The fertile alluvial plain behind the beach is now filled with small hotels, pensions and restaurants, and any further expansion has been relegated to the nearby hilltop towns of Ovacik and Hisarönü.

The beach takes its eerie name from the secluded lagoon at the beach's western end by the Hotel Meri. Protected by hills and entered by a narrow channel, the lagoon is calm during even the worst storms.

The Lycian Way, a 500-km (311-mile) rustic footpath, starts in Fethiye and wanders through the hills, descending to Ölüdeniz before ascending again above Kidrak and Faralya, passing the head of Butterfly Valley and the access road to the Tohum Eco-Center before wandering southeastward toward Patara and, ultimately, Antalya.

To get away from it all, consider the Villa Mandarin in Faralya, past Ölüdeniz along the coast.

If you plan only a short stay at Ölüdeniz beach before moving on, you might want to stay in Fethiye, where prices tend to be lower, and take one of the frequent minibuses to Ölüdeniz for the day. All intercity buses operate out of Fethiye's otogar (bus terminal).


For distances from Ölüdeniz to other places, see the distances on the Fethiye page, and add 8.5 km (5.3 miles).

18 Temmuz 2010 Pazar

Turkey's Best Beaches



Here are Turkey's top 10 beaches, with nearest big town (in parentheses). Some even rate the coveted Blue Flag for cleanliness.

Important note: most Turkish beaches do not have lifeguards, but some do occasionally have dangerous riptide and undertow conditions. Swim at your own risk, don't swim alone, and make some plan for what to do if disaster strikes.

1. Patara (Fethiye): 50 meters/yards wide and 20 km (12.5 miles) long, this beach 75 km (47 miles) south of Fethiye is Turkey's finest. Accommodations—and shade—are limited, though. (Big photo)

2. Ölüdeniz (Fethiye): Very fine, with good hotels, restaurants and bars, but because it's Turkey's most famous, it can get crowded. (Big photos)

3. Olimpos (Antalya): The opposite of the others: small, secluded, atmospheric, backed by a forest filled with Roman ruins. 79 km (49 miles) southwest of Antalya (map).

4. Side (Antalya): The once-idyllic village 65 km (40 miles) east of Antalya is now crowded and noisy, but the beaches are still fine and unspoiled. Roman ruins abound (map).

5. Alanya: The town (115 km/72 miles east of Antalya) is busy and crowded, but the beaches are so long (22 km/14 miles to the east) that there's plenty of sand for everyone. Great Seljuk castle, too (map).

6. Iztuzu (Dalyan): Good beach, with or w/o logger-head turtles. The town, 8 km (5 miles) NW of Dalaman Airport, the river, cliff tombs and Caunos ruins are a nice bonus.

7. Bodrum Peninsula: Beaches in the towns are not great, but good smaller ones abound: Ortakent Yalisi (coarse sand & pebble), Turgutreis (surfy), and gem-like Gümüslük (map).

8. Kemer (Antalya): Very mod-resorty, but near a lot of interesting day-trip possibilities (map).

9. Pamucak (Ephesus): Big, broad, dark sand, only 7 km (4 miles) west of Ephesus, relatively clean with a few cig butts and bottlecaps (map). (Big photo)

10. Çalış (Fethiye): Long beach near the city cradling yacht-happy Fethiye Bay, good but somehow un-charming, and famous Ölüdeniz is just 10 km (6 miles) away over the hills.

HONORABLE MENTION:

Kızkalesi (Silifke): Known only to Turks and savvy foreigners, the beach is sort of small but the castle out at sea makes up for it.

Sinop: Nice beaches, never crowded, because the Black Sea water is usually pretty chilly.

Kuşadası (Ephesus): Nice enough beaches, but small and very crowded (map).

Antalya: Big, l-o-n-g pebble/coarse sand beach using the Blue Flag System to certify cleanliness (map).

Samandağı (Antakya): W-a-y down near Syria (26 km/16 miles) southwest of Antakya, but has a trash problem.

Anamur (Alanya): Good beach that only Turks seem to know about. Interesting Byzantine ghost town nearby.

BEACH SAFETY:

Note that few Turkish beaches have lifeguards! Be careful of the surf, and prepared to save yourself.