Saturday, April 9, 2011

Behramkale (Assos)


Aristotle, who spent three years in Assos.




The path from the Alarga to the temple


Ece's no name cat

A street in Behramkale, which later in the day would be lined with stalls selling wares

The view of the Aegean (Ege) and the island of Lesvos


Saying goodbye to Ece

The Assos Alarga was a real find.  Three lovely guest rooms, a living room, pool, terrace, game room, spectacular views, steps from the Temple of Athena,  and the incomparable innkeeper Ece.  This was her family's summer home.  She left a career in Istanbul working with software in the hotel business to try running this place as a B & B  after her parents decided to sell it.  This is the place to stay, I think, rather than up in Canakkale.  There's a picturesque harbor down the steep hill about a kilometer where we had a fish dinner at the Assos Keravansaray Hotel.  All was quiet in the off-season.  Monday morning dawned bright and sunny and after a marvelous breakfast, we walked up to the temple.

Truva


a Trojan cat



 Skies continue to be gray and it was chilly, but the rain mostly held off for the rest of the day.  Touring  the ruins of Troy, like when we were at Efes, there were tour groups of Japanese, Germans, Italians, but we also found ourselves off the main route and alone at least briefly, as happened there.  This time it was looking at a man made cave that's at least 3000 years old.



Another fake Trojan horse


Back in the car we headed another 40 minutes down the road to what the Greeks called Assos and what the the Turks call Behramkale.  This was the highlight.  We will return to enjoy this place.


Canakkale




The description of this fairly recent commemorative piece identifies Ataturk as the sun lighting Turkey's future.
We pulled into Canakkale in the early evening.  Once again I proved a lousy navigator and what should have been an easy location of the hotel was not.  We ended up going far afield and winding around narrow, very ugly streets piled with garbage.  Two friends at RC had pronounced Canakkale charming, but it seemed to me a pit.  We did finally make it to the clock tower square and found our hotel.  Very nice folks at reception but as soon as I walked in the lobby I could smell what I think was the coal-fired heating system.  The smell was strong throughout the hotel and that may have contributed to the ferocious headache I developed.  With it still cold and damp outside, I wasn't up for trudging around and selecting a restaurant, so Sim went out and came back with kebap, beer and wine, and we stayed in. At this point I was feeling like the trip was pretty much of a bust. In the morning it was brightening a little and we began to discover some of the charms of the town.  The waterfront is pretty with lots of restaurants and the Trojan horse used in the movie Troy.  We went to a park which had a naval museum inside a ship which explained the battle in March 1915 when the Turks repelled allied forces in the Canakkale Strait. (The Dardanelles)  We also toured an impressive Ottoman fort.

Around noon we headed for Troy, about a half an hour down the road.

Friday, April 8, 2011

A much needed Spring Break

Our week's vacation began last Friday.  I'm working on another post about the demands and rewards of the job, so it's enough to say here that my fellow RC teachers and I were really ready for this vacation.  Friday was gray and cool and the forecast promised more of the same for our 3 day road trip.  Immediately after school my friend Kristine and I had made a date to be the first at the Happy Hour sponsored by our headmaster at Bizemtepe.  I only had a half hour because Sim and I were taking advantage of the free buses taking boarders to the airport, where we had a reservation for a rental car.  Well, the buses were late, kids and my friend Ambrose who actually had planes to catch were getting anxious.  We made it to the airport about 5:30, then began an hour and a half of messing around to try to get the rental car.  First we needed to locate the Payless desk.  That involved going in and out of the terminal and then back in, which involves going through security.  When we found the desk they said their computers were down, then they finally found our reservation. But they didn't have the car we reserved.  They offered a "free" upgrade to a bigger diesel (and with some of the roads we were driving on, bigger is not necessarily better).  But he starts quoting prices and is insisting that we have to take the CDW, which is not true, and the bottom line, after looking at TL, Euro and figuring dollars in my head, he wanted twice as much as the price I had reserved.  So we walked out, grumpy.  Tried to use my iPad to see if we could contact Expedia, our booking agent, but couldn't get a connection.  So we walked over to Thrifty and started to negotiate. Got a decent Fiat, for about 50 bucks more than our original price and finally hit the road.

We had planned to just drive part way to Gallipoli and I had tried to book a room in Tekirdag, but hadn't received a response from the Golden Yat Hotel  (Yat in Turkish= yacht).  We pulled off the road and wandered around the not very attractive town of Tekirdag, looking for GYH.  Finally spotted it back on the highway.  But they had no rooms, nor did the Rodosto next door, which I'd considered booking despite its decidedly mixed reviews.  The bellman at GYH pointed us to the Yayoba Hotel down the road.  We found it and a very nice young man checked us in and showed us the room, which was okay, except it smelled like cigarette smoke.   The room was off a large echoy circular hall.  Inside the door to the exterior hall was another small hall with the bathroom and both a double and a single room off it.  Why he put us in there, when it was clear that there were lots of empty doubles, we don't know.  Maybe we looked like we didn't want to sleep together.  Or maybe it was just a way to charge us an extra 15 TL.

The same nice young man then waited on us for dinner.  I ordered a glass of white wine (the area is supposed to have a lot of wine production.)  What arrived was a color that might best be described as taupe.  And it tasted like what you might expect from taupe-colored wine.  While I was considering how to tell the nice young man that the wine was undrinkable, he asked me if I wanted Sprite or mineral water.  I said I'd like mineral water (I was thirsty)  When he came back with the mw and poured it into the wine, I really didn't know what to say.  I gather if I had said yes to Sprite he would have added it to the wine for a special kind of spritzer.  At that point I asked for a beer,which Sim had wisely opted for in the first place, and left the "wine" untouched. 

Saturday morning we awoke to see pouring rain and strong wind.  Not at all a day for touring the battlefields of Gallipolli, except it gave us a small glimpse into what the soldiers might have experiencd at just this time of year.  We stopped for lunch in the village of Gelibolu (the Turkish name for the peninsula).  My friend and department chair has a place there, where he will make his home after his retirement in June.  I had just purchased an umbrella  and were heading toward the restaurants that ring the harbor when we ran into Phil.  He had just had lunch but he led us back to his favorite place and introduced us to the owner and gave instructions to treat us well.  Our  shrimp starter and  broiled fish were very good.  Eating out on the dock would have been lovely in better weather.  That also would have helped us avoid inhaling the cigarette smoke which filled the dining room, where everyone, including the owner, were puffing away under the signs "Sigara Incilmez"  (Literally, No cigarette drinking).  This is a relatively new ban and is widely ignored, especially in little places like Gelibolu.

Back on the road, we soon entered with National Park commemorating the Gallipoli campaign where so many died and were wounded.


The coastline is spectacular and the overall effect very moving, as signs remind you that this is a cemetery and behavior should be respectful.  The Gallipoli campaign really catapulted Ataturk's reputation. He halted and eventually repelled the Allied advance, exceeding his authority and contravening orders.

He's famously quoted as telling his troops, "I do not command you to fight, I command you to die. In the time it will take us to die we can be replenished by new forces."   86000 Turkish soldiers died, twice as many as from the combined Allied forces. Ataturk himself did not die, obviously.  Apparently a bullet he would have taken in the heart was stopped by his pocket watch.

Canakkale Day is celebrated on March 18th in Turkey, commemorating the day the Turks repelled the Allied forces in the Dardanelles.  ANZAC Day is April 25th, when the the largely Australian and New  Zealand forces made landfall at ANZAC cove and began months of trench warfare. When we were there they were setting up stands for the large celebrations which will take place in a few weeks.


One of the monuments has this nice sentiment from Ataturk in 1935:  "Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side now here in this country of ours... you, the mothers, who sent their sons from faraway countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land, they have become our sons as well."

After finishing our tour, we took the 25 minute ferry ride from Eceabat to the town of Canakkale, where we checked into the All Star Anzac Hotel.

A Spring Saturday


Getting an expensive shoe shine from the guy who helped us find Chora


One on the mosaics in St. Saviour in Chora (Kariye Camii)


Atop Theodos II's walls


View of the Golden Horn from the wall, Galata Tower to the left
We continue to explore our city when we can.  On Caitlin's birthday, March 26th, a sunny Spring Saturday, we celebrated by venturing to the south side of the Golden Horn.  (She was in the Poconos.)  The trek involved a walk down the hill, a bus to Kabatas, then the tram to Aksaray, then stumbling around looking for the Metro, the metro to Ulubatli, then trying to follow a map through winding streets to get to St.  Saviour in Chora.  Finally we were helped by a Mehmet-on-the-spot shoeshine guy.  While he shined my boots he showed us pictures of his children in Ankara and told us of how much it costs to get to Ankara (50 Euro).  When he was done he wanted 20 TL PER SHOE for his service.  We smilingly left him with only 20 for both.  Pretty ridiculous but we were feeling generous and didn't have any smaller bills. 

The Byzantine church has the best preserved frescoes and mosaics that I have seen anywhere.  This church was part of a monastery complex dating from perhaps the 4th century.  The mosaics and frescoes are from the beginning of the 14th century. The Ottomans turned the church into a mosque, but it's been a museum since 1948.  We had an early dinner next door at an elegant restaurant which specializes in Ottoman food prepared according to historic recipes from the records of the Topkapi kitchens.  Their terrace wasn't open, which seems like it would be delightful, but the dining room was beautiful and the food and service outstanding.  We got a bus to Besiktas, which took at least an hour, and another one home.  We spent more time in transit than we did at our destination, but it was worth it. 

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Since Sim's return

Sim arrived home on March 17th, via Doha, Qatar.  (Not a vacation spot.)  He bought alcohol at the duty free, then discovered it's illegal to bring alcohol into Qatar. (He had some from Bangkok duty free as well) He had to turn his Doha purchased bottles over to be picked up on his way out after an overnight.  He said they didn't really seem to have a system in place, but just making it up as they went along.  The next day he was sent hither and yon to retrieve his packages, but finally magaged to get them, and luckily no one checked and discovered he had brought the Thai purchases in. 

Friday March 18 was the big St. Patrick Day bash (Sim's purchases in duty free involved several bottles of Irish whiskey for the occasion.)  The party was hosted at the apartments of Maura Kelly, Graham Fleming, and Metin O'Ferhatoglu in Blue House (dubbed Green House for the evening).  Lots of great food and luckily the rain held off so we were out in the garden with the fire pit.





Our bedroom at Kadriye Hanim Kosku


The restaurant-lined waterfront in Buyukada.  There used to be glass-enclosed seating, but it's in the process of being replaced by a tent  sort of thing.  We all decided it's a really dumb change.
On Saturday afternoon, Sim and I took the boat to Buyukada to spend the night and celebrate Fusun's birthday.  A beautiful dinner with Selim and Cigdem and Angela and Korhan, two couples who live on the island and whom we've spent a lot of time with on previous visits.

Update

It's been awhile.  Partly because blogger.com has been blocked in Turkey.  But I've known how to get around the block for awhile now.  But work has had me incredibly busy.  I'm on Spring break now, and just got back from a 3 day road trip.  I've got lots of school work to do and housekeeping both literal and figurative.  I just downloaded some pictures to this computer (the process including downloading the software, as usual with this HP school-owned computer, took a long and frustrating time.)




So these pictures are not Moira's adventure or even a Turkish adventure.  They're from Sim's Thailand trip the first two weeks in March.  But since Moira's Turkish adventure made his Thai adventure possible, I thought I'd include a few.  Two of them are Sim and his friend Cooper who has spent a lot of time in Thailand,  working on his business involving medical tourism.  As another friend commented, he seems to have managed to provide the requisite medical event which allows customers to sample the product.  The last picture is of Sim getting stitches for the cut he received when he lost control of his motorbike on the way to a temple in Chiang Mai.  He sprained an ankle and a thumb, bruised some ribs, and the cut got infected and required follow-up.  All of that plus a refill on his blood pressure medicine was less than the cost of fixing the bike.

The last pix is Sim with his cousin Tony Lett, who he met up with in Chiang Mai.