Monthly Archives: March 2013

The beauty of urban agriculture

Alright. Somehow it’s already late on what was supposed to be a very relaxed day in Fethiye. Weather has pushed back our hike startdate by a day, so we’ve had some time to get ourselves together, but somehow I haven’t managed to write anything down. Always seems to be busier when you’re traveling with someone. Anyway. Tomorrow we leave for a week or two or three of hiking on the Lycian way, depending on how we like it and where/if we stop. But the last few days have certainly been eventful. A combination of hitchhiking and busses took us first west to the northern Aegean coast, where we camped in a lovely olive orchard (orchard? Grove?) and walked the deceptively-signed road to a local waterfall park. The surrounds were beautiful, but not enough to compel us to stay, so the next day we  meandered south and east, arriving in the small city/large town of Kuracasu around 10:00 pm. This isn’t a town with much in the way of accommodation, being off the normal tourist track, and we weren’t inclined to pay, but we managed to find a beautiful little olive grove within the city limits, just beside the river bank. We stumbled over the furrows and found a perfect little nook to hide from the nearby apartment buildings and occasional traffic. Continue reading

Record Scratch

I could wax on for some time about how I already miss the Balkans (good times, very good times) but no sense lamenting when there’s so much to celebrate. Istanbul provided a wonderfully sunny welcome, though by now we appear to have worn out that particular good grace. I’ve spent the week reacquainting myself with the many delights of Turkish cuisine, and having the enjoyably role-reversed experience of playing tour guide for Kate and, for a day, Jamie. We’ve had plenty of new adventures too – two heads are better than one when it comes to finding fun in a city as overwhelming as Istanbul.

And overwhelming is the word for it. After two nights near Taksim, the bouncing, throbbing heart of new Istanbul, we fled across the continental divide to Kadikoy, still my favourite place in the city. Taksim area is absolutely stuffed with bars, clubs, and a rainbow of other drinking and shopping establishments. Twice we wandered its cacophonous streets looking for a drink and a song, and twice there were simply too many choices. Why stop and hear this particular guitarist when there’s four more just down the street? And what’s that around the corner? And what about that place we passed in the beginning that looked so cool? I’m hopeless in these situations, and Kadikoy has proved the perfect cure. Still many, many choices, but Kadikoy is too cool to thrust everything at you in a bombast of touting and overlapping music. Kadikoy is all about discreet signs, small clubs under low overhangs, and not being able to find the place you’re looking for because it doesn’t appear to have a sign at all. We ended up in converted house, the bar taking up the top two floors, plus the small attic, which is where they stashed the band. We’d never have known it from the street, but they put on quite a show in the tiny room, well worth staying through the heat.

Even the relative calm of Kadikoy is still Istanbul, though, and I’m looking forward to starting the journey south and spending some time outside. The forecast is for thunderstorms tonight, so we’ve delayed our departure by a day to try and wait out the worst of it, but we’re heading to one of the Prince’s Islands tonight, which should provide a nice city break. And a good excuse to spend more time on the always-relaxing public transit ferries (they’re not Brisbane’s high-speed cats, Carmen, but they’re still heaps fun).

Also: Saw a dolphin! In the Golden Horn. Turns out there are dolphins in this tiny strip of hyper-trafficked water? Would not have guessed, but there you are. The Horn was also full of jellyfish – millions and millions of them, mostly alive and glowing phosphorescent. A beautiful sight present at every bridge and ferry crossing.

The Long Road

Returning to Turkey, especially at night, was like returning to the west. From a ragged, barely two-lane road in Bulgaria (which I’m convinced cannot be the main road to Turkey) we crossed the border and spent the next few hours on a beautifully smooth six-lane highway, filled with long-haul trucks carrying everything a first world country needs, from Sony products to biodiesel. Continue reading

Turning the Corner

With word from my once and future travel partner Kate that she’d like to head to Turkey ASAP to beat the heat, Sarajevo became the westernmost stop on this particular leg of the journey. The coast was still calling, and Dubrovnik is marginally closer to Turkey than Sarajevo (this is possibly untrue), so off I went. Continue reading