Europe & Asia 2022

August - December 2022
We are off on the next adventure. Go east young couple, go east. Read more
  • 34footprints
  • 10countries
  • 121days
  • 311photos
  • 13videos
  • 17.4kmiles
  • 8.8kmiles
  • 4.3ksea miles
  • Day 5

    Vancouver Island to Island of Ireland

    August 14, 2022 in Canada ⋅ ⛅ 70 °F

    We had a wonderful time at Morgan and Scott's wedding on Vancouver Island. From there we hightailed it to Seattle Airport and out to Ireland. Since we arrived we have been to the Killarney Horse Races, played golf four times, met with tons of extended family and friends and have been having a jolly ould time.Read more

  • Day 35

    Golfing Ireland

    September 13, 2022 in Ireland ⋅ ⛅ 54 °F

    Weather has been great. Have spent time on the east coast of Ireland, Kilkenny, Dublin, Mullingar (my home town) and Downings in Donegal. Downings was a four hour drive from Dublin and well worth it. We stayed at the Rosapenna Hotel and played golf at Sandy Hills and St. Patrick's. https://www.rosapenna.ie/ Spectacular.
    Tomorrow we have six of our friends coming in from Seattle for eight days of travel and golf. Looking forward to it. Fingers crossed on the weather. Cheers for now.
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  • Day 49

    "Ireland or bust" Golf Trip

    September 27, 2022 in Ireland ⋅ 🌧 52 °F

    We sent the Ireland or Bust (Sandpoint Country Club) crew off to the airport last Friday. What a great time was had by all. Seven rounds of golf in 8 days. Exhausted... This time we played three lakeland courses and four links courses. K Club, Mullingar, Concra Wood, Port Stewart, Portrush, Ardglass and Baltray.
    The weather was brilliant with only one shower that I can recall. Our friend Jason (Daddy) gave us a great tour of the political side of Belfast. Fascinating.
    The weather here in Ireland is cooling and the rain is in. So it's time to move on. Flight to Izmir Turkey departs on Saturday Oct 1st. Sunshine.
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  • Day 56

    Day 3 in Izmir

    October 4, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

    After our almost seven week adventure in Ireland we took off last Saturday for Izmir, Turkey. This is a very charming city on the Gulf of Izmir.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/İzmir

    The city has a great boardwalk with fishermen with rods set every 20 yards. Tons of people walking so lots of people watching. Hooray. The food seen here so far has been top class for pennies. I had a nice lunch yesterday. What seemed like a Turkish Burrito and a water for $2.50. 20oz Vanilla Latte $1.50 and dinner for two with bottle of wine and plenty of good stuff to eat $40.
    We just pulled the trigger on renting a car so off sightseeing around the country on Friday. I'll miss the people watching but looking forward to getting out of the big City.
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  • Day 57

    Izmir Food & Market Tour

    October 5, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

    Had a wonderful food, political and economic learning experience with Furkan. What a great guy. Putting things in perspective. The inflation rate in Turkey currently is running at between 80 and 90% annually. Yikes.

    We got to try:
    •Boyoz - super flaky rolls, sometimes stuffed with delicious things like spinach, with Turkish tea (çay, pronounced chai, imagine that 🤔
    •Mussels stuffed with pilaf and a generous squeeze of lemon. And spicy turnip drink (label said fermented black carrot juice but there was turnip in the ingredients), kind of like a salty spicy beet juice … jury’s out on that one.
    •Black mulberry juice (supposed healing properties)
    •Mezes - zucchini tart, stuffed pepper, lentil boules, and so many delicious kinds of yogurt-veggie mixtures (pumpkin, walnut, and crispy chilis is 🤤🔥!!)
    •Marzipans - pistachio (my fave), almond, and walnut (C’s fave)
    •Turkish coffee with allll the grounds in it and milk cream (kind of like a goopier crème brûlée)

    And did I mention Pickles...
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  • Day 60

    Bodrum & the importance of flexibility

    October 8, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

    Picked up the rental car yesterday and headed south. Took the slightly slower road nearer the coast to see the countryside. Lots of greenhouses with tomatoes and aubergine (eggplant), which I have a new love for thanks to how delicious it is here…incorporated into yogurt, cooked with cheese, mmmm…

    About 2 hrs south of Izmir we found Turkish cotton country—acres and acres of cotton fields with harvest underway. Passed a bunch of tractors hauling full trailers of cotton to the nearby gins and storage buildings full of literal mountains of cotton.

    East from there took us back to the Aegean, where you see *huge* resorts perched on hills leading down to the sea. Clearly “all inclusives” are the draw here, with arcades and water parks for the kids and multiple bars, restaurants, pools, and spas for the adults. It boggles the mind how many there are just in this area alone…easily 20,000+ rooms in a 5 mile stretch of road.

    Bodrum seemed to both of us more Greek than Turkish on first impression—mostly white houses nestled on hillsides around a picturesque bay. Which makes sense since it’s a 1-hour ferry ride from the island of Kos, and the reason we’re only here for one night. Decided to “pop on over” to Greece since it’s so easy AND just happens to be the island which Donny’s sister, Fiona, recommended after her & Ken’s recent visit.

    Now here comes the flexibility part… after meticulously researching the ferry, timing, hotel in Bodrum near the terminal, and chatting with our lovely Airbnb hostess on Kos, what we failed ask was, “Can we leave the country with our rental car?”

    We cannot leave the country with our rental car. Which we discovered when checking in 40 minutes ahead of our booked ferry to Kos. The exchange with the ticket guy (who thankfully spoke great English) was classic…

    Him: You have rental car?
    Us: Yes
    Him: Ah, you have voucher saying you can take rental car out of country?
    Us: 😶
    Him: Let me see paperwork (we hand over little car license folio). No l, you do not have voucher to take car out of country.
    Us: 😳🤦‍♀️🤦‍♂️. Can we call to get it.
    Him: You can. (Lengthy pause) But you need it in writing.

    More (restrospectively hilarious) conversation continued at the end of which, and this is one of the biggest reasons I absolutely adore Donny, we switch gears, park the rental car, and head for the ferry sans wheels. Will we get a €240 refund for not taking the car.

    Him: I will talk to boss (with face saying, probably not).
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  • Day 60

    A week on Kos, Greece

    October 8, 2022 in Greece ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

    Our week on Kos (kohsh, not kawse) was relaxing and largely uneventful.

    Highlights:
    • Renting a “buggy” and cruising around the island’s winding roads (despite its narrow seats spawning a complex about my ass width 🫤)
    • Sunset dinner up the mountain in Zia (complete with cremated 🔥 lamb chop)
    • Lovely wine tasting with snack pairings, overlooking the vineyards and Aegean Sea
    • Great Airbnb in Marmari, with neighboring donkeys braying at mealtimes, and a praying mantis visiting our clothes drying rack
    • Getting “upgraded” at the Diamond Deluxe Hotel to a room with a round bed 😂 and a perfect view of the bar (wait….THEY can see US?!?) 🤦‍♀️

    Geography: The island is arid with a mix of sandy and pebbly beaches (most of which are private and/or populated with for-rent sunbeds for €5-20/day depending on location and services provided).

    Weather: There’s a fairly constant wind from the north and, although the sea wasn’t what *I* would call warm, it didn’t stop the hearty (i.e. crazy) types from partaking. As both places we stayed were on the north shore, we didn’t spend too much time on the beach as the warmer afternoon sun invariably came with more assertive winds and you had to turn your lounge chair away from the beautiful sea view to create a windblock or settle for windburn.🫤 We did go for a drive to the southern beaches which had milder weather and where we learned what an “exotic” beach is (hint: its not full of tropical plants & animals). ❌👙🩳🫣

    Tourism: The number of resorts, hotels, and apartments available boggles the mind (see screenshot of hotel.com search 🤯), and those only slightly outnumber the car/buggy/quad/scooter/bike rental shops. Add in a vast number of restaurants and bars and it’s not hard to guess that tourism is #1 here. That said, everyone we encountered was nice and generally seemed happy to have us there. It probably doesn’t hurt that most businesses on the island close November 1 to April 30, time the locals we queried said they use for cleaning, maintenance, and some rest during the holidays. I got the sense that it must be absolutely nuts during the summer busy season.

    Culture: Kos is the home of Hippocrates. Yes, THAT Hippocrates. There were a fair number of ruins around town but I think we missed the most impressive ones, opting instead for people watching along the waterfront. The pace is laidback, as with most tourist destinations, and the vendors/shop owners make sure you know what they have to offer but don’t chase you down the street.

    Agriculture: The countryside looked pretty scrubby, possibly due to it being the end of the season and ~6-8 months since any significant rain. There didn’t seem to be much commercial agriculture beyond a few fields of potatoes, some vineyards, and quite a few olive groves. More common were afew rows of table produce—lettuce, peppers, tomatoes, corn and a lot of aubergine 🍆— planted here and there. Every cow I saw was tied out on a rope in a field that you wouldn’t think would sustain life and I really hope all those buckets had some water. 🙏

    Food & Drink:
    TLDR: Lots of touristy food; local cuisine very fresh, seafood-centric with almost no seasoning/spices and very little garlic. Affordable, tasty local wines, especially dry rosé. A few highlights, but we mostly missed the amazing depth of flavors in Turkish food.

    It’s tough to get a bead on a super touristy destination’s food culture as generally it’s trying to cater to a bunch of different palates. Most restaurants in hotels and in town had the requisite burger, chips (fries), a few pasta options, Caesar salad and pizzas alongside some more targeted tourist food like full English breakfast and schnitzel. (Give me a few menus and I’ll tell you which nationalities visit a place.)

    Then there was the “standard” Greek fare: souvlakis (grilled meat kebabs), gyros, Greek salads, tzatziki 🤤 and hummus. And so, so much bread and pitas.

    Beyond that, this place is all about seafood: a few kinds of grilled fish, abundant octopus & calamari, then shrimp and mussels featured prominently on most restaurant menus. Everything was very fresh and prepared well but bold flavors (and, in some cases, any seasoning at all) are not really a thing here.

    Fortunately, our lovely Airbnb hostess, Sia, had a bunch of recommendations near our house which was intentionally chosen for its country location, so we got a bit more of the local food flare. We found, of course, gorgeous Greek salads, tasty pizza with a local sausage, and €3 gyros! From our hotel later in the week, we went for a walk and ended up stopping for an early dinner at a little hole-in-the-wall place on the edge of town for souvlakis and hand-cut fried potatoes…tasted like home cookin’!

    Prices were higher than Turkey, but lower than what you’d find in the U.S., partially due to more affordable food but mostly wine (~€6/glass, €25-40 for a decent local bottle but of course more 💰 options were available).
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  • Day 68

    Driving along and *boom*…ancient ruins

    October 16, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    En route from Yalikavak to Kalkan, cruising along the highway when these ruins appear along the side of the road. No fanfare, no signs, no gates… just a piece of still-standing ancient history.

    It still catches me off guard sometimes how young my home country is, especially in relation to this part of the world.Read more

  • Day 68

    Yuvarlakçay: Lunch on the river

    October 16, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ☁️ 75 °F

    Took a little detour for lunch on the way to Kalkan, based on a cool restaurant I saw on Instagram that hangs over the river. Turns out the whole area is populated by these but somehow Defne Restaurant became Insta-famous. (https://instagram.com/yuvarlakcaydefnerestauran… )

    It wasn’t *quite* as romantic as the Instagram videos (although Donny did his best to make it so), mostly because it’s late in the season, so the water levels are low and they appear to have removed their man-made waterfall.

    Still, it’s a very cool concept and some of the best food so far. I’m a sucker for köftes (well, meatballs of any sort), thick garlicky yogurt, and sautéed mushrooms, *especially* when they’re delivered sizzling in a pan with its own heat source! 😋🤤 And check out that basket of bread bigger than your head!!
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  • Day 70

    Kalkan

    October 18, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

    Stopped in Kalkan for a few days to break up our drive from Bodrum to Antalya. Another tourist destination, this one preferred by Brits. Our Airbnb was 86 steps above street level, and about 1/2 mile uphill from the main town so we definitely got a workout just staying here.

    The area reminds me of México: large, beautiful villas and condos next to vacant lots filled with construction debris and trash.

    I also learned about solar hot water when I went to take a shower at my customary 9-ish pm and it was lukewarm. 😧 I’ll be getting clean when it’s still daylight from now on. 😂

    Oh, and have I mentioned that the pools here aren’t heated? So beautiful but I’m going to have to pass. Probably wonderful when it’s 90°F+ in the summer.
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