Turkey
Muammer Aksoy Parkı

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    • Day 12

      Dag 12- Ephesus na Troy (Çannakale)

      August 17, 2022 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

      Wat 'n belewenis was vandag nie... Na ons opgepak en gou ontbyt by die hotel geëet het, is ons sak en pak oppad na Ephesus. Toe ons daar inry, wys die een ou ons waar om te stop. Hy hoor ons praat en weet dadelik ons is Afrikaans en vertel ons dat hy een van Leon Schuster se flieks gekyk het. Ons koop by hom 'n boekie oor Ephesus en hy reël vir ons vervoer na die bokant van die terrein toe. Hy sê ons moet 10 minute wag en toe daag ons perde en perdekar op! So oulik! Die ou hanteer sy perde baie mooi en ons geniet die rit vreeslik baie! Ons het oorspronklik gedink met die boek is 'n gids nie nodig nie, maar het toe besluit om een te kry. Ons is definitief nie spyt nie! So het ons deur die Ou Stad geloop en vreeslik baie interessanthede geleer. Hulle is nog besig met opgrawings en daar is van die goed wat sommer 'n week of twee gelede nog gevind is. Mens kan ook sien hoe hulle staan en skoonmaak en opgrawe en tekere gaan. Dis besonders! Na ons deur die Stad was, het ons toergids saam ons gery om geld te trek, aangesien hy kontant wou hê en ons nie gehad het nie. Hy vat ons toe gou by 'n leerfabriek in waar hulle vir ons 'n klein modeparade hou. Shame, die arme ou kry seker kommissie op die items wat verkoop word en het seker gedink ons het baie geld. Die items is ongelooflik mooi en word van skaap- en bokleer gemaak, so dis vreeslik sag en lig. Dis net jammer die pryse is so... R25 000 min of meer per item! Selfs die wat op uitverkopings is, is om en by R10 000. Die gids het so ewe vir Damian in die kar gesê toe ek uitgehop het om geld te trek, dat hy kan sien ek is lief vir hom, maar net so 80% lief vir hom... Maar hy sal sien, as hy vir my ietsie by die plek koop, sal ek 100% lief wees vir hom! Haha! Nee! Van daar het ons weer die gids gaan aflaai en is ons na Moeder Maria se huis toe. Dit word gesê dat dit die laaste plek van woning vir haar was voor sy oorlede is. Dis op 'n baie rustige berg, tussen klomp bome. Mens mag glad nie foto's neem as mens deur haar huisie stap nie en word ook nie toegelaat om te praat terwyl mens daardeur stap nie. Mens kan 'n kersie buite opsteek vir 5 TL elk en ons het toe so gemaak. Van daar af het ons toe gery Çannakale toe, wat naby Troy is. Ons het ons baie oulike woonstelletjie vir die aand gekry en het toe rustig op die Promenade gaan stap en aandete gekry. En dit was die som totaal van ons Dag 12...
      Baie liefde en groete
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    • Day 38

      Crossing the continental border

      October 24, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      Last few days were quite eventful. Last things first: I am now officially in Asia (regardless of what this platform says, I am pretty sure Edirne is still Europe). Ironically, Canakkale is more European than the European part of Turkey.

      But let’s go through this chronologically. Like 15 km outside of Edirne, I got held up by the military, which was pretty cool. Nice guys: apparently I was somewhere I wasn’t supposed to be. Photos weren’t allowed though. After a while the gravel turned rough, the roads went up, and the wind started kicking in. And I can tell you, in this part of Turkey there is no cover from the wind.

      So, looking for a supermarket and shelter in this part of Turkey wasn’t that easy, but on the first slightly bigger town (or just “town” in any other country) I first had 10 turkish men around me, wanting to show me the way to the supermarket and wanting to know where I was from, all conversing through some translation app. At the supermarket I was invited to tea, all kids wanted to know where I was from, second tea; you really feel you’re being rude on leaving. I got a short entourage out of town by kids running along—immediately after though, on a busy car road, full headwind exposure with steep climbs immediately makes you forget all that. A double-faced country.

      Camped at a lake where in a town nearby they were playing folk music (its not all islamic), and the next day, after a hilly tiring start, I got again invited for tea. “Stay overnight!” “Have you eaten?” (For context, this was a very small farmer’s town.) I got introduced to this guys’ family, introduced to everybody, got a big big meal, more tea, more google-translating: Just an amazing experience. I left after about an hour, getting tired quickly around groups of people and still having a long road ahead, and immediately the winds and hills made me regret that decision. After maybe 35 exhausting kilometers (which might have taken 3 hours) I again entered something-which-isn’t-a-town-but-has-a-name, and a turkish guy who lived in Austria approached me and immediately arranged that I could pitch my tent at the restaurant. Dude, these people are friendly.

      Now, short intermezzo: at the lake I was awoken by a load “gulp” noise in the middle of the night. I had all my food packed away closed and unreachable by not-too-agile animals, but outside I had bags with electronics and toiletries. So what was this gulp?! Well, in the morning I think I established the source to be a (big-ass) frog. (S)he didn’t take anything… At the restaurant, I was also waken, but by a small kitty, being very curious and actually having found and taken my bread. The second didn’t worry me at night, but was more annoying. There’s no point Im making here, but both the frog and kitty deserves mention. Or maybe the point is that it’s nicer to be woke up by kitties, regardless of the consequences.

      Next day I actually avoided stopping at villages because I was tired, too tired for conversations and translating, etc. (Well, I did accept the compulsory tea at the restaurant, with someone who lived in Linz for a while!) After my first nail and tubeless plug, and many many hills, I got to some very small village and, being exhausted (12% fully loaded means pushing) I decided to push my luck to ask some woman where I could camp: maybe this person would let me camp on her beautiful garden… I got told, somewhat aggressively, to “ yürü, yürü!” Obviously I dont know what that meant, but the piece of onion she threw at my leg said enough. (It seems to mean “to walk”, so I think she told me to fuck off… Am I not supposed to ask women things in islamic countries maybe?)

      Well, whatever, I found some trees near the next village which were occluding enough.

      Then, the next day, and last day of this post, about 15-20 km in, I got followed not by children but by very ferocious and scary dogs, four of them. Teeth exposed, you get the picture. And they wouldn’t stop following, all shouting was futile—it was scary. The owner was there but clearly didn’t care, or was just totally unsuitable for keeping a dog (let alone 4). Luckily a car followed me shortly, giving me some extra space so I could outsprint these horrible, absolutely horrible, animals. One followed me for 500m to maybe a kilometer: I hate these dogs. I get why people generalize, I distrust all dogs here now also.

      Ok, so I made it to Eceabat, and I thought… this place is a shithole. Just small shoppy looking markets, nothing there, no restaurants... Took the ferry to the other side — that being cinakkale —and it’s a totally different continent, literally and figuratively speaking. Except Canakkale is modern, alive, European, and has a lot going for it. Continents got swapped here somewhere along the way.

      Last point to make: I get told 5 times a day here that allahu akbar through loud speakers, so it must be true.
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    • Day 76

      Troy

      November 5, 2018 in Turkey ⋅ 🌬 17 °C

      Anatolia (from Greek Ἀνατολή Anatolḗ; Turkish: Anadolu "east" or "[sun]rise"), also known as Asia Minor (Medieval and Modern Greek: Μικρά Ἀσία Mikrá Asía, "small Asia"; Turkish: Küçük Asya), Asian Turkey, the Anatolian peninsula, or the Anatolian plateau, is the westernmost protrusion of Asia, which makes up the majority of modern-day Turkey. The region is bounded by the Black Sea to the north, the Mediterranean Sea to the south, the Armenian Highlands to the east, and the Aegean Sea to the west. The Sea of Marmara forms a connection between the Black and Aegean Seas through the Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits and separates Anatolia from Thrace on the European mainland.

      The eastern border of Anatolia is traditionally held to be a line between the Gulf of Alexandretta and the Black Sea, bounded by the Armenian Highland to the east and Mesopotamia to the southeast. Thus, traditionally Anatolia is the territory that comprises approximately the western two-thirds of the Asian part of Turkey. Nowadays, Anatolia is also often considered to be synonymous with Asian Turkey, which comprises almost the entire country;[5] its eastern and southeastern borders are widely taken to be Turkey's eastern border.[6] By some definitions, the area called the Armenian highlands lies beyond the boundary of the Anatolian plateau. The official name of this inland region is the Eastern Anatolia Region.[7][8]

      The ancient inhabitants of Anatolia spoke the now-extinct Anatolian languages, which were largely replaced by the Greek language starting from classical antiquity and during the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods. Major Anatolian languages included Hittite, Luwian, and Lydian among other more poorly attested relatives. The Turkification of Anatolia began under the Seljuk Empire in the late 11th century and continued under the Ottoman Empire between the late 13th and early 20th centuries. However, various non-Turkic languages continue to be spoken by minorities in Anatolia today, including Kurdish, Neo-Aramaic, Armenian, Arabic, Laz, Georgian and Greek. Other ancient peoples in the region included Galatians, Hurrians, Assyrians, Hattians, Cimmerians, as well as Ionian, Dorian, and Aeolian Greeks.
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