DAY ONE
After a long over night bus ride we arrived in Goreme, Cappadocia at 7.30am. (It has to be said that this bus ride was better than the overnight train, not by much but it was better!) We had breakfast at the hostel, yummy French toast! and laid around by the pool until we could check in. That afternoon we visited the Goreme open air museum which was full of fairy chimneys. Most of the chimneys and rock faces have churches carved into them, they were short people back then in BC!
Our hostel! We stayed in a “cave room” which was about 50% cave and came with a 50% damp cave smell… Very cool though!
Looking down over the open air museum
Inside a church at the open air museum
Taken from outside a pottery store on the walk home. Apparently most pottery breaks in the oven and is therefore useless.
That Afternoon we all went along to a Turkish bath which meant mud applied to faces, saunas, exfoliating, massage… The works. It left us all feeling extremely relaxed!
That evening, we went along to Turkish Night. There was 11 of us in total, 6 kiwis, 2 Aussies, 2 Turkish bus drivers and Lindsey our kiwi tour guide. Turkish night involved a Turkish meal, music, and dancing… It also had unlimited drinks of any description! Not a good mix with a bunch of Australians and Kiwis intent on getting their moneys worth! It was also our introduction to Raki, a Turkish alcohol, which we will be avoiding from now on.
DAY TWO
Day two started very slowly! Most people were up by lunch time, with some exceptions. We were the only two to manage any sightseeing with most people relaxing by the pool most of the day. We rented a 125cc Scooter for 6 hours after some hard negotiation and a staged walk out. One scooter was rented and Mike was driving!
We blasted between the small towns of Cappadocia in mere minutes… Even passed some slow vehicles on the way!
One main objective of the scooter ride was to track down a certain item of pottery (a type of wine flask from the Hittities period), at the right price, we’d seen a few of them around but had heard that Avanos is the red clay capital of Turkey so we assumed this would be the cheapest place to find one.
First stop Cavusin – photos below
Then onto Avanos, the red clay capital of Turkey, there’s pottery everywhere! (and carpets)
Yup, they love their pottery / keramics (as they call it / spell it)
Mike having a go at pottery, yea it looks easy here… It’s actually pretty hard. Not a career he will be taking up.
Devrent Valley
A street in Urgup
Aktepe Hill – The spot to see the sunset
There was probably 100 people there for the sunset… A guy turned up and charged an entrance fee (1.50 lera per person, about $1.50 NZD) for an hour prior to the sunset then went home just after. That's a good working day!
DAY THREE
We decided to take “The tour of southern Cappadocia”along with the other 4 kiwi’s on our FEZ bus. We were picked up from our hostel at 9.30am.
Firstly we were taken to the largest underground city in Turkey. This was first dug in 1100BC as military tunnels but has had many additions since as different tribes and religions have taken shelter there during various wars. It goes 85m and 8 stories deep and there were rooms everywhere. Apparently at one stage 10,000 people were living down there!
A bridge inside the underground city
The narrow stairwell linking the levels of the underground city – its not a place you would wont to be claustrophobic in!
One of the main ventilation holes going up to the surface
A passage way in the underground city
Once we surfaced we were back on the bus and headed to Ihlara Valley Gorge, we were walked along the bottom of the Gorge for about 2 km and then stopped for lunch.
Back on the bus and off to the Selime Cathedral. This was an amasing Cathedral which had been dug out of the rock face.
Our last stop was Pigeon Valley, this is were we really saw the talent of our tour guide. “This is Pigeon Valley, where Pigeon live”. It was only after we asked further questions that we got more of an explanation into why this was called Pigeon Valley. People dug our little holes throughout the valley for the pigeons to nest in and this is were they collected there poo for fertiliser for their crops.
DAY FOUR
Hot Air ballooning – the Cappadocia highlight!
We dragged ourselves out of bed by 4:30 in the morning and were picked up in the dark and taken down to the launch site.
We watched and waited as our balloon was inflated
Three, two, one, take off – up up and away
There’s a couple tending their crop in the bottom right corner!
Our fellow kiwi friends – Trace, Mike, Johnny, Will, Stu and Sarah
What a way to start the day. We were dropped back off at the hostel at 8ish, had breakfast then it was on the bus destined for Istanbul. . . . What a journey this was going to be.
3 comments:
More brilliant photos of more brilliant times... it just seems to keep keeping on doesn't it!! I guess you've heard we're all a bit distracted this weekend with the massive earthquake in Christchurch... very sad. No loss of life but massive damage to buildings, roads etc.
Hope you have a great time in Egypt. Fingers crossed you can find access to wifi there.. will so miss your log entries if you are silent for a while.
Much love Mum/Deb
Great having the girls and Ben here for the weekend though Kate was too sick to get to the We
something strange happened to that comment... it seemed to be cut off and the much l
ove got stuck in the middle. Basically it should have continued "Kate was too sick to get to the party they all came up for. Dan didn't get here either as he had an infected knee. Just as well really as Kate was in no state to introduce him to Hawkes Bay. Hopefully it will happen soon.
Rad shots of the ballooning kids!
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