As we sit here in the sun, beer in hand,
the high melt-water river rushing past our camp, we contemplate the last couple
of days, which have seen us leave central Turkey via mountain passes to the
Black Sea Coast.
The morning we left Goreme we were treated
at breakfast to a balloon filled sky, with the sun shining at last. A welcome relief after a few days living like
Troglodytes underground. Leaving the
weird and wonderful rock formations for the last time we quickly exchanged them
for mystery and mist. We also left Betsy
behind, oops! Not to worry as she has popped home as planned for a friends
wedding and will hook up with us again in Georgia. Our drive took us past the
base of the jagged snow capped peaks of Kurmaz Dagi, towering above us. Once clear of the low-lying blanket of fog we
spent the morning rolling along through the undulating hills of the Turkish
countryside. As we climbed higher the
snow line crept ever closer to the edge of the road.
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Calypso's first glimpse of snow for the year |
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Minarets piercing the sky |
Dark clouds loomed ahead so we scanned the lakeside for a place to camp. Rounding a corner, it suddenly appeared, a
gentle slope inviting us down to the water’s edge, a most serene spot. To our surprise the skies cleared, revealing
a beautiful sunset followed by a star filled night sky. We are lucky to have a holistic therapist on
the trip, Shelagh’s reflexology is a real treat and Laura was the lucky
recipient this time. After a delicious stir-fry,
the evening was wiled away around the campfire, enjoying a dram or two of
whisky.
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Stunning bushcamp next to the lake |
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Setting up camp |
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Reflexology |
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Rogs, Ryan, Gareth, Julia and Jim contemplating life |
The condensation dripping on our faces in
the tent the next morning did nothing to dampen our spirits. Cat Stevens “Morning Has Broken” rang out
from the truck as the mist rose from the lake and the heat from the sun
intensified, warming our souls.
Reluctantly we returned to the road and started to climb into the red
earthen hills, leaving the green valleys behind. We stopped briefly round the bend after
spotting some local lumberjacks chopping wood.
The wood rack was filled and Laura is now banned from throwing logs
after nearly killing Kev and injuring Rogan, she definitely didn’t play netball
at school. For love nor money they
wouldn’t take our money, so we gave them a case of beer instead. The Turkish hospitality continued into the
evening at our camp for the next couple of nights. Some local diners at the restaurant whose
garden we are camping in presented us with a 2ltr bottle of Georgian wine as a
gift!
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Not a bad view to wake up to |
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Bushcamp breakfast |
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Friendly wood choppers |
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Loading up the wood locker |
Calypso’s first challenge was to take us
from the lowlands to our first 2,200m mountain pass, a mere molehill in
comparison to what lies ahead. We
stopped briefly for photos on the way and threw a few snowballs. The rest of the morning was spent winding our
way down the mountain with sheer drops and recent rock falls keeping us on our
toes. Minarets pierced the skyline and
mosques dazzled in the sunlight with their silver domed roofs. Comparatively modern compared to the castles
we saw perched on rocky outcrops standing sentinel over the towns below. After 6 hours covering only 150km through the
mountains we hit the Black Sea coastal highway and steamed on to the pretty harbour
town of Tirebolu. The group had time to
wander the sea front and some were lucky enough to see dolphins playing in the
waters around the local fishing boats.
Dolphins, in Turkey? Back on the
road and in land to camp, a night earlier than planned, was it the road or was
it the brilliant drivers, we’ll go for the latter.
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Chris, Kev and Mikkel comparing altimeters |
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Stunning drive, northern Turkey |
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Tirebolu lunch stop |
This morning we woke to choruses of Happy
Birthday, the 3rd of the trip, today it is Nick’s; our gadget man. With various contraptions, one in particular
involving tupperware, an egg timer and a time-lapse camera, we have suggested
he change his name to Heath Robinson.
Nick is also responsible for the Spot Tracker which you can click
through to from the blog. He sends a
signal to a satellite every time we arrive at a night stop enabling friends and
family to follow exactly where we are.
It is worth mentioning the lines drawn between the night stops are not
the actual routes driven, the Roman’s didn’t build too many straight roads here
during their time. We’ll be celebrating
his birthday properly this evening.
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Birthday boy Nick |
Today we had a chance to explore the
Byzantine Monastery called Sumela, or Meryama (Mother Mary), as The Virgin Mary
was said to have been seen here in around AD500 and the monastery founded. Restored in recent times. We’re not teachers, we’ll let the photos do
the talking. It really is clinging to a
rock face and very pretty. A stunning
sight to visit and a challenging climb to reach from the car park, rather than
get the minibus up like the lazy tourists…
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First glimpse of Sumela high up on a cliff |
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Di, Ryan and Rogs |
We’d better leave you now, some of this has
sounded rather cheesy but a lot of the places we’ve been to it’s hard to get across
in words, the main ones that spring to mind are wow, wow, wow and if we carried
on saying that you’d get bored. Have the
crew lost their mind already, after 3 weeks?
Answers on a postcard please to the big blue truck.
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Crew thinking (and working) hard |
Brilliant ! I am sooo jealous. I see Odyssey are getting even more trucks, to venture to even wilder destinations. Chop chop.
ReplyDeleteNick