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asia’s FroM its Mediterranean Ports to the resort toWns oF the aegean, turkey’s southWest coast is More accessible than ever, teMPting travelers With a Mix oF natural beauty, Fabulous Food, and evocative ruins —including tWo oF the seven Wonders oF the ancient World. isn’t it tiMe you exPerienced its delights For yourselF? Farthest shore By Christopher p. hill PhotograPhs by Martin Westlake Bay Watch Woven-rush umbrellas shade sun loungers on the pebbly beach at Kalkan, an old OttomanGreek fishing village that has emerged as the ideal base for exploring Turkey’s Lycian coast. december 2012/january 2013 — DESTINASIAN.com — 77 meze magic Flame-grilled zucchini and chili peppers at musa, a trout restaurant in the mountains behind Kalkan. Opposite: a simit (sesame bagel) seller at myra, whose rock-cut tombs and roman theater are among the Lycian coast’s most visited attractions. Breakfast–that’s what I’ll miss most British-born, Australia-raised, Hong Kong–based friend who stumabout Turkey. Not that my trip isn’t filled with memorable moments bled upon Kalkan while on a Turkish holiday two years ago and fell (it is, and then some), but there’s nothing like starting the day the Turk- in love with it. More precisely, she fell in love with Halit, and he with ish way, with a tulip glass of sweet black tea, bowls of glistening olives, her, and now splits her time between frenetic Hong Kong and this lowmounds of salty goat’s cheese, plump red tomatoes, fresh fig preserves, key slice of the Mediterranean. Romance aside, I can understand Kim’s attraction to the place. The and wads of the paper-thin flatbread they call yufka. Savored slowly over good conversation, Turkish breakfasts are, to borrow my new friend setting is lovely—sun-drenched villas tumbling down a hillside to a big blue bay; narrow lanes framed by fig and pomegranate trees; limpid Halit Ada’s favorite expression, “Fantastic!” It’s over one such spread, augmented with spicy lamb salami and waters that mirror the sky’s soft pinks and purples at sunset. Yes, it’s omelets drizzled with Anatolian honey, that I quiz Halit about life in entirely devoted to tourism, but Kalkan is not what you would call Kalkan, the Anglo-centric resort town on Turkey’s southwest coast overdeveloped. The largest hotel has 136 rooms; every other place is boutique by comparison. There’s not a disco in sight. And, unlike at where I’ve based myself for four nights. “In Antalya, you have the Russian tourists. In Alanya, the sun spots Left: a 10-minute drive Germans. Here, it’s mostly Britfrom Kalkan, Kaputaş ish,” he says, flashing the impish beach nestles at the foot of a mountain gorge. smile that served him well as a below: Halit ada outside stage comedian in Istanbul during his just jewelry shop in Kalkan’s Old Town. his youth. “Twenty hours a day Opposite: The view of talking English, four hours talkKalkan bay from a balcony at blue bay ing Turkish. My God, can you apartments, in the imagine? It is like Little Britain.” Kisla area. Halit doesn’t mean that as a knock. Originally from Kars in eastern Turkey, he first came to Kalkan in 1986, at the age of 23, to help one of his five brothers sell silver jewelry to the town’s trickle of visitors. “It was so small back then, maybe 300 people, just a few carpet shops, pansiyons, a marina only half the size it is now,” he recalls. “To tell you truthfully, it was a little boring. But it changed my life.” As European sunseekers began venturing beyond the Turkish Riviera’s more established resort areas—places like Bodrum and Marmaris and Antalya—Kalkan flourished. And so, too, did Halit. “I came here with just half a Quiet lanes kilo of silver,” he says. “Today, my scented With sea shop carries 2,000 kilos. Fantas- salt and jasMine tic!” Halit’s business ventures lead to Quaint now range from his jewelry store, Just Silver, to the Mediterranean houses that date restaurant next door and a three- back a century or hectare farm in the hills near Sak- More, to When jaded mass-market resorts such as Bodrum, lıkent Gorge. During the tourist kalkan Was a the people here seem genuinely hospitable. Or season, he rents out his 560- PredoMinantly perhaps they’re all just in a good mood because square-meter villa to guests; from the season’s almost over. November to April, when Kalkan ottoMan greek There is also much to be said for wandergoes into hibernation for the win- trading Port ing aimlessly through Kalkan’s compact Old ter, Halit builds vacation properTown, with its riotous bowers of bougainvilties (at last count, 77 of them). lea and sun-burnished Juliet balconies. Just I’m visiting in early October, and Kalkan, to judge from the vacant sun loungers on its small peb- watch your step—countless feet before yours have worn the cobbleble beach, is already winding down. And that suits me just fine. After stones ice-slick in spots. Quiet lanes scented with sea salt and jasmine all, I didn’t come all the way to Turkey to hobnob with holidaying Brits lead to quaint houses that date back a century or more, to when Kalkan in a town that one local quips is so un-Turkish, he sometimes feels he was a predominantly Ottoman Greek trading port; many, like the old needs a passport. I did, however, come here to hang out with Kim, a Custom House, which sports a fresh coat of salmon-pink paint, have 80 — DESTINASIAN.com — december 2012/january 2013 lycian legacy clockwise from left: Fishing boats and tourist craft crowd the harbor at Kaş; a byzantine fresco on the chapel ceiling of St. nicholas church in demre; Lycian tombs at myra; a glass of sage tea; stacks of sesame drying in the sun in the fields of bezirgan village. 82 — DESTINASIAN.com — december 2012/january 2013 Beyond the Beach clockwise from above: Trinkets for sale at the site of the Temple of artemis in Selçuk; farmhouse masonry in bezirgan; inside Saklıkent Gorge; a kaleidoscope of lokum (Turkish delight) in Fethiye; what remains of the great Library of celsus at ephesus. december 2012/january 2013 — DESTINASIAN.com — 83 in the dun-colored fields, where stacks of unthreshed sesame cast conical shadows across the stubble of a recent harvest. By way of explanation, Kim tells me that many of the village’s 600-odd residents have winter homes and pastures on the coast, where they retreat when the weather in the mountains turns cold and dank. With thunder rumbling overhead, I’m tempted to follow them. Instead, we push on through the drizzle to Islamlar, a tiny yayla (mountain resort) where trout are raised in pools fed by gushing spring water. Two of those fish, grilled to perfection and served with pomegranate juice, find their way to our table at Musa, the little roadside restaurant where we stop for lunch. They’re delicious, though by the time the establishment’s eponymous owner brings the trout over, I’ve already gorged myself on mezes—flamegrilled zucchini and big yellow Bodrum Beauty Set on a pine-covered peppers, fried halloumi cheese, a hillside outside Türkbükü, tangy yogurt dip, and kısır, the amanruya is among the bodrum Peninsula’s most Turkish version of tabbouleh. sophisticated retreats. “Excellent nosh!” Kim declares right: a waitress at one of the resort’s four as we linger on the terrace sipping dining pavilions. below: little glasses of sage tea and gazamanruya’s 36 stone cottages feature canopy ing down the valley to the hazy beds and traditional blue of Kalkan Bay. “And that’s just charcoal fireplaces. Opposite: Overlooking for starters. There are zillions of the main swimming pool. things to see and do along this coast. Here …” Taking my notepad, she jots down a roll call of local attractions under the heading “Kim’s Tips for Turkey”: Patara, birthplace of St. Nicholas and home to one of the longest beaches in the Mediterranean; Saklıkent Gorge, the country’s longest, deepest canyon; the sunken city of Kekova; the Lycian ruins of Letoon, Tlos, Xanthos, Pınara ... the list goes on. With Kim as my plucky guide for the next few days, and me behind the wheel, we cover a lot of ground. (We also burn through a lot of gas money—petrol here no aMount oF goes for about US$2.70 a liter. lycian toMbs, Only in Norway will you pay more at the pump.) One day we greek teMPles, or visit the market town of Fethiye, crusader Forts can 80 kilometers east of Kalkan and PrePare you For still abuzz with Daniel Craig’s ePhesus, Much less April visit to film a scene for the the sight oF the latest Bond film. Like 007, sunKim promises me a taste of the real Turkey— gleeFul erections seekers head straight to the or at least some really steep switchbacks. beaches. We, however, make for brandished by The vivid colors of the seashore soon the shade of the central bazaar, Fertility idols drain away, replaced by gray skies, chalky to marvel at the seafood counters rocks, and scraggly maquis. High on a lonely in its giFt shoPs and cuts of dry-aged beef and a mountain ridge, it starts to drizzle—but with cornucopia of Turkish produce: this comes the unexpected gift of a double rainbarrels of olives and dates; goat bow. I pull over to let Kim capture the moment hides packed with crumbly tulum on her iPhone. cheese; slabs of honeycomb; and a kaleidoscope of Turkish delight. Farther on, we descend into the broad bowl of Bezirgan village, at Another day, we trace the scenic coastal road west to Kaş, a small the heart of which is a cluster of crumbling stone farmhouses and tin- but bustling port town backed by craggy limestone hills. Dive boats roofed wooden granaries calledambars that look like they’ve been around and two-masted gulets with names like dragoman and alibaba crowd for centuries. For all I know, they have. Yet we don’t see a soul, not even the wharves. Kim makes a beeline for a cobbled shopping street been spruced up as vacation rentals. Waterfront cafés beckon. And at night, there’s no better roost than one of the neighborhood’s rooftop dining terraces. One of the most bewitching meals of my trip unfolds atop the candlelit Olive Garden restaurant, whose aptly named owner, Fatih, conjures plate after plate of Anatolian delights: sweet red peppers filled with spinach, hazelnuts, and aged feta; lightly battered shrimp with walnut sauce; cinnamon-scented goat stew; and pan-fried chicken livers in cherry sauce. Kim, however, is eager to get out of town and show me the sights of the Lycian coast, which takes its name from the ancient civilization that once inhabited the region. Leaving Halit to mind his shop, we jump into my rented Fiat and head into the mountains behind Kalkan, where december 2012/january 2013 — DESTINASIAN.com — 85 called Uzun Çarşı, popping into one boutique to try on embroidered well-preserved Greco-Roman theater, the biggest on this coast. Its lamb’s-wool shawls, then into another to admire updated Byzantine acoustics still impress: from the uppermost of its 35 rows of seats, I can broaches and Ottoman pendants by jeweler Hüseyin Sağtan, who, we’re hear Halit, down on the arena floor, laughing away as though he were told, designed the faux-period baubles worn in the other boleyn girl standing beside me. Myra—or rather the modern town of Demre—is also home to the and troy. Kaş is built on the foundations of the ancient Lycian port city of Church of St. Nicholas, who was bishop here in the fourth century. PreHabesa (later Antiphellos). Its economy, however, much like Kalkan’s, dictably, Santa gimmicks abound out front, including a jolly Bakelite rests squarely on tourism. People come here to hike the hills, dive the statue of St. Nick and an eatery that optimistically announces itself as offshore reefs, or make daytrips to the rocky Greek island of Kastelorizo, SANTA CLAUS® RESTAURANT. Don’t let this put you off. The church, whose unspeakably cute harbor lies just a couple kilometers across the built over St. Nicholas’s tomb in the fifth century and rebuilt in the eighth bay. But there are antiquities here, too, almost casually stitched into century, is an exquisite ruin. An ongoing restoration has brushed some the town’s modern commercial fabric. The 2,500-year-old Lycian sar- of its Byzantine frescoes back to life, and repaired the brickwork ceiling cophagus that casts its shadow over a trinket stand at the top of port of call The harbor at datça, left. Uzun Çarşı. The ancient cistern below: Turkish breakfasts in the basement of Echo bar. The feature everything from pan-fried halloumi cheese Hellenistic theater just across and olives to baskets from the kebab joint where we of bread and chopped salads. Opposite: entry stop for skewers of grilled lamb to bodrum’s castle of and lahmacun, Turkey’s piquant St. Peter—via a stone tunnel—sets the mood answer to the pizza. for the imposing ramparts One runs the risk of becoming and couryards within. blasé about archeology in this part of Turkey—there’s just so much of it. “Everywhere in these mountains, treasures,” says Halit one overcast morning as the three of us drive through the hills above Kaş en route to Myra. At first, I assume he is talking about the Lycian rock- cut tombs that pock the distant cliff faces, or maybe even the Ottoman-era gümbets (domed rainwater cisterns) that occasionally flash past on the roadside. But what he means is buried treasure—caches of jewelry, gold coins, and other valuables—left behind by the Greeks who were deported during the population exchange of the early 1920s. “They buried these things the legendary thinking they would come back halikarnas disco some day. But they never did,” he May be bodruM’s says. “At night, you can see lights nocturnal nexus, where people are digging, always but by day, the digging.” Any treasure-hunters would iMPosing 15thhave a cool time of it today; from century castle yesterday’s high of 30°C in the oF st. Peter of its vaulted nave. Even the normally ebullient Halit seems hushed by the antiquity of it all. shade, the temperature has dipped is the toWn’s In a side chapel, I find him gazing up at a dome to a blustery15°C. But that hasn’t MarQuee tourist frescoed with a depiction of the Apostles. deterred busloads of Russian “Fantastic!” he whispers. tourists from mobbing what attraction remains of ancient Myra. Served by pomegranate-juice squeezers HAvING WORKED MY WAY through Kim’s and simit (a sort of sesame bagel) Tips for Turkey, it was time to move on to the sellers, the ruins lie at the edge of a coastal plain that, from the road Aegean coast. One last big breakfast at Halit’s and I’m off, driving northabove, looks like it’s been Saran wrapped—plastic greenhouses stuffed west past Fethiye and Dalaman and on toward Marmaris. I’m winging with tomatoes cover every inch of ground. The sea of plastic, in fact, this leg of the trip. Despite my best efforts to buy one in Kalkan, I have laps right up against a cliffside Lycian necropolis of yawning tombs no map. Nor have I booked a hotel for the night. After being coddled carved temple-style with pediments and pillars. Right next door is a by Kim and Halit for the better part of a week, cOnTinued On PG. 120 86 — DESTINASIAN.com — december 2012/january 2013 TURKEY cOnTinued FrOm PG. 86 I’m ready for some unscripted adventure. The scenery soon grows monotonous, but the roads are excellent, none more than the newly blacktopped stretch that zigzags down to Marmaris. For a moment, I consider stopping here for the night: my back is aching from three hours behind the wheel. But no—Marmaris’s reputation as a big, brash resort city precedes it; Kim was adamant that I “give it a miss.” I settle for stretching my legs on the ridge above, and then push on through pine forests and hairpin bends to the bay-scalloped Datça Peninsula, where I’ve heard rumors of empty beaches, Hellenistic ruins, and grand seaside villas. Rumors they shall remain: I’m only halfway along the peninsula when the sun begins to slide into the sea. So down I go to the workaday harbor town of Datça, groping my way through dimly lit streets to the first hotel I spot. After rousing the night clerk and dropping my bags in a cramped room redolent of mothballs, I console myself with shots of raki and a plate of calamari at a restaurant overlooking the town’s little yacht marina. By 9 p.m., the streets are deserted. One benefit of this detour is that I get to make my way into Aegean Turkey on the Aegean, hopping a feribot across the sea to Bodrum, a 90-minute passage. Another benefit is that my first sight of Bodrum is from the water, surely its most seductive perspective. Sugar-cube buildings spill down undulating slopes to a harbor teeming with yachts and gulets, a forest of masts that is dwarfed by the ramparts of the Castle of St. Peter. The legendary Halikarnas Disco across the water may be the town’s nocturnal nexus, but by day, this 15th-century Crusader fort of imposing towers and amphorae-strewn courtyards is its marquee tourist attraction, and well worth braving the crowds to see. The birthplace of Herodotus—Bodrum was known as Halicarnassus in his day—is also home to the original mausoleum, built in 350 B.C. as the tomb of the satrap Mausolus. Counted among the ancient world’s Seven Wonders, only its foundation remains today; the knights who built the Castle of St. Peter 120— DESTINASIAN.com — december 2012/january 2013 carted off much of its stone, while other relics ended up at the British Museum. When the crush of Bodrum’s waterfront becomes too much, I head across the neck of the Bodrum Peninsula to Amanruya, where I’m spending the night. Mapless, I miss the turnoff twice, but eventually make my way down an unmarked lane to a compound of Anatolian-style cottages of gray stone and pink mortar arranged across a thyme-scented hillside above the Aegean. Nearby Türkbükü, I’m told by Astrid Killian, the resort’s French front-office supervisor, is “the Turkish St.-Tropez,” but the terrain here better recalls Corsica, with its copses of pine and aromatic carpet of maquis. After my fitful night’s sleep in Datça, it’s all I can do to resist the temptation of the canopy bed that commands one side of my cottage. A bracing dip in the plunge pool outside revives me enough for a stroll down to the beach club, where a wooden jetty accessorized with sun loungers pokes into the bay. Later, after yet another fine meal and a look around the resort’s tower-like library, I fall asleep to a silence broken only by the whirring of cicadas. NO AMOUNT OF Lycian tombs, fallen Greek temples, or Crusader forts can prepare you for Ephesus, much less the sight of the gleeful erections brandished by fertility idols in the site’s gift shops. Once the Roman capital of Asia Minor, Ephesus is among the best-preserved cities of Mediterranean antiquity, with a vast theater, colonnaded streets, partially intact Roman houses, and the trademark facade of the Library of Celsus. Its gateway town, Selçuk, a three-hour drive north of Bodrum, proves to be something of a marvel itself. From my room at Ephesus Suites Hotel, I can gaze out on a remarkable overlay of history: the sole remaining column of theTemple of Artemis,another of the Seven Wonders; domed Roman baths crouched against a field of corn; and the 14th-century İsa Bey Mosque, set below a Byzantine citadel and the reputed tomb of St. John. An overgrown market town, Selçuk is also the most real place I’ve visited so far, with tractors rolling down its main street and a central plaza area where the air carries the mingled aromas of shisha smoke and sizzling kebabs. I take it all in that night from a seat at a patio restaurant run by brothers Cem and Cüneyt (a.k.a. Jimy and Juju) Ozkan, who also own the hotel where I’m staying. Just meters away stand the remnants of the aqueduct that once watered Ephesus: five pillars crowned with storks’ nests. A balladeer strums his guitar; young Turkish couples canoodle at sidewalk tables, oblivious to the muezzin’s call to prayer. Where, I wonder, have the tourists who thronged to Ephesus gone? “To Kuşadası,” Juju tells me, referring to the hedonistic beach town just down the road. “Kuşadası has all the big hotels, all the nightclubs. It’s taken all of the bad.” Which leaves me with this small but captivating swirl of East/West, old/new, exotic/ mundane. As my dinner arrives—zucchini fritters, veal meatballs with homemade mustard—I flip back through my notepad to find Kim’s Tips for Turkey. At the bottom of her list, I scribble a tip of my own: Selçuk. —WhERE TO STAY TURKEY izmir Selçuk bodrum marmaris Fethiye datça the details TurKiSH deLiGHTS —gETTing ThERE antalya Kalkan Kaş The gateway airport for the Lycian coast is at dalaman. Turkish Airlines(turkishairlines .com) operates several daily flights between dalaman and istanbul’s atatürk airport, where the carrier connects to Hong Kong, bangkok, Singapore, and jakarta. its domestic network extends to bodrum and izmir,where the closest airport to Selçuk/ ephesus is situated. Kalkan’s lodgings scene revolves around vacation villas and apartments; the author stayed at Blue Bay Apartments(safran select.com; threebedroom units from uS$800 per week) in the Kisla area, to the west side of Kalkan bay. For those looking for a hotel stay, there’s no better choice than Villa Mahal (90-242/8443268; villamahal.com; doubles from uS$318), a 13-room resort on the water’s edge in Kisla. datça town’s best accommodation (as the author belatedly discovered) is provided by hotel Villa Tokur (90-252/712-8728; hoteltokur.com; doubles from uS$100), where 15 charming roomsoverlook the yacht-filled harbor. Amanruya(90-252/ 311-1212; amanresorts .com; doubles from uS$1,020), which opened a year ago on the north coast of the bodrum Peninsula, is all amanresorts-meetsanatolia chic, with 36 supremely comfortable pool cottages. a teak-paneled yacht offers a sophisticated way to cruise the nearby bays. Ephesus Suites (90-232/892-6312; ephesussuites.com; doubles from uS$108) is as fancy as hotels get in Selçuk —ask for a room with a view of the Temple of artemis.