krd-map-back - Culture Routes Society
Transcription
krd-map-back - Culture Routes Society
CULTURE ROUTES IN TURKEY Turkey is a huge country, with thousands of years of history, wild and beautiful scenery and friendly and hospitable people. Its maze of old roads and trails—many dating from ancient times— are now being rediscovered and combined into long-distance culture routes and clusters of day-walks. The culture route movement is still new to Turkey, but is developing fast. The first long-distance trail, launched in 1999, was the Lycian Way, between Fethiye and Antalya in SW Turkey. Thousands enjoy this trail every year and it has inspired enthusiasts to establish other trails. There are now 17 culture routes in Turkey but the number grows every year: their locations are shown on this map. The Culture Routes in Turkey main website tells you about the parts of Turkey where you can hike and how to use the existing routes. These vary - some are mainly coastal or mountainous and some have historical, cultural or natural themes. This map and the website also tells you which routes are suitable for biking or horse-riding. This map also shows you which routes are waymarked and signposted. All the routes have GPS points that can be downloaded from the websites. A GPS is a useful asset for independent walkers in Turkey because walker-friendly mapping is poorly-developed. This map and the individual culture routes web sites provide detailed information about each trail and the sightseeing to be done along the way. In addition, most routes now have a guidebook and a route map; you can buy guidebooks online, at the Culture Routes Society centre in Antalya, or through stockists listed on the website. Many Turkish and foreign tour operators run holidays on our routes. If you don’t want to trek entirely independently, you could choose a self-guided walk, where the tour operator makes all bookings and transports your baggage, or you could join a group of walkers. Walking tour operators are listed on the websites; we can also put you in touch with specialist nature-tour operators. If you want advice on independent trekking, or to organise a walking, biking or horse-riding holiday for a group of friends, please contact the Culture Routes Society. All the routes give you a chance to enjoy varied accommodation—a mix of village home stays, small, family-run pensions and occasional boutique hotels. More luxurious accommodation is available in nearby towns, from where you can do selected daywalks. Olderestablished routes such as the Lycian Way have plenty of group walks or self-guided options, easy communications, a huge range of accommodation, and are still not over-used. We hope that this map will inspire you to check out our websites for all the information you need to plan an active holiday on Turkey’s culture routes. We look forward to seeing you on the trail. Culture Routes Society (www.cultureroutesinturkey.com) The Culture Routes Society was established in 2012 in order to sustain Turkey’s existing culture routes, to promote the establishment of new routes, and to set best-practice standards for their development. As defined in the Society’s constitution, a culture route is a sustainable route or combination of routes following a historical, cultural or natural theme. Sustainability is our watchword, and eligible routes are accordingly non-motorised. Lycia Lycia is the historical name of the Tekke Peninsula, which juts into the Mediterranean on Turkey’s southern coast. The mountains rise steeply from the wooded shore and tiny bays, giving varied walking over old paths. The highest ridges are bare and give wonderful views. The upper slopes are often clad with old-growth cedar forest, an historic relic which harbours wonderful flowers. Between the forest and the agricultural areas are pine woods, grazing areas for herds of goats, canyons and gushing streams. The Lycians were a democratic but independent people, with a unique art style and a high standard of living. They absorbed Greek culture, and were later conquered by the Romans. Their graves and ruins abound on the peninsula and the walk follows many of their old roads and is marked by many distinctive stone graves. Hz. İbrahim The route passes 27 historic sites, mainly dating from pre-Roman Lycia. Nearly all along the 25-day route, you can stay in pensions, small hotels or village houses. On three high-level sections there is currently no accommodation, so you have to camp out. There are plenty of camping places with nearby water mentioned in the book; you do not have to ask permission. You can order the guide-book, which includes a map, from our website, which also has the GPS points. The patriarch İbrahim (Abraham) stands at the beginning of a spiritual and cultural tradition shared by more than half the people in the world today. Although the story of Abraham has come down to us from the Bronze Age, almost 4000 years ago, it is still remembered and celebrated in a series of historic cities and sacred sites scattered across the Middle East. Perhaps more than anywhere else, the memory of Abraham has been kept alive by the people of Şanlıurfa in south-eastern Turkey. Following the footsteps of İbrahim (Abraham) An ancient legend describes the patriarch’s birth and childhood in the city, a centre of pilgrimage for more than a thousand years. In Turkey, the Path has been created to celebrate the unique Abrahamic heritage of the Şanlıurfa area. The Path encourages travelers from around the world to explore the remarkable historic and sacred sites of this region, as well as to experience the hospitality and friendship that is also part of the legacy of Abraham. A complex of Abrahamic caves and mosques, gardens and pools form the heart of the town. Just a day’s walk away stands the village of Harran, from where Abraham began his journey towards the Holy Land and beyond, to Mecca. The Route Turkey’s first long-distance trekking route The Lycian Way, opened in 1999, is a 509km way-marked footpath around the coast of Lycia in southern Turkey, from Fethiye to Antalya. The route is graded medium to hard; it is not level walking, but has many ascents and descents as it approaches and veers away from the sea. It is easier at the start near Fethiye and gets more difficult as it progresses. We recommend walking the route in spring or autumn; February-May or SeptemberNovember; summer in Lycia is hot, although you could walk short, shady sections. On many days, you can stop and swim in the beautiful turquoise waters or relax on a tiny beach. The waymarked route is mainly over footpaths and mule trails; the hills are of limestone which is often hard and stony underfoot. Caria Hz. İbrahim Path Walks around Beycik A network of walking routes utilizing centuries old shepherds paths, forest trails and aqueducts have been developed around the village of Beycik, on the slopes of Mount Olympos. They link Beycik to other sections of the Lycian Way, remote beaches by the sea, and to the ancient ruins of Laodikeia. Waymarked in red and yellow, they run mainly on hillsides through forest, along mountain ridges and canyons with views down to the sea and across to the main ranges. When used in conjunction with the Lycian Way and the teleferique to the top of Mount Olympos, these routes give 6 days of pension or hotel-based family walking. The Hz. İbrahim Path is a route of walking and cultural tourism that follows the footsteps of the patriarch through the Middle East. The Path threads together a remarkable group of sacred and historic sites into a single itinerary of outstanding interest. Hotel or pension accommodation is available in Şanlıurfa and Harran and home stay accommodation in various villages. The best season to walk the trails is Feb – May, and October – November: summer is very hot. Göbekli Tepe is under excavation in the late spring and again in the autumn, and is best visited at these times. The route is 170km long and can be walked with a local escort. An early start lets walkers benefit from the cooler hours at the beginning of the day. Along the route you will meet the villagers, whose lives are still in many aspects similar to those of their remote ancestors. The Hz. İbrahim Path has a group of volunteers who arrange walks and tours to the sites on the remote parts of the route. Visit www.abrahamspathturkey.org details. for further From 2000 BCE, the region of south-western Turkey between the Meander and Indos rivers was called Caria. The Carian language and script have not yet been deciphered but their neighbours called them Karuwa, Karka (meaning peak, head or promontory) or Krk. Like the Lycian and other contemporary civilisations along the coast, Carian remains can still be seen. The Carians lived along the Mediterranean and Aegean coastlines, on some of the Greek islands and in the mountains. According to Herodotus, the world’s first historian, who was himself a Carian, they were the first people to use crests on their helmets and put handles and designs on their shields. Carian warriors were famed as mercenaries; we know that in the 6th C BCE the Carians fought in Egypt and that the pharaoh Psammethicus I rewarded them with lands in the Nile delta. Until the Persians invaded in 545 BCE, Caria was independent; it then became a province of the Persian Empire. The capital, where the Persian governor or Satrap lived, was moved from Mylasa (today’s Milas) to Halicarnassus (Bodrum) during the reign of the Satrap Mausolus (377-353BCE). His huge grave monument, known as the Mausoleum, became one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Coastal Caria is now an important tourism area with international airports at Dalaman, Bodrum and İzmir giving easy access to the route. It is famous as the focus of the ‘blue cruise’ - gentle cruises in wooden sailing yachts over clear turquoise waters between traditional harbours. At Bodrum, only a small trace of the Mausoleum remains but there are traces of many Carian cities and fortifications in the limestone hills above the jagged coast. Village life still depends on grapes, olives and fishing, so the locals still eat well. Evliya Çelebi (1611-?1685) Evliya Çelebi Way The Hittites The Hittite Routes Sultan Süleyman Evliya Çelebi was an Ottoman Turkish gentleman adventurer who travelled far and wide for over 40 years. A native of Istanbul, Evliya made many journeys across the sultan’s domains to the frontiers of the Ottoman Empire in the Balkans and the Middle East, and far beyond. As well as visiting the Habsburg emperor’s court at Vienna, going far up the Nile, and to the Caucasus and Iran, he criss-crossed Anatolia on several occasions. He dubbed himself ‘World Traveller and Boon Companion to Mankind’ and wore a ring inscribed ‘The World Traveller Evliya’. Among his many accomplishments, Evliya was a dervish, musican, and linguist, as well as a scholar and racontuer, and his observations on everyday life in the 17th century are a unique record of his times. He aimed to describe everything he saw on his journeys, and left a record of his wanderings in 10 large volumes, the Seyahatname, or Book of Travels. Turkey’s first Culture Route for horse riders The Anatolian Peninsula is a cultural mosaic, a synthesis of successive civilisations that left thaeir mark on this land and on humanity. Of these civilisations, the Hittites were a ‘superpower’ of their times. The Hittites are famous for producing the first written constitution and an advanced criminal code; for making lightweight war chariots, the awesome weapon of the era; for kings who were masters of strategy; for a pantheon with one thousand gods and goddesses; and for splendid cities. Trekking Routes And Biking Trails along the roads of the Hittites Süleyman the Magnificent, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, invaded Europe from Istanbul to Vienna for the first time in 1529, and then again in 1532. Both times the Sultan and his army failed to conquer the city of Vienna. This was the time the Ottoman empire was at its greatest extent and power - the failure at Vienna started a decline in Ottoman fortunes. The Evliya Çelebi Way opened in 2011, the quatercentenary of Evliya’s birth; UNESCO declared the year a celebration of his life and works. The Way is Turkey’s first equestrian route, and also a trail for walkers and bikers. It follows the early stages of Evliya’s journey to Mecca in 1671, when he at last found the opportunity to undertake the pilgrimage. The Evliya Çelebi Way crosses some of the most spectacular and varied landscapes in Turkey, visiting villages far off the beaten track, as well as passing through, or close to, towns and cities of great historical importance in this region where the Ottoman Empire was born. It follows rivers and goat paths, tractor- and forestry tracks, and Roman and Ottoman paved roads. The terrain is rarely difficult. The equestrian route is around 650km long, and takes about 25 days to complete, plus rest/sightseeing days; the walking route omits some flat sections, and is about 330km long, taking about 22 days to complete, plus rest/sightseeing days. It is very suitable for visitors who have only a few days to spend—you can stay in one of the towns or cities along the way, and join the route at any point by public transport. The ancient city of Hattussa is one of eleven Turkish sites that form part of UNESCO’s World Heritage List. The Hittites also left us extraordinary cuneiform tablets, now part of the UNESCO Memory of the World Register. The Hittite Routes explore the region’s rich cultural heritage amid tranquil surroundings - a truly special experience for lovers of history, culture and nature. The focal point of the Hittite Routes is a beautiful National Park, established in 1988 over 2634 hectares of land in Boğazkale. The National Park contains the ruins of the ancient Hittite city of Hattusa and the Alacahöyük earthen burial mound. The Hittite Trekking Routes and Bike Trails follow the historical roads connecting corners of the triangle formed by Hattusa, Alacahöyük and Şapinuva. The routes were drawn up by the Governorship of Çorum province and the work was completed in October 2010. The 17 trekking routes covering 236 km are marked along the old roads plied by the trading caravans and by successive waves of migration. Counting the alternative roads, their total length reaches 385km. Six exciting mountain-bike trails stretch over 406km. The best season for trekking is from March - June and September - November. Later at the site outside Vienna where the sultan pitched his tents the Habsburg Emperor built a pleasure castle. That is why the historic Sultan’s Trail begins at the edge of Vienna. The path ends at the tomb of the Sultan, behind the Süleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul. The trail is thus a celebration of the historic links between the Turks and Europe and a reminder of the traditions of the Ottoman Empire. Carian Trail Yenice Forest The Carian Trail is a recentlyopened 800km long-distance walking path exploring the south-western corner of Turkey between Dalaman and Izmir. The trail was developed by a team of young archaeology guides and allows you to discover a region rich in ancient ruins and history. It runs over Caria’s stone-paved caravan roads and mule-paths connecting villages on the coast to a mountainous hinterland. Pine forests cloak mountain slopes whilst olive terraces and almond groves still form an important part of the region’s economy. In 1999 the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) designated one hundred “Hot Spots of European Forests,” regions of extraordinary biodiversity requiring immediate protection. The Yenice Forest in Karabük Province, is one the nine “Hot Spots” in Turkey. Inland Caria is a little-known and unspoilt region full of colour and local traditions for all to enjoy. The trail is signed and waymarked according to international standards, allowing both independent and group travellers to hike and enjoy the scenic beauty and ancient stone villages of Caria. A new guidebook and map give detailed and up-to-date information about the route and region; you can download GPS points to guide you on your way. Local travel agencies can organise your trip - either with day-walks based at a comfortable hotel or staying in small pensions or village houses. From the Carian Trail, you can swim in turquoise waters from deserted beaches, climb pine-scented hillsides to discover ancient ruins, look out over a dramatic coastline across to the Greek islands of the South Aegean. Rare mountain goats still roam the remote forests of the Datca peninsula, traditional gület (sailing boats) are built in Bozburun, Neolithic cave paintings are hidden in the rocks of the Bafa region, village girls still weave hand-spun wool into traditional village carpets. All this and more awaits the trekker in search of new adventure……. The area is a natural wonder, comprising virgin forest, monumental trees, a unique ecosystem, and a wealth of biodiversity rare outside the tropics. Undoubtedly the most important parts of the Yenice Forest are the “Nature Protection Zones” which contain the monumental trees, and the Arboretum area. The protection zone was established primarily to protect the biodiversity of the unspoilt forest, with its many species of monumental trees, the most valuable part of the heritage. The trunks of some of the trees reach diameters and heights that are rarely seen in the world, and grow amid the green valleys, steep summits, and rich plant life created by the abundant water and humidity. Local accommodation includes a hotel in Yenice, a pension in the forest and family pensions at İncebacaklar Village. In Safranbolu Town, 40 kilometres from Yenice, are delightful hotels in characterful old houses. You can camp at the City Forest, the high pastures of Darıyazısı, Sekermeşe, and Sorgun, the reservoir at the Eğriova Dam, and the Arboretum area. The best season to walk the routes is between April and November. Yenice Forest Trails Biking and trekking through spectacular countryside The route was created as part of a project instigated by the Governorship of Karabuk Province and the Administrator of Yenice County in October 2009. 21 trails were marked along 210 kilometres, and together with the alternative trails the total route adds up to 396 kilometres. The trails are classified either as daytrips, short trips or long trips and include forestry roads and footpaths. Mountain bike trails total 292 kilometres. Sarıkamış About the Route St Paul Sarıkamış lies in the southwest of Kars Province in East Anatolia region, on high plateaus between 1500 and 3000m altitude. The region is rimmed by mountains, deep canyons and high plateaus, which surround the whole perimeter. The spectacular peaks, which make any visitor stop and stare, consist of Aladağ, Suphan, Balikli, Kosedağ, Bayraktepe and Soganlı. Their well-drained, bare summits, with sparkling cirque lakes, are covered with snow for almost all the year. In addition to its existing winter tourism facilities, Sarıkamış aims to offer nature-lovers various alternative tourism activities. Sarıkamış has 21 different walking routes totalling 256km in aggregate. Any nature-lover will find these tracks, which use the valleys of Keklikdere, Komdere and Inkaya, as well as the native Scots pine forest, comfortable and safe to use. Apart from the walking routes, there are cycling routes following forest and village roads. The length of the routes through the oxygen-rich forest environment totals 356km and trekking is best from April - June and September - October. Turkey’s route Rivers have formed deep corridors through this landmass, resulting in canyons such as Keklik, Komdere and Inkaya. They are covered with the dense and lush Scots pine forests, of mainly mature, well-shaped trees, for which Sarıkamis is famous throughout Turkey. Sarıkamış has a harsh continental-type climate; while summers are fairly mild, the winters suffer extremes of cold. Positioned on the foothills of Mt. Bayraktepe, Sarıkamış Ski Centre is characterised by a coarse crystal powder snow, which is only encountered in this region and the Alps. The centre also offers fans long downhill pistes, mainly red and black runs, and excellent accommodation facilities. The ski season is from December - end March. Cultural routes, which give visitors a better understanding of the cultural and historical heritage, and a 428km long scenic motoring route, also are included in our facilities. Demonstrating both historical and natural beauties, they can satisfy the interests of any traveller. In between exploring the variety of routes, you will have time to study the fascinating and historic settlement of Sarıkamiş. The grassy plains around the town can offer the nature-lover activities such as horseback riding, hunting, golfing, grass skiing, camping and caravan tourism. The Sultan’s Trail office in Haarlem, Holland, has a pilgrim card which can be stamped at several places along the route in order to get a certificate. The office provides latest route and GPS information for walkers through its website. In Austria and Serbia, hotels, pensions, and private rooms are within a day’s walking distance on the trail. In Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey walkers can stay in hotels or private houses, in the mountains of Bulgaria a tent is needed. The Sultan’s Trail can be walked almost year round. Some higher parts (like the Bulgarian mountains) are only accessible from May to October. Turkey may be hot in July and August. The Society is based in a drop-in centre in Antalya, where you can get advice before you set out, and buy maps and guidebooks to the routes. We invite you to become a member of the Culture Routes Society, and have your say in the future of Turkey’s culture routes. Contact us directly through our website www. cultureroutesinturkey.com Our centre is at: Culture Routes Society Haşım İşcan Mah 1296 Sok no 21. (90) 242 2431148 ANTALYA ‘N 36.88390, E 30.71145’ Kaçkar Mountains The Kaçkar Mountains are an extension of the Caucasus, and separate the Black Sea from Anatolia. Armenians and Georgians settled early in the Pontic Alps, now the Kaçkar, later building wonderful stone monastery churches hidden in the mountains. The Turks gradually occupied the area from the 11th century but it remains ethnically mixed and very interesting, with a variety of local accents and customs. The Kaçkar is one of the most bio-diverse areas in the world. It has huge areas of mature evergreen forest, upland pastures once grazed by herds of bulls, three glaciers and many glacial lakes as well as sharp basalt peaks and spires. The Trails 8 long treks, which cross the passes of the main range of the Kaçkar, have been cleared, cairned and mapped; each trek is of 3 to 6 days duration. 7 daywalks around the Hevek Valley are waymarked and signed. These routes total over 30 days trekking. Only the daywalks are waymarked; longer routes are marked by cairns. The guide book and map and GPS points for longer routes can be found on the website. Wars of independence give rise to legends and symbols of national rebirth. The Independence Route connects the corners of a triangle which played an important role during Turkey’s War of Independence. During the war, over a period of three years, boatloads of arms and ammunition arrived at the port of İnebolu from İstanbul and Russia. A dirt road, built at the end of the 19th century by volunteers and convicts, connected the port of Inebolu to Ankara, and was a vital conduit for military supplies. The famous saying of Mustafa Kemal, ‘While my eyes scanned Sakarya and Dumlupinar (battlefields), my ears were at İnebolu” demonstrates the importance of the Independence Route, plied by the oxcarts carrying their burdens towards the front. The Independence Route The longer trails climb above the treeline, at about 2100m, so have superb views; others run between villages through steep, dense fir and pine forest and along white-water streams. Some routes link villages with their summer pastures; others are old trade routes; most are steep and some very rocky. The Sultan’s Trail makes use of parts of the E8 and the Donauweg and runs more or less parallel to the Via Comitis (the Roman road to Jerusalem). The total length of the trail is about 2100km; the In Turkey, access to the trail is from Edirne. Remote parts can be reached by minibus or taxi. Currently, the Sultans Trail Foundation organises exploratory walks along the trail, researching and documenting sections. The most popular trek is the climb of Mt Kaçkar at nearly 4000m. Unless you use snowshoes, routes across the high passes are only open July – September but lower, marked routes are open for 5-6 months, from early June onwards. You can join an organised trekking group or design your own independent trek, hiring mules and drivers to carry baggage and guide you. There is accommodation in larger villages, plenty of water and many wild camp areas near the glacial lakes. About the Route Phrygia Phrygian Way Ağrı Dağı Walking and Biking routes in the Küre Mountains National Park The Directorate of Kure Mountains National Park made the 482 km long walking routes and 828km of mountain bike trails. Walkers can enjoy short walks, day trips and longer, more arduous hikes. The longest routes require a week of walking and camping. Ambitious walkers can start on the adjoining Yenice Forest trails, hike the whole of Kure Mountains National Park, and finish on the Istiklal Route, a 500 kilometres long trail which takes a month. Phrygia is the ancient name of the region in Anatolia covering the present day provinces of Afyonkarahisar, Ankara, Eskisehir and Kutahya. The name comes from the Phrygian people who migrated across the straits from Thrace and settled in the region. The Phrygian Trekking Route is one of the longest trails in Turkey. The route passes through the renowned Phrygian Valleys where hikers may visit the ruins of ancient civilisations and enjoy the natural beauty of the region. The trekking route is 400 kilometres long, and is marked in accordance with international standards. The Route has three starting points and the trails meet at the Yazılıkaya (Inscribed Rock), which was a focal point for the Phrygians. Dancing in the clouds The Kure Mountains National Park, a unique part of Turkey’s geography, met all criteria. The National Park covers an area straddling parts of Kastamonu and Bartin provinces. The park includes unspoilt land home to endemic plants, fauna, a unique microclimate, interesting geomorphologic structures, deep valleys and gorges, rushing rivers, waterfalls and local culture. The park, covering 370 square kilometres, is truly an open-air museum, and boasts a biodiversity that rivals almost any in the world. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) selected the National Park as one of one hundred sites requiring urgent protection, and one of nine hotspots in Turkey. There are hotels and pensions in the Azdavay, Pınarbaşı and Cide, along the route. Villages offer charming accommodation at family pensions; old mansions of Yanıkali and Pasa and the picnic places at Zümrütköy and Nalbantoğlu will accommodate you. There are many camp sites at beauty spots along the route. The best season for trekking is between May and November. During the winter, the region is snowbound and silently beautiful. By the mid 8thC BCE a vibrant civilisation was flourishing, centred around the capital Gordium (Gordion), present day Yassıhoyuk and Polatlı. The legendary Midas was the most renowned Phrygian king. Other important settlements were Pessinous (Ballıhisar) and the city of Midas (Yazılıkaya). Volcanic ash thrown out by Turkmen Mountain (called Mount Elaphoeis in antiquity), carpeted the region, and the consolidated tuff created easily carved rocks. The Phrygians left behind many carved rock monuments. The easily worked nature of the local rock also aided the creation of ancient roads, which are still visible today. The Phrygian valleys display a different aspect of their beauty in every season. The Route was planned in order to introduce trekkers to Phrygian culture, and to enable them to enjoy a safe journey through the Phrygian Valley along trails once used by the Phrygians. Spring and autumn are the best seasons to walk the region’s trails. There are ample sources of drinking water at the trailside, including springs, fountains and troughs. However, the summer months can be swelteringly hot. The trekking route is generally suitable for mountain-biking. St Paul was responsible for the spread of Christianity to western Europe. Jesus’ message was aimed at amending the Jewish religion, but Paul took it to both the Jews outside Israel and to the worshippers of the traditional Greek/Roman gods, or of other cults. In the process he changed the religion of Christianity, interpreting Jesus’ message quite freely. If St Paul had not preached, Christianity would probably have died out when the Jewish rebellion of 66 AD was crushed and Jerusalem burned. Paul’s first journey into Asia Minor started from Perge, and his first major destination was Antioch in Pisidia, where he first preached to non- Jews. The St Paul Trail The St Paul Trail is a 500km 25-day waymarked footpath from Perge, to Antioch in Pisidia, now Yalvaç. A second branch starts at the Köprülü Kanyon, 40km east of Antalya and joins the first route at the Roman site of Adada. The trail is over Roman roads, footpaths and forest tracks; it is suitable in places for mountain bikes. It’s a wilder route than the Lycian Way, starting at sea level and climbing up to 2200m, with two optional peaks at around 2800m. Parts of the route run through ancient and natural cedar forest, unique around the Mediterranean. The east branch of the trail runs through a beautiful national park; the west, more historically accurate, follows aqueducts and, as far as possible, original roads. Trekking is best in spring and autumn. Accommodation is in village houses or small pensions, or you could camp in beautiful forests. The map and guidebook are complemented by downloadable GPS points. Eğirdir Day Trails Local enthusiasts have made 6 easy-access day-walks close to the lake; waymarked in redyellow, they are for families or less-experienced walkers. On some trails you can enjoy a meal with shepherds or a visit to rose-gardens. You can also stay in traditional village houses. Free leaflets are available at the pensions. Idyma Way - Daywalks The Idyma Way Fethiye, the former Lycian city of Telmessos, is on a circular bay below the peak of Baba Dağı. Between, scented pine-forest clothes the slopes; ancient graves and ruins are hidden on rocky hillsides or olive-groves. Each year, thousands of visitors stay mainly in Ölüdeniz, where hang gliders soar from the summit and land in the soft sand. The interior, where nomads still take their goats to summer pastures high in the mountains, is little-visited except by trekkers along Turkey’s first long-distance walking route, the Lycian Way. Fethiye Chamber of Commerce and Industry has developed 343km of easy and medium daywalks, waymarked in red-yellow. Most are connected to and signed from the Lycian Way. The trails are designed to enable families and less-experienced walkers to enjoy vast vistas over the sea, sailboats and islands, or to try a path before starting the Lycian Way. Using public transport and locally-organised transfers, you can do daywalks while based in a comfortable hotel. The trails are best in February June or September - November. Idyma is a small Carian city close to the Mediterranean sea in the area of Akyaka and Gökova. The area at the head of the Gulf of Gökova has many relics of ancient civilisations. The bay faces west, so is exposed to the prevailing winds and it’s unlikely that there were important harbours in the area. But there are relics of many years of habitation, based on olive farming, grapes and goat herding. The route was made to encourage local people to protect their important heritage from marble mining and coastal tourism development. This 135km route connects with the Carian Way and circles through ruins and wild countryside. Based on shepherd trails or ancient roads, the route gives an insight into a traditional way of life on the coast. It also passes through the dramatic Ula canyon, where there is an historic paved road, believed to be 2500 years old. Walkers can base themselves in modern comfort in Akyaka and reach the most distant parts of the route by minibus or taxi. In future, village accommodation will be developed. The Via Egnatia The route Via Egnatia was, together with the Via Appia in Italy, the road between Rome and Byzantium, now Istanbul. It functioned for two millennia as a multipurpose trans-Balkan highway, a real life artery for the region. It runs through Albania, Macedonia, Greece and Turkish Thrace. The best maintained and still used - parts of the road are in Albania. The Via Egnatia Foundation (VEF) aims to revitalize ancient Via Egnatia as “a way to connect”. So the Via Egnatia is more than just a hiking trail. The VEF aims to use the path for a broader purpose: to connect people. The road as a way to exchange people, goods and ideas. In the end the road as a way to friendship and peace. There are different theories about the exact route of the original Via Egnatia in Turkey, but the locations of the main stations are known. It is presumed that the Turkish route corresponds with the Ottoman Sol Kol and went along Ipsala via Marmara to Tekirdag and then along the coast to Istanbul. Recently a Roman milestone has been found, that will provide more clues about the course of the original Via Egnatia. The part of the Via Egnatia Hiking and Heritage trail in Turkey is now being actively researched and way marked. The VEF is plotting an attractive trail for walkers from Ipsala to Istanbul: currently you can participate in research journeys. A milestone of the struggle for nationhood, the Independence Trail was revived as a trekking and biking route by the Governorship of Kastamonu Province. The most picturesque part of the old oxcart route between İnebolu and Kastamonu, passing through Küre, is perfect for nature lovers. The first 10km of the 105km route were built as a pathway, and the old oxcart road was repaired over the remaining section. There are hotels at Küre and Kastamonu and İnebolu, on the Black Sea coast, is perfect for a longer stay. The Ecevit caravansaray and the ecotourism site at Beloren, both near Kure, tempt visitors to stay longer. Ayrancı picnic area is the best camp site along the route. The best season for trekking is between April and November. Follow the route of the War of Independence Küre Mountains The Wildlife Fund (WWF) criteria for protected sites include integrity of the site, biodiversity, wild life, endemism, rarity, sensitivity, and severity of threats. trekking Fethiye Walking Routes The Society sees culture routes as a means of deepening cultural understanding—both within Turkey, where city-dwellers are increasingly distanced from their rural past, and by introducing international visitors to aspects of Turkey’s culture that would normally be hidden from them. We aim to bring benefits to the areas through which the routes pass, by involving local people in their creation and by offering them opportunities to host routeusers in their homes and pensions. A major concern is conservation of the culture routes and their environment: change is often fast and unplanned in Turkey, and we will work with the relevant authorities to minimise disruption to trails where development is scheduled. long-distance Fethiye The Independence War Turkish section is 330km. In Turkey the route can be done by bike as well as on foot. second Trail marking is in accordance with the international “Grande Randonnée” system, with red and white paint markers and signposts mark the routes’ beginnings, ends and junctions. The Independence Route follows the old Ankara road from İnebolu to Kastamonu and Cankiri. A well-preserved oxcart road between İnebolu and Kastamonu forms part of the route. Of huge historical importance, the famous road also passes through spots of outstanding natural beauty, such as Ersizler Gorge, Karacehennem Pass and Çuhadoruğu peak. The Sultan’s Trail Yenice is 32 kilometres from Karabük, which has regular coach services from Istanbul and Ankara. There are regular minibus services and a train service between Karabük and Yenice. Mount Ararat (Ağrı), the highest point of both Turkey and Europe, can be seen from vast distances across the eastern Turkish plain, rising ethereally into the clouds. In 2004, it was declared a national park. Its summit, snow-capped all year, is a dormant volcanic cone covered with glaciers, the largest permanent ice-mass in Turkey. Its mention in sacred texts, in the context of the story of Noah’s Ark, makes this massif unique. Claimed to be “impossible to climb” by the famous explorer Marco Polo, for many years this majestic mountain haunted the dreams of adrenalin-addicted explorers. Ağrı Dağı Walking Routes The cone of Ağrı Dağı is surrounded by several summits higher than 3000m. The slopes of all these mountains are covered with basalt blocks and lava flows, blown out by ancient volcanic eruptions. They harbour a variety of birds and rare wild flowers as well as small lakes. Çorum and the Kızılırmak The area attracts mountaineers and nature lovers with several well-known mountaineering routes. Known as the “roof” of Turkey, the province of Ağrı includes four of Turkey’s highest summits: Büyük Ağrı (Greater Ararat) 5137m., Süphan Dağı (Mountain) 4058m., Küçük Ağrı (Lesser Ararat) 3896m., Tendürek Dağı (Mountain) 3533m. Süphan’s summit is in Bitlis but the north-eastern slopes are in Ağrı province. Our routes include Büyük Ağrı, Küçük Ağrı, Suphan Dağı and Köse Dağı summits and Balık and Küp high tarns. www. agritrekking.com has GPS data and mail info@ agritrekking.com for the guide book, with detailed information about the routes. The province of Ağrı was once part of the early Urartu kingdom, famous for immense fortifications and superb metalwork. These fortresses, plus the luxurious 17th C İshak Paşa Palace, nestle amongst snowy peaks and await discovery by both nature and history lovers. Know in Roman times as Niconia, also referred to as Yankoniye, Trokmu and Gordiana, the original Greek name of Çorum is Dzorum. Çorum has the most extensive traces of the Hittite civilization, and the migration route between Central Anatolia and the Black Sea maintained its importance throughout time. The ancient city of Hattusa is one of 11 Unesco World Heritage Sites in Turkey. The 1355km long Kızılırmak River, the longest in Turkey, greens the landscape of Çorum and links the deep valleys of the interior to the Black Sea coast. In contrast to the southern part of the province, which has mountains, deep valleys, lush forests, waterfalls, the natural beauty of the northern part is made up of colored plateaus. Of course, the cuisine reflects the rich cultural mosaic of Çorum. The Gastronomy Route The Kızılırmak Basin Corum Gastronomy and Walking Route project is the first in Turkey. The cultural, historical and natural beauty of settlements along the Kızılırmak were evaluated and found to support a unique food culture. Along the route of the river, a steady flow of travellers journey though time and space, borne by the currents of time, spreading this culture. As a result of the evaluation, 190km of hiking and 606km of bicycle trails are now marked. The trails include walking routes marked with the familiar red-white waymarks and bicycle routes following village and forest paths. The Scenic Vehicle Road begins at Hirfanlı Dam, near Kırşehir and passes through Kirikkale, Ankara, Çankırı, Corum, Samsun and Sinop provinces. All the bike routes and the Scenic Vehicle Road can be combined as a jeep safari route. While exploring this ecotourism route along the lovely Kızılırmak, you have the opportunity to to see authentic historical and cultural items, crafts and folklore. You can sample the delights of local traditional delicacies with strange-sounding names, which cannot be translated, but which are based on local field crops.