22 Apr 2016

Day-12 | Back on the Trail

Kaş to Boğazcık | 22.2km



Restocked and rested I headed out with today's target being 20km to the village of Boğazcik, but my real goal was to push on another 6.5km to the Purple House beach and campsite at Aperlai, which I'd heard was an eco-village.

Büyük Çakıl Beach
Ruins of abandoned 1970s beach bar
A short walk along the road out of Kaş I passed Büyük Çakıl beach, then was immediately climbing onto scree ridden trails - the general tone for the next 20km broken only by occasional short bouts of gravel tracks, forest trails or cliffs. The heat was relentless and 3 litres of water was only just enough for the day.

The views and numerous beaches and coves were worth the effort though.  

Limanağzı
The famous tomb ridden drop-in to Limanağzı
Scree trails as far as the eye can see

Ahhh... the views - his one across to the Greek island of Kastellorizo
Did I mention the views?
A bunch of us simultaneously arrived on one beach - Germans, Swiss and lowly mad Englishman. The beaches were littered with the detritus of Syrian refugees fleeing the short distance to the EU. One particular weathered original Gucci handbag had been upturned and nappies and Arabic tagged medicine and personal belongings lay scattered around.

Germans, Swiss and English - what a great example of racial harmony

Rocky secluded cove with crabs as big as your fist
And the views...
The trail opened up into a short beach walk past a lonely palm before rising 250m to flatten out onto a gravel trail into Boğazcık.

Lone date palm - probably seeded by a discarded stone
With sunset almost upon me, nowhere to camp in the village and no energy to move on I booked into Ali's Pansiyon in Boğazcık for the night (75 liras for full board).

Ali's Pansiyon
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Day-11 | Day of Rest

A day off in Kaş to rest, recuperate and resupply after walking for 10 days.

Kaş at night... tourism has fallen off a cliff in Turkey his year

The proverbial town square Atatürk statue

Lycian tomb just outside Kaş



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21 Apr 2016

Day-10 | Kaş or Bust

Pinarbaşı trailhead to Kaş | 23.2km




Again a late start, partly due to lying in past dawn and having a long breakfast but also because the valley was damp overnight so I lingered to dry my kit in the warm, early morning sun.


Looking down on the previous night's camp
A long 13km slog over mixed terrain, forest trails initially but then onto now common and ultimately annoying and uninteresting scree slopes, with a 500m climb followed by a 500m drop into the village of Çukurbağ. I'd hoped to find a market or somewhere to get lunch here but I nonchalantly passed Dede's (Grandfather's) Pansiyon with Dede sat outside. We exchanged greetings and I gave him the low down on the other trekkers behind us. A short while further down the hill I came across an elderly villager and asked where the closest market was. 'There isn't one for miles'... Okay then the closest place to get a meal. 'Nope'. Okay then where can we find some food? 'In the next village', some 6km out of the way...

Forest trails
Scree slopes dotted with abandoned farm houses

Despondent but not wanting to climb back up the hill to take up on Dede's offer of çay I plodded on and started tapping up villagers for food. Eventually one house took pity and gave me two loaves and a big bag of tomatoes, which my hiking buddy Morten and I snaffled down in the grounds of the local mosque with some cheese triangles and honey we had left over.

Water çeşme (spring) with camping platform
Re-energised and stocked up with water I set out for the final push to Kaş, hoping to make it there by dusk. The terrain was mostly flat roads and trail paths through open fields and unchallenging so ground was covered quickly and I made it to the cliffs of the 'Sleeping Giant of Kaş' in great time.

Towards the flat last few kilometres of the flat trail before the descent to Kaş I wove through the remains of Lycian tombs.




The end of the trail opened out into an amazing view over Kaş, Çukurbağ Yarımadası and the Greek isle of Megisti.

Kaş with Greek Isle of Megisti in the distance
After breathing in every last drop of the view I began to make the steep descent down the steep valley to Kaş. After ten consecutive days of walking and at the end of a hard day the climb was all the more precarious and my concentration kept wandering. I slipped on loose rocks several times, ended on my bum on two occasions and managed to slash my little finger open when I was putting my hand out to break my fall.

Owww...
Bandaged up, I headed to the Aphrodite Pansiyon (60 liras a night b&b, clean rooms with small en-suite toilets and little balconies overlooking the bay) for an off-day to restock and recover before getting back on the trail.

Lush Aphrodite Pensiyon

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20 Apr 2016

Day-9 | Meet The Hüseyins

Sarıbelen to Pinarbaşı trailhead | 21.1km




It was so peaceful in the shepherd's grove campsite that I slept in, only to be awoken in by Fatma. She had arrived to graze her sheep; obviously her mother meant that it was her day for herding so I'd probably see her in the grove... and nothing more surreptitious! After a cursory 'merhaba' she shoved off up the hill to observe the foreigner packing his rucksack from a safe distance. 


Baa humbug
After a quick breakfast, and loaded up on stream water infused with sterilising pills, I made a late start on the long undulating trail to Gökceören. There was little in the way of shade and plenty of wells on the way and, despite the climbs, the going wasn't particularly tough.


Easy going :)
Along the way we passed a large well kept, rubble cleared plain with a cow grazing and a decent sized stone hut. An elderly red haired villager was washing pots outside and she offered tea. Parched, I gratefully received. Her daughter was also there and they had a large area with a covered table surrounded by benches, set out for tourists with Lycian Way memorabilia, books, photo albums and empty parcel boxes sent from abroad. It turns out this is the hut of Dağ (Mountain) Hüseyin, who features in Lycian Way pioneer Kate Clow's original exploratory trip and book, but today he was out tending the elder goats. The 150 or so young goats were let out of their pen while we were there and they excitedly bounced over each other into the pasture bleating with happiness - a wonderful sight. It turns out that the daughter's husband and eldest son were killed in a car accident some ten years previous and the ladies now offered home-made food and drinks to passing tourists to bring some extra income to the family - her two other children were at school in Sarıbelen. A fresh glass of goat's milk ayran with mint was 2.5 liras, a huge breakfast platter for two with tea and water was 30 liras. Delicious and well worth the money and I added a generous tip as a gesture of support to the fatherless family.


Dağ Hüseyin's pad
Valley view
Further along the trail I came across numerous great camping spots so started geolocating them with pictures.  I'll post the .gpx trail files on the blog when I'm done - they maybe of use to someone at some point in time.


Ample camping spots with nearby well water
As I came down the hill into Gökceören I bumped into a couple of local farmers and asked them where I could find some bread. They said there wasn't any to be found. At that moment an old, battered Tofas station wagon ripped up in a cloud of dust. A ratty looking bloke jumped out with a guide book in hand and jogged over. One of the farmers chuckled and said I could probably buy some lavaş flat bread from Hüseyin 'Para'* Yilmaz, motioning in the direction of the new arrival... (*para = money)

The ratty looking bloke pawed at my arm for my attention and waved a highlighted section of the guidebook in my face. 'Me Hüseyin Yilmaz' pointing to his underlined name. 'Famous pansiyon'. 'You Swiss man?' I explained no, I wasn't but the two Swiss people he meant were probably the two I had passed picnicking in the shade higher up the hill. 'They telephone me. Taxi to famous pansiyon' he explained. Seizing the opportunity he spurted, 'You need taxi to famous pansiyon?' I explained that no I didn't as I was walking all the way and he left as quickly as he'd arrived once he had understood my disinterest in his offer, Tofas wheels churning up the gravel and throwing up a big cloud of dust. 

The markings for the official Lycian Way route seemed to have been diverted at this point, away from the straight road and instead now go around a bend, past a mosque and village water fountain, onto a small trail before joining back onto the official route. I soon realised this had been engineered to push tourists past the 'famous pansiyon', which looked to be famous for it's lack of character and unwholly expense... I stopped for a can of coke... FIVE LIRAS! I was livid at the extortion and told him so. A couple of American trekkers were already sat there having tea and while we were chatting about their long slow two month long Lycian Way holiday 'Para' Yilmaz kept butting in to further underline his fame and his wonderful b&b. I got righteously pissed off with him so turned and explained that he and his pansiyon were indeed famed, we'd heard of him from many people we'd met over the last 24 hours but his fame extended only to his ridiculously expensive prices that had gifted him the 'para' moniker among his peers. Initially taken aback he then indignantly puffed out his chest in pride at his fame and opened a door so I could see his downstairs 'show' room. Clean but basic and tackily decorated. He refused to answer me when pressed on the cost but we met the Swiss couple again later and they told me they paid 220 liras for a night plus the taxi shuttle from the trail to the pansiyon... An extortionate price fro what was on offer... 'Para' Yilmaz indeed!


For shitty home-made signs call Hüseyin 'Para' Yilmaz
After leaving Gökceören I started down a long forest trail in a valley along the side of a small river. A good part of the initial section of the very mature forest had been logged and a worker was sat by the road so I had a chat with him about what was going on. He explained it was government land and they were cutting down the old trees to plant new ones and 'make it better'. When pressed further he admitted they were logging the mature forest for cash and would plant fast growing lumber pine in its place. We exchanged scathing comments about the Turkish government and said goodbyes. I'm yet to meet an AKP supporter on this trip. Plenty of MHP, some HDP and a decent anount of CHP, but no admission of AKP support so far... Where are they all I wonder? 

I caught up twith the American couple who looked to be suffering under the weight of their packs and on the poorly marked sections with only Clow's book to go by, but explained they were 'going real slow' and taking lots of breaks so speed was of no issue.

Toward the end of the valley I pitched camped on some flat stepped grassland next to the stream, in a large clearing by another deserted shepherd's house. A great spot but very damp the next morning. A German couple we kept bumping into were camped over the river on the next ridge.

Day 9 campsite. German Morten's fekking huge tent and my tiny lightweight bivy. I've no need to compensate!
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Day-8 | Valley of dreams, Bezirgan

Kalkan to Sarıbelen | 18.1km




To avoid the heat I got up at 5.45am to pack and prepare for a 6.30am start to hike 
the two kilometres to the start of an 800m climb up and out of Kalkan and to the valley village of Bezirgan.


Early morning view from Kalkan
The climb was broken up into two parts, separated by a plateau of pasture and the toughness was increased by the rubble strewn scree surface.

Up, up and away
Part way up and looking back

At the summit, the climb opened up onto a flat trail into peaceful and beautiful Bezirgan. Aftre passing a large clearing of old historical grain storage huts (ambars) I stopped for some tea at the village çaycı and picked up some supplies from the small village store. The cool valley wind soothed the midday sun and perfectly complemented the beauty of the village and I floated across the valley floor. Then it was a short climb out of the other side of the valley and down a few kilometres of main road onto the less interesting village of Sarıbelen.


Beautiful, peaceful Bezirgan
The villagers we met were the nicest and kindest people I have ever come across. They came over to chat, their children showed their toys and magazines, they stopped to give advice on where to get water, a cup of tea and even where to camp, which left us pitching up for the night in a wonderful shady grassed grove next go an abandoned shepherd's hut. 

Campsite next to shepherd's hut
One shepherdess, who was particularly chatty went home and came back to give us some matches when we asked her if she had any meths stove fuel. A misunderstanding. She also offered us her daughter Fatma... she said she'd send her over to us... another misunderstanding or..? We waited until nightfall and then lit a fire, only to be surprised by a nearly blind 80 year old farmer making his way home who stopped to chat to us (and snaffle all of my walking compadre's cigarettes) for a good 45 minutes, before toddling off into the darkness with his stick.


Bivy bag out. Campsite for day eight
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17 Apr 2016

Day-7 | "You're Going The Wrong Way! LOL!"

Gelemiş to Kalkan via ruins of Patara | 28.9km




I woke up at 8am with a beer and raki hangover and left my bag at the pansiyon to walk the few kilometes to the sea and to see the ruins of Patara. Interesting sights: the reconstructed Lycian league Assembly building that now serves as a posh open-air theatre, the amphitheatre & old city entrance with a pipe where part of the aqueduct I followed the previous day ended.


City entrance
Water pool at city entrance fed by the aqueduct

Panoramic view from atop the reconstructed Lycian League Assembly building
View from Lycian Way looking back down on Patara

I grabbed an expensive Nescafe at a beach cafe blaring sh1te music, which remained on despite my request to turn it off and their being no other clientelle, and then headed back into Gelemiş for a late menemen breakfast before setting off for Kalkan.


The beach, complete with sh1tty beach cafe
If I'd known beforehand and timed it better I could have joined the annual Gelemiş walk from Akbel to Gelemiş, pausing for lunch at the hilltop above the village. I'd done that route the previous day and was now heading out and past the incoming day hikers. The chorus of "you're going the wrong way!" only got funnier the more I heard it...


Hilltop lunch queue
The anti-clockwise route around Eren Tepe was a pure mind-and-foot-numbing slog along gravel paths back to the aqueduct in sweltering heat. A few beautiful sea views broke up the tedium.

Time to take a break for a swim!
Crystal clear
the views...
After a late lunch at the aqueduct, I took the craggy, dangerous route to Kalkan that involved scrambling up and down razor sharp rocks and cliffs for 4km before levelling out into paths and finally a gravel road into Kalkan. Darkness was descending and with no camping options I holed up for the night in Gul Pansiyon (single room: TL70) and went out to a local ocakbaşı for a big portion of iskender kebab.
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