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Why Turkey should be on your bucket list

by | Jun 17, 2013 | Turkey | 8 comments

I was really excited to visit Turkey for the first time recently, and imagined  having a pretty good trip. It blew me away. From the moment I arrived in Istanbul, I loved every moment of being in this amazing country. I had no idea how beautiful, diverse, culturally rich, friendly and historically fascinating Turkey was, and wished that I had much longer than two weeks there.

If you’ve never been to Turkey before and aren’t thinking of visiting anytime soon, let me try and convince you to book your flight to Istanbul right now.

There wasn’t a bad meal to be found in Turkey – even for a vegetarian. I gorged myself on pistachio and rosewater Turkish delight, syrupy and buttery baklava, salty-cheese borek, hundreds of mezzes, from stuffed grape vine leaves and red peppers to olive-oil-soaked baked aubergines, salads with inventive dressings like pomegranate and walnut, sour, thick yoghurt with everything, the sweetest cherries and apricots I’ve ever tasted, and the world’s best breakfasts.

I fell in love with magical Istanbul, a city with an epic history that spans three massive empires that straddles two continents with one of the most alluring skylines in the world, and a mix of ancient ruins, extravagant palaces and contemplative spiritual spaces and buzzing bars and restaurants. My favourite way to soak up the city’s atmosphere was by sitting in rooftop bars watching dusk fall, listening to the competing sounds of tweeting swallows, honking cruise ships and the wailing of the sunset call to prayer while smoking grape-flavoured nargile (water pipe) and sipping hot, sweet apple tea.

Cappadocia, in the centre of the country, is an other-worldly landscape of mushroom-shaped volcanic formations jutting out underneath rock hilltop castles that look like a mixture of Swiss cheese and something out of a Salvador Dali painting, boutique cave hotels, snow-capped peaks, 1000-year-old cave churches covered with beautiful religious frescoes, beautiful lush valleys of spring flowers and the occasional donkey and claustrophobic underground cities that are hundreds of years old. Every day (apart from when it’s really windy) around 100 hot air balloons launch at dawn. Flying for an hour over this unique landscape surrounded by scores of other balloons all calmly suspended in the sky is indescribably awesome.

Beach hopping along the Turquoise Coast from Antalya to Fethiye was one sun-drenched highlight after another: taking in the breathtaking beauty of Olympos’ white pebble beach, flanked by clear warm sea, towering green mountains and two-thousand-year-old ruins, hiking to the eternal flames of Chimaera, which have burnt naturally for thousands of years, cruising to the sunken ruins of an ancient city at Kekova, climbing to the top of a medieval castle, exploring ancient Lycian tombs scattered on hillsides covered with silvery gnarled olive trees, discovering the birthplace of Santa Claus (yes, really) next to one of Turkey’s most beautiful beaches, swimming in sea the colour of jewellery, driving through tiny villages (just a few kilometres from tourist-packed coastal resorts) where life looks like it’s continued the same way for hundreds of years to stay at rustic cottages perched on the edge of high cliffs plunging down into the sea.

And that was just two weeks of travel! We missed out on so many other places and can’t wait to go back for a longer trip to see even more of amazing Turkey.

 

8 Comments

  1. Andrew

    Beautiful!!! I’m sold 🙂

    Reply
    • Sarah Duff

      Glad I could inspire you 🙂

      Reply
  2. Mari Vigar

    Hi Sarah

    Thanks for the great piece and stunning photos, we are going for a week (too short) in September enroute to our annual pilgrimage to the UK and now I am even more inspired and excited!

    Kind regards
    Mari

    Reply
    • Sarah Duff

      Thanks Mari! Glad I could help you start getting excited for your trip! I’ll be posting more blogs (which will hopefully also be inspiring) about Turkey over the next week.

      Reply
  3. Logan Marlowe

    Truly it should be on anyone’s bucket list a few times, there’s so much to see! I’ve spent days just in the North Aegean coast before heading off for Istanbul. The South coast, and Antalya region are for another trip. The Aegean coast is also a great jumping off point for some Greek islands.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      There’s so much to do on the coast! I can’t wait to go back sometime soon and explore more of it. Hope you had an amazing trip!

      Reply
  4. Lauren

    Hi Sarah,
    Love reading your posts. You have inspired me so much to go to Turkey and that’s just where i’m heading next month!
    If you had only 4 days to spend somewhere on the turquoise coast (flying into Antalya and out again to Cappadocia), where would you choose to spend your time? What was your favourite place?I prefer to be away from the crowds however I won’t be hiring a car so somewhere that can be reached on public transport.
    Thanks in advance! 🙂

    Reply
    • Sarah Duff

      Hi Lauren,

      We rented a car so I’m not sure about public transport routes on the coast. Maybe try Olympos? It’s a popular spot but not too crowded – and there are loads of hotels and restaurants along the beach so you would be fine without a car. Enjoy your trip!

      Reply

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