We got to Istanbul this morning on an overnight bus from Cappodocia. Never say never… but if I never go on another overnight bus, I will not feel like my life was incomplete.
Cappadocia was pretty unbelievable! After spending 3 days on Kos—of which two were rainy and therefore spent mostly indoors, catching up on sleep and stuff that needed to get done (e.g. federal taxes) and the third was gorgeous and we spent it driving around the island and frolicking on turquoise beaches—we took a ferry to Bodrum, Turkey. Since leaving Bodrum, I’ve read about it in the guidebooks and apparently it’s an overrated tourist trap. Good thing I didn’t read that in advance, cause we loved it there! It had a big old harbor full of ridiculously tricked-out yachts, beaches, and hundreds of restaurants and cafes. It was cheap to stay there, and we had some incredible food. There’s also a giant medieval fortress there that houses the world’s biggest underwater archeology museum. (My assessment: castle is cool, museum element is sort of lame).
The other thing that stood out about the place is that just about all the downtown roads are completely torn up and under construction, which means that it’s kind of hard to walk around. You have to walk through torn up chunks of concrete and dodge traffic when the sidewalk ends on your side.
Now a word about language. We had finally gotten a few Greek words down, and then all of a sudden it was welcome to Turkey, where it takes six syllables just to say thank you! Phonetically it’s like this: teshekur ederem (quite a mouthful compared to “todah” (Hebrew), “shukran” (Arabic), or “efarishto” (Greek)). Over dinner one night with a Turkish traveler, we were discussing whether there was any way to shorten this, since it doesn’t exactly roll of the tongue as you’re peacing out of a souvenir shop or off a bus. How about just teshekur? Nope, doesn’t mean the same thing, apparently. He did say, however, that we could shorten it to “teshekur lehr” (equivalent of “thanks” instead of “thank you”). Excellent. So we’d been trying out the shortened version, still honing the pronunciation, when one day, our friend Eve thanked someone quickly and it sort of turned into one word: teshekurlehr! Pronunciation-wise, it was more like this: “teshickular!”…getting the idea? Now we have a good time cracking each other up by thanking people with a reference to a certain male gonadal element.
Okay so back to Turkey… after a night and day in Bodrum, we took an overnight bus to Ankara and basically got right on another bus to Cappodocia where Eve was waiting for us. We last saw her in Eilat after that epic clubbing night and before we almost missed the bus to Tel Aviv. We had a great time catching up in Cappadocia! We stayed in the same hostel and she was able to show us the good hikes since she’d already been there for a few days.
We hiked through a lot of gorgeous scenery—the first two days were beautiful! The third day Carla and I went on a tour of an underground city, the world’s 3rd biggest canyon, and a monastery carved into a spiky mountaintop. It was all pretty spectacular. I particularly liked the underground city. The deal was that early Christians were apparently being hunted by all kinds of other people, and they dug this city so that they could stay alive and worship as they chose for centuries. During peace time they lived underground but farmed above. During times of emergencies, though, they retreated into their caves and lived off food stores and water from subterranean wells.
These people were really resourceful! Their chambers were a maze of stairs, tunnels, and rooms—and booby traps for whoever tried to follow them! They had big stone discs waiting by thin holes along passageways so that they could roll the stones through and block the tunnel in case of attack. They also had holes in the floor that intruders wouldn’t know about, so they could escape through them and cover them up—or leave them and wait for their enemies to fall through in the dark. Exploring the city, I felt a little like a character in the Goonies.
There was one tense moment: Carla was taking a picture and I was waiting for her, when we realized our group had gone down a stairway/tunnel. We started down, and after a while a few people came up the same tunnel. We flattened ourselves against the side to let them pass… and then they were followed by more people, and more people! We were pressed against the wall with people streaming past us without any intention of letting us move. It was pretty funny, though I think Carla was feeling rather oppressed. Finally we broke away from the wall and forced our way past the people coming up. Turns out we were like 6 steps from the bottom and our whole group was waiting.
The last thing we saw on the tour was a carved-out mountaintop monastery. It was really gorgeous and so impressive that they had a) carved out these fantastic chapels and chambers and b) managed to conduct their lives up there for generations.
There was a view from the monastery that apparently inspired the Ewok homeland's depiction in Star Wars. It made me realize that, yes, this area looks like a place that aliens would live on some other planet-- it's THAT different from anyplace else on earth!