CappadociaThe first thing we had to learn before we went to the Central Anatolian region of Cappadocia was how to pronounce it.
kap-ah-DOE-cha kap-ah-doe-SEE-ah kap-ah-DOE-see-ah We used all three pronunciations interchangeably until we heard the word articulated by the Turks as kap-ah-DOK-yah. That almost settled it but then we found out the Greeks say kap-ah-doe-KEE-ah. It is not surprising that a place with multiple versions of its name would offer travelers so many delightful diversions. We stayed four days in Cappadocia and rued it was not enough time to do and see a fraction of the region’s activities and sites. Like our beloved Canyonlands area in Utah, Cappadocia is a playground for active travelers offering hiking, biking, rafting, horseback riding, rock climbing and other outdoor adventures. |
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Cappadocia Allure_ What is the allure of Cappadocia? In a nutshell – an exceptional landscape and a mystical history.
Millennia ago volcanic mountains formed outlandish rock pinnacles known as “fairy chimneys” whose whimsical shapes made us laugh out loud. Erosions created sensuous folds in the earth causing us to gawk with glee. The mountains’ soft clay or sandstone allowed early Christian hermits, initially hiding from pagan Romans, to carve elaborate cave churches and refuges in daunting spots atop rocky hills. Some of Cappadocia’s marvels are accessible stepping out of a coach tour bus, but so many of its other wondrous phenomena require hiking the backcountry dirt paths that connect the area’s two dozen or so towns and villages. Needless to say, Cappadocia is a hiker’s haven. |
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Cave HotelsCaves converted into comfortable accommodations are a premier tourist feature and we, too, indulged in this exotic treat. We based ourselves in Goreme (population 2500), located in the center of Cappadocia.
We stayed at Aydinli Cave House which consists of six cave rooms and a lobby that was formerly a stable. The owner Mustafa was born and raised here before restyling his family home into a darling little hotel decorated with bygone family relics which give the premises an earnest authenticity, notwithstanding Wi-Fi connections in each cave room. Mustafa’s wife cooked menemen for breakfast which is a delicious omelet. Although it is made with common ingredients -- tomatoes and green peppers -- its taste was foreign and new to us. She served her homemade jam called pekmez made from grape resin. Fresh honey was set on the buffet still in its waxy honeycomb. By the way, it is rare to get a poor meal in Turkey and you will never, ever be served bad lentil soup. |
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Rose ValleyOur first hike was in Rose Valley, so named due to the rocky landscape’s stunning pink patina. Seeing several trails, we asked the guy who dropped us off which path to take and he laughed, “Oh it doesn’t matter. You will get lost and that’s part of the fun.”
Rose Valley is small enough that we correctly surmised that by walking two to three hours in the general direction of our destination we would get to where we needed to go. It’s impossible to feel lost when so many treasures are to be found on whichever path you choose: undulating rock mounds looking like Himalaya-size candy gumdrops, a winery storage in a cave two stories high with a perplexing ladder, windows in a cave home, a cave church with orange frescos and a dizzy maze of rooms. Rose Valley is an excellent starter hike because it is exceptionally beautiful. There weren't that many other hikers out besides a group of Germans, but then we came off season so it's hard to say. Reaching the main dirt road, we came upon a motorcyclist selling fresh squeezed pomegranate juice. With saddlebags and bungee cords, he managed to carry a little table, juicer, cups, the fruit and even bottles of local wine and guide books. He’d ride up and down until he spotted susceptible tourists willing to buy his modestly overpriced products. Impressed by his clever enterprising spirit, we succumbed and bought a glass of “nar” juice. Fresh pomegranate juice, a rarity in U.S. juice bars, had already become a daily ritual during our Turkey trip. Lucky for us we were there when it was in season. Fresh squeezed orange juice was also sold but it wasn't nearly as good as you get in Greece. |
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CavusinUnless you’ve studied Turkish, you’d never guess Cavusin is pronounced sha-vou-SHIN. We entered the village from the south which took us past its Muslim cemetery.
Cavusin was once a Greek village. We don’t know when it stopped being inhabited by Greeks nor whether their absence was due to the Turkish government relocating the people because erosion and harsh weather made their rock-hewn homes unsafe, as the Turks maintain, or whether the residents were forced to leave, a tragedy that befell many Greeks in Turkey in the early 20th century. The village probably had a Greek name when Greeks lived there because this is the case with several other Greek towns in Cappadocia that were depleted of Greek families during the 1920s “population exchange” and now bear Turkish names. Cavusin’s most famous feature is the 5th century Basilica of St. John the Baptist, one of the oldest churches in the region. The grandiose rock-cut structure looks utterly treacherous to enter; in the States it would be declared a lawsuit waiting to happen. But you can indeed follow a path up the cliff and explore various rooms, which is well worth the effort to see some marvelous religious carvings on the stone walls. |
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Goreme's Open Air MuseumAfter the wilderness of Rose Valley and sleepy Cavusin, at first we were flustered by the flocks of tourists converging on this site. Those dreadful mass tourism coaches were idling in the Museum parking lot within lazy reach of tacky souvenir stands and live camels who looked unhappy as their owners waited for petty thrill-seekers. We actually had to wait in line to enter some caves. But all that is really of no import because Goreme’s one-time monastic settlement, known as the Open Air Museum, is utterly magnetizing.
The cave churches, dating from the 10th, 11th and 12th centuries, are probably the most popular attraction in all Cappadocia. Convenience of location right off the road is likely the chief reason. Setting aside that ornery observation, the church caves truly earned their World Heritage Site status. They are incredibly sculpted, almost to perfection, with vaulted domes, naves, apses, columns, altars and refectories – a word we had to look up. A refectory is a communal dining hall in a religious house, college or other institution. In Goreme, refectory tables and benches were carved out of the rock and it's doubtful those anchorite diners used cushions. The scene brings to mind a stoic picnic site which is probably why an ungodly number of tourists seem compelled to sit down and pose with pretend cups raised in the air for a pretend toast. By the way, anchorite is another obscure word frequently used in Cappadocia guidebooks. It means “a person who has retired to a solitary place for a life of religious seclusion.” The Museum’s frescos are, of course, the site’s biggest draw since they are purportedly the finest in Cappadocia. Orthodox monks painted the churches in vivid colors depicting iconic images, such as, Mary with baby Jesus or St. George slaying the dragon. Some of the images are fascinating, even suggestively erotic. One particular cave is so spectacular that an additional entry fee is required, which we obligingly paid. It’s a mystery why it is called the Dark Church because the entirety of the walls and ceilings are painted in ultra-bright colors narrating the life story of Christ. Without a guide to explain the meaning of each figure, and not being Byzantine art buffs, after a while our eyes began to glaze over. The most striking cave in the entire complex is the stark white rock nunnery that pops out at you at the Museum’s entrance. It is not hard to conjure the triangular formation as the head of a hooded albino friar amongst his more somber brethren -- or a macabre Klansman far from home. (You'll easily detect the nunnery photos). As should be obvious by now, the very nature of Cappadocian topography stirs the imagination in provocative ways. It makes us wonder about a paradox: how did those rigidly ascetic anchorites relate to a terrain we behold as so fanciful, unorthodox and intoxicating to the imagination? |
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Hot Air BalloonsAbout fifteen years ago some entrepreneur began offering hot air balloons across Cappadocia’s magnificent landscape, and now they are a de rigueur sunrise activity. We got up at 5:00 am but our flight that day was a bust. Assessing the fast winds and abundant clouds, our Butterfly Balloons captain determined his passengers, sixteen of us, would not have a memorable excursion, so he canceled and gave refunds or credit for the next day. At $200 per person, his was a costly decision. Several less than honorable companies green lighted their balloons, thereby condemning their clients to a twenty minute ride with limited visibility; once in the air no one gets a refund. We are so thankful our captain had the integrity to wait. The next day the weather turned positively perfect. We took off just as the sun rose over Cappadocia’s otherworldly horizon. Minimal wind kept our balloon afloat for one solid hour. We were rewarded with tremendous aerial views of the freaky rock obelisks of Dervant Valley. When we reached 100, we quit counting the balloons, and realized we were witnessing a visible display of lots of money in the sky. The scene of dozens of circus-like hot air balloons floating over a fairy tale landscape lent the activity a fantasy quality. To clinch the romance of the venture, upon landing we were handed glasses of champagne. It did not go unnoticed by us that our $200 payment included the cost of this fancy finale, but it would have been churlish of us not to make a victory toast, and so we did, but we would have been much happier with a glass of fresh squeezed pomegranate juice. |
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Dervant Valley & PasabagGiven that there were so many places yet to explore in Cappadocia, Colleen proposed that we skip Dervant Valley because we already saw it by air. Cat vigorously vetoed and since between us we jokingly regard Cat as the dominant twin, Col acceded.
OMG, Dervant Valley is so fun and funny and funky. It’s dazzling from the sky but you have to get down to earth to feel its capricious humor. A 45 minute walk away is Pasabag, another thoroughly entertaining site that evokes some kind of stomping grounds for gremlins. The “fairy chimneys” (called hoodoos out West) are comical rock spires, like minarets, some conspicuously phallic. Hilariously, the Pasabag police station is housed in one of these fairy chimneys. No sense writing more -- let the photos speak for themselves. The first photos are Dervant; Pasabag starts with the photo of the police station recognizable by the Turkish flag flying from a flagpole. It was really hard to filter through the photos and limit ourselves to just these handful. There are other rocks with just as much character. A professional photographer would go nuts here. Well, leaving Pasabag we actually did meet a photographer, an American at that! He saw us trying to figure out which way to go and he offered us a lift in his vehicle. But we intended to walk back to Goreme and only wanted directions. He pretended not to know the route and said it was far, so we gave up and got a lift. His real motive was just to talk about himself which we concluded was either because he was lonely or he was just acting like a typical man. We excused ourself and jumped out once we recognized our route. |
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Ihlara Valley & DerinkuyuAll our hiking and biking adventures in Cappadocia were self-guided, except for Ihlara Valley. For that excursion, we contacted Middle Earth Travels in Goreme and retained Gurcan Vural as our guide and driver for the fifty mile journey south.
En route to Ihlara Valley we made a pit stop at Derinkuyu to tour the largest excavated underground city in Turkey. In the 7th and 8th centuries, all these Christian hermits living in peaceful solitude fell under attack by invading Arabs. They fled their caves and set up complex underground communities all across Cappadocia, some of which were connected through a network of tunnels. Derinkuyu is phenomenal. It consists of eleven floors penetrating to a depth of 280 feet into the earth. The city accommodated between 35,000 and 50,000 people with homes, storages, stables, wine presses, schools, chapels and other features of city life. Only 10% of the site is accessible to tourists but that’s sufficient to get the picture of this awesome feat of human engineering. And, anyway, it gets tiring stooping through the long, low-ceilinged passageways connecting the rooms. Ihlara Valley is a ten-mile gorge cut into volcanic rock with a hiking trail pretty much hugging the Melendiz River from start to finish, one of the few hiking locales next to running water. The path is almost entirely flat with few obstacles and in some sections as wide as a car lane. This type of terrain encouraged the two of us to get into our “New York City fast clip” mode for a hearty work-out. Gurcan, accustomed to casual hikers in Ilhara Valley, was thrilled, although he admitted our pace was a bit of a challenge. Most visitors do not walk the length of the valley primarily because the towering cliffs hold another attraction. Over one hundred archaic churches with frescos are carved into the rock. We were told some of the first Christians escaping Roman soldiers fled to Ilhara and created this unique historical treasury. It's written somewhere on the web that 80,000 people once lived in the valley and were housed in some 4,000 cave dwellings. During this period Ilhara was known as Peristrema. Reaching any one of the cave churches requires diverting from the path in a steep climb. Not that either of us is intimidated by ascents; the truth is, we were a little “churched out” and longed for some rigorous exercise. |
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Selime MonasteryThe Ihlara Valley hike ends at Selime village where Cat spied a lovely camel motif handbag and against her better judgment, because we were out there in the sticks, she bought it. Later we found a similar version in the coastal city of Selcuk for half the price. Just like at Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar, both of us got out-bargained left and right by the Turks. They aren’t dishonest; they are just consummate salesmen who probably mastered the art of negotiation when they were still teething.
Selime is home of the Selime Monastery, the largest rock-cut monastery of Cappadocia whose cathedral size church was carved by monks in the 13th century. We adored this site! We climbed up to its highest tiers and traipsed through all its rooms. The frescos and religious rock carvings were not as sensational as we had seen elsewhere but it was the multi-level configuration of the outcropping-turned-monastery that made us giddy. * * * * * * * For a number of years Cappadocia has been on our wanderlust radar for we rightly suspected it was a grand playground of natural and cultural proportions. It is not always the case that a place exceeds our expectations, but Cappadocia assuredly did. In fact, it is now one of our top ten destinations, a statement we do not make lightly considering that between us we've traveled to over ninety countries. Well, maybe we should qualify our ringing endorsement of Cappadocia to say if you love rocks and nature and hiking and quirky terrain and caves and mystical settlements and terrific food and friendly locals who are pleased to meet you even if you are a tourist --- well, then in that case, you better put Cappadocia on your bucket list. |