A lovely walk after breakfast through the pine forest. Cracking stop over. Felt safe as the police had stopped by last night as they were locking up for the night … guess you’re staying the night. No problem, but I need a picture of your passports.
It was actually chilly first thing and didn’t go above 27C all day!From Cemlik National Park looking down to Yozgat
A straight forward, but longish, drive and we stopped for scrambled eggs with bits. Should be an omelette but my pan is passed its best.
Sivas
First stop was Migros MMM. Have worked out MMM are the larger stores. And they sell booze. Initially, I thought just spirits on the shelves. Tempted, but 1 litre of Gordon’s was c.£28. I eventually spotted about a dozen choices of wine. All medium priced are around £8/9. No plastic bottles on the bottom shelf. Our 20 litre box wines we buy in Crete from winery for €28 (I know!!!) are sadly nearly all consumed. Had we known how expensive wine is here now…
Sivas centre is about Seljuk architecture. Most built c. 1271. Lots of Medrese … schools for medicine, the sciences etc. a newer mosque of 1500s.
One of the many Medrese / schools1271Medrese, one of about 4 all built under Seljuk ruleC16 Mosque so relatively new The old Ulu mosque had definitely seen better days. The roof has been removed and the minaret is listing by 1.17 m at the top.Had a cold drink and ice cream in an old Ottoman caravan inn
We drove up into the forest for an overnight. Too many dodgy tracks for Jez, so we stopped in a clearing along a quiet road. Rude awakening at 11.00 p.m. Police. Google translate: You cannot entertain in the Forest. I replied with: Where can we go that is near? Bear in mind that I’m wearing nothing but a nightie. There are 3 policemen and J sleeping through this! I know I should’ve got dressed first, but you don’t like to keep the police waiting. Fortunately, they replied with: You can stay here tonight, but no fires. Phew. And no fires, I went back to bed!
We moved early from the Roman site before the guardian arrived to close by for breakfast.
We stopped at Ortahisar, billed as an up and coming rock (not 🎸) village, with another vertical rock castle. Coffee and biscuits, but the town was singularly lack lustre.
The one attraction … … maybe two attractions!
Destination was the No. 1 tourist attraction … Goreme Open Air Museum. We had planned to visit a few days ago but waited until J better. As we got close we joined a queue of cars and coaches. A quick conversation, that even when we managed to park, the site itself would be rammed with visitors, most into inconvenient tour groups. Our window to visit had closed. Shame as today was our last day the area. Hindsight, we should have driven here for opening time.
We drove northward stopping in Hacibektas, home to another Dervish guru and sect. Just been reading that Haci Bektas Veli started the Bektasi sect who were responsible for training the Janissaries … selecting Christian boys, converting them to Islam and training them in military and administrative skills. Not sure how that sits with the original precepts of love and tolerance. J sat outside the museum / Dervish lodge with Corrie, and I had a quick scoot around.
Fab ceiling Coveted the large stone meat chopping board
Bonus that we finally found a street market. We took the larger back pack that I filled. I asked one hardware stall holder for 2 x CR 3032 batteries. Come back in 10 mins … he’d fetched them for us. He and his parents made a fuss of Corrie and introduced us to their elderly blind pooch asleep under the table.
We checked out a couple of park ups, including a deserted Sulfi centre. It wasn’t deserted at all. As I did a 5 pt turn, J was handed a cube of crystallised salt (symbol of hospitality, friendship and mutual protection) and a small square of green cloth (nature, life and renewal). Feel I should keep them in Jez along with a crystal angel for safe travel a friend gave me when we set off in 2015.
Our eventual park up was dried up Lake Seyfe. Apparently this is normal. Super shallow with a silver salt sheen. Parked by an observation tower.
From the observation tower … of the observation towerWe and another Tr family BBQd. He came over to offer us a plate of food : hospitality. And we both fed a skinny stray dog. They left their rubbish. We didn’t!
Lake Tuz
14/08
With such a quiet peaceful, almost surreal, spot at Lake Seyfe, we lingered. Exercised. Fed the stray. Hair / fur chop for Corrie and J.
Corrie took longerPassed this cottage made from hay bales – must be well insulated The landscape was either barren and dessert likeor agricultural, with mostly harvested stubble
Tuz was a little out of the way, but we had the time before our appointment in Ankara to drop Jez in for repairs and we fly to Dublin. It is the second largest lake and the largest Tr salt factory is on its banks. I read it is one of the mostly salty lakes in the world.
Looking across to one salt factory
We parked up at a closed restaurant / picnic area. A few quads set off to burn salt on the lake, but otherwise quiet. The ‘secretariat’, who was obviously in charge of maintenance, pressed us with tea.
Another fab sunset
Tuz Causeway
15/08
I had spotted the causeway leading from the No. 1 factory across the lake when looking for a potential park up. It did not show as a road on the maps, but as a track. From our last night’s park up, I had seen a steady stream of trucks on it. So even though completely in the wrong direction and adding a good hour to the day’s driving time, we headed for it.
At the factory was a hut, a man and a barrier. One waved and the other was lifted. We had to drive through the factory with its big equipment and mountains of salt. Would have loved a tour.
The causeway was 7.8 km long. And the salt looked like snow.
The causeway was compacted dirt with a few potholes
Fascinating. Something I will remember.
We drove to a large prosperous town called Yozgat. Apparently it has some fine buildings and a clock tower, but the parking we could see was underground and the town was busy. Abort. Straight to our overnight in Camlik National Park. Under £2 to enter and I mimed sleeping. OK, but in the car park. Again lots of picnic benches so anticipating lots of families later.
But no BBQs and signs everywhere. Even large bottles of water on the path I followed earlier.