Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Uchisar

After the underground city, we drove back to Uchisar, to see the castle there, and then on to a ridge overlooking Goreme, where we spent our last night in Cappadocia.
Uchisar Castle, another carved-out elevation, perhaps the
grandest of them all
















View of Uchisar from the top















Ditto; smaller, vassals' castles below















Us on the summit















For some reason we never understood, the air flotilla
launched again, late in the afternoon, contrary to their 
stated mission of flying only in the early AM; perhaps 
they were moving to their winter quarters in Sarasota


















Tourist/native interaction; universal language















Curious cat















Fixer-upper















The more impressive side of Urchisar Castle, over where
the tour buses park; and the bazaar...
















At the aforementioned bazaar, world-class kitsch; does
UNESCO have a category for this?
















Another photo pregnant with meaning: a
Japanese tour bus has just rolled in, joining
the dozen others, I am up on a mound hoping
to capture the drama, the excitement, the 
beauty...the balloons are launching in the
valley, the camel is waiting for his next trick,
and Vicki is laughing hysterically at me and
the whole Cappadocian scene

























Anyhow, we parked that night with a couple French RVs
on a ridge overlooking Goreme; they were just back from
Syria
















And had lunch the next day, exploring Goreme, at a
"traditional" restaurant called A la Turca; the mezes...
















And the main, sort of a sliced roast beef (?),
smoked, served on a bed of frites, smothered
in yogurt and brown gravy; I swear I am
not making this up; credit Vicki for not even
thinking of asking for ketchup; so far as I
know

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Kaymakli Underground City

In addition to all its other attractions, Cappadocia also has several underground cities--places where the Christian or other communities could literally go underground and live for a time while marauding or crusading armies marched through. We chose Kaymakli, which had eight levels, four of which are now open. It accommodated 3,000. Derinkulu, nearby, could accommodate 10,000, they say.
Rather than being underground, strictly speaking, Kaymakli was built into this 
ridge 
















Tourist entrance to Kaymakli















Whatever; it's another World Heritage Site















Looking down one of the corridors




















It was reasonably well signed, but we engaged a guide anyway--the guidebooks 
said to--for a mere $15 we got to hear, three times, how the citizens of Kaymakli 
solved their "toilet problems"


















For defense, or if the neighbors wouldn't turn down the music, the citizens 
could close off passages by rolling these really heavy stones into place

















Vicki in one of the smaller passage-ways; not a place for 
claustrophobes




















Flat-screen TV would have been very popular; but then all the satellite dishes would 
have given away the location of the city

















In the (common) kitchen area, our guide said, this was the spice rack
















All in all, I did not think the underground city was all that 
great; I later amused myself in the adjoining bazaar

Soganli Valley, 2

More from Soganli Valley, Cappadocia...
Seen from across the valley, Kubelli Kilise, or the Domed
Church
















Looking up into the dome, all carved from the rock















Domed Church interior




















Carved columns, lower level of Domed Church















Monastery interior















Domed Church exterior















Outdoor cooking, Soganli















More cliff dwellings, on the way out















Potato harvest, back-breaking work















Squash in the fields...we saw millions of them

Soganli Valley, 1

After Zelve, we drove back down south again, through Uchisar, then Moustafapasa (where a few Greek families still live and where there is an annual Turkish/Greek friendship event), up and down valleys and canyons, on to the high ridge, and then down to Soganli. We spent the night in the parking lot outside the local tourism office, which looked closed for the season, but came back to life the next morning. Soganli is off the major tour bus route, although we saw a few independents, including two from NYC, and a couple of more adventurous maxitaxi loads, Germans. We pretty much had the valley to ourselves for a couple hours. The ruins there are mostly churches, monasteries and the like, 10th-11th century, but absolutely un-restored. Even as defaced as they are, they are still interesting and sometimes moving.
En route to Soganli, cliff dwellings















Soganli Calley, right fork; the structures are low down















Karabas Church















More Karabas















Ceiling















Detail















Yilanyi Church--Snake Church or St. George Church















"Onward Christian soldiers..."















Ms. Sherouse was last seen entering hall 17
on level IVa




















Interior, looking out, Yilanyi Church















There's St. George, on horseback, the
snake/dragon below




















St. Fruitus de Loomis

Monday, October 18, 2010

I Could Have Whirled All Night

I could have whirled all night, and still have begged for more. I could have spread my wings, and done a thousand things, I'd never done before...
OK, we're going to leave the dervish thing for next time;
or maybe the time after that...

Zelve

Zelve is another one of the Capadocian centers, actually two: a village at the head of three valleys, which we skipped, and a collection of picturesque mushroom and other figures just below.
Zelve Open Air Museum, from the outside















Ditto
















Zelve cat





















Zelve mushroom features
















Ditto
















Vicki demonstrating proper down-climbing
technique, returning from, well, a chapel that
wasn't all that great





















Obligatory camel, found at all tour bus-worthy sites,
available for weddings, bar mitzvahs, christenings,
birthdays, circumcisions...

















Typical Zelve structure






















We were not alone















Three-humped Zelve camel