Sunday, November 7, 2010

Cleared for Landing At Olu Deniz

Please bring your seat backs to their full up-right position and stow your tray-tables. We will be landing in Olu Deniz shortly.
So we're walking along the nearly deserted beach in Olu Deniz and just happen to 
notice this sign...
















When--buzzzz--out of the clear blue of the western sky















Comes






One of my favorite aircraft















No, not just buzzing the pretty Turkish girls on the beach















But actually landing right there on the beach, next to the (deserted) life guard's 
station, the tiki huts, and us
















Taxiing to the terminal
















They do other sorts of recreational/touristic flying as well;
hmmmm, Icarus, wasn't he the one that flew too near the sun
and...?




















I might have been interested, but was not impressed with the handling of the 
goods
















Nonetheless...














The (new) Songbird, with Sky King and Penny; a show I never missed as a kid
(stolen from Flight Aware)

On the Blue Lagoon, Olu Deniz

Saturday afternoon we found our way back down to the sea, the resort of Olu Deniz and a campground on the Blue Lagoon, which, I am told, is famous. We decided to take it easy here for a day, do the wash, regroup, and walk into town...
We are staying at the Sugar Beach Club, 20YTL, including everything, which 
evidently is a pretty swinging place in the high season; don't worry, we are the 
only campers here presently

















This is the Blue Lagoon, which looks more black and brackish to me















This is the Creature from the Black Lagoonone of the formative 
movies of my life; along with Jaws, accounts for my disinclination 
to go into any water that doesn't have major chlorine content 
(caption: "in your dreams, scaly creep")






















Interesting adverts in town














Guess the nationality of visitors here; I was tempted 
nonetheless



















They also do boat cruises (we passed)














In high season it looks like this














Right now it looks like this; which is incredible because the place is glorious, 
more than affordable, and the weather beats anything we saw in Spain; but 
apparently there are no cheap flights from the UK of GB this time of year

















So the locals get to practice mountain rescue techniques



















And have family picnics in the Natural Park; Turkish family picnics are not 
small and simple affairs...

Saklikent Gorge

A little more driving, and one of Tom Tom's more interesting short-cuts, took us up to the mountains and the Saklikent Gorge, a huge gorge that cuts up into 9,895 foot Gombe Akgai. Access to the gorge is only by foot.
A boardwalk leads a few hundred feet into the
gorge; after that, you walk in the stream...




















Gorges are really tough on cameras and
photographers--no perspective to lend the
3rd dimension, very difficult lighting





















Plus, we did not want to get our feet wet, nor risk any more
debilitating injuries; so we stopped here
















Looking up; I would guess it's 300 feet deep at this point,
deeper further in















Bolder explorers can rent head and foot gear from the
concessions
















Or dine in platforms in the creek (somehow, farm-raised
Turkish trout didn't quite appeal)















The creek, which is actually quite a gusher
even in this dry part of the year





















At the mouth of the canyon





















The creek, from above; this is how harbors get silted-up!























We drove on in the direction Fethiye, stopping for a couple days' rest on the beach in a campground in Olu Deniz.

Xanthos

Only a few miles from Letoon is Xanthos, which, near a hill-top, was the capital of Lycia.
We had Xanthos pretty much to ourselves (as with so
many of these sites)
















Main street, Xanthos, one of the wider boulevards we have
seen in this part of the ancient world
















Typical of the stones laying around by the hundreds















Agora and theatre















Huge stele; the top part is in the British
Museum, of course




















Several Lycian tombs adorn the theatre area















Remains of the large Byzantine church elswhere on the site















Nice mosaics in the church















"Heart" detail















Around the hill is the necropolis and a number of ruined
tombs and house tombs

















Most pretty tumbled down; despite the ruination, both
Letoon and Xanthos are World Heritage Sites

















Letoon

We had planned on spending the night at the parking lot at Letoon, another Lycean/Hellenistic/Roman site, but that proved not feasible, and, rather than wandering around in the darkness looking for the beach, we halted at the nice MaxiWax gas station nearby...where you can not only wash but also wax your vehicle, free. Very nice, accommodating people. We filled up the next morning. The station was within range of three different mosques, so we got a nice early start on the day. With the days getting shorter and shorter, this is a
good thing.
Leto was another consort of Zeus, so to speak, who bore him
Apollo and Artemis; Hera, Zeus' "better half," didn't like this,
so she condemned Leto to a life of wandering, right here in
Lycia; she became the local patron goddess, apparently
replacing Cybele, the Mother Earth of previous aeons, and
Letoon is her shrine as well as religious center of Lycia;
pictured above is Leto's temple




















Interior of Leto's temple; as you can see, they're doing a
bit of renovation here and there
















Renovation parts















Three in a row: the temples of Apollo, Artemis, and Leto















Within the Temple of Apollo is a very nice mosaic of his
symbols, the lyre (music), the sun, and the bow and arrow
(OK, I took the picture upside-down)

















Me playing the lyre















Really nice stuff in the spare parts yard















Ditto















Theatre















Really old olive tree nearby