Snakes and Castles

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Early this morning was another wonderful exhibition of drum banging. Several times the drummers went past. I say drummers because I heard 2 in cahoots at least once during my partial conciousness. I will buy earplugs very soon! Enough complaining.

Saturday

After finishing the Adana work office on Saturday afternoon I visited Ebru, a friend who had previously served on AIESEC Turkey’s national committee. Her house was in the middle of renovations. Then, it was on to Toygun’s place for dinner and to fall asleep in front of the NBA basketball on TV.

The expedition to Anazarbus (Anavarza)

On Sunday morning Toygun and I ate a good Turkish breakfast, filled his family’s Skoda with LPG and headed east to Yilankale (Snake Castle) and Anarvarza (Anazarbus). The day was warmer than expected. I was sweated in my Port Adelaide Football Club polo top. We didn’t actually get to Yilankale, a castle visible from the highways to Antakya (Antioch) and Gaziantep. Yilankale will have to wait until next time.

After skirting the town of Ceyhan we headed north, following the directions of the Lonely Planet guidebook. After 90 minutes of driving we successfully made it to our destination. Anazarbus (Anavarza in Turkish) is a historical place, most famous during Roman times. It has a castle on top of a hill as well as a ruined aqueduct, arches, tombs and other ruins. In my post-trip research I find that Anazarbus is also famous for saints a, b, c, d, e, and coins.

We drove the ancient town’s entrance gate with the castle on the hill standing guard in the distance. Turning left we headed to the aqueduct. Some of the aqueduct’s arches were still complete, amazing for something so old. We turned into a field and followed a road towards the hill on which the castle is situated. In the corner of my eye I saw a rock face with what looked like a cave. Upon stopping the car and walking to the sight, the cave had pictures and words inscripted above it. We were looking at this tomb.

All around, farmers were busy pulverising or burning their dead corn fields oblivious to the history of the area.

Toygun then drove the car back past the entrance gate, through the nearby village and narrow pass and around to the back of the hill. From this side, the caste looked closer. I wasn’t planning to climb to the top and I told Toygun I would go a little way up the rocky hillside. Well, the castle kept coming nearer but still remained intangibly far away. I made it through the spiny plants up to the castle. My shoelaces and cargo pants not appreciate the journey greatly, particularly the spines!

The Top

At the top, Toygun and the vehicle were mere specs. In the middle of Turkey, next to the walls of an ancient fort, overlooking the forever-tended fields, what did I do? I called Toygun via mobile phone!

All around the hill there were many lizards. I also saw two turtles and, in the castle, a tiny 30cm snake. My first ever snake sighting in Turkey!

Several of the castle walls were intact with the stairs built into the side still climbable. The castle stretched all along the top of the hill and I did not have time to see all of it. There was a ruined church with frescos barely visible inside. Above the entrance to the church writing in a language unknown to myself was etched. The views on both sides were stunning. To the west were the village and the outline of ancient city walls with various columns and ruins. The northern view contained a water channel and many fields, several of which had smoke rising from them. In the distance, minarets marked the location of tiny villages.

The descent

On my way down I passed two Turkish men and an American woman. I mischievously told them, I had seen a snake. I don’t know why people have such fears about snakes or other supposedly dangerous animals. Further down the side, many rock-cut tombs laid around, a few with still visible patterns on their sides. There were even staircases cut into the side of the hill.

At the base, Toygun had been chatting to some of the local men. One of them came over and showed me some ancient coins found around the area. They were good, however, I was not interested in their purchase. Back in the nearby village we marvelled at an archway, the most intricate ruin but one in the area. At the small open-air museum locals had uncovered an ancient pool with a near-perfect mosaic of the goddess Thetis, reminiscent of the mosaics in Antioch.

On the road home

Back on the main road to Adana, we stopped at Misis for some of the town’s renowned ayran (yoghurt drink) and sikma (a type of savoury pancake). The drink was very refreshing after a hard day. In Adana Toygun dropped me off at the train station before he went home for the iftar (fast-breaking) meal. At the train station I met Didar, a first year medical student from Adana studying in Mersin. On the train back to Mersin we chatted about many issues. I enjoyed listening to a person with a different perspective.

After arriving in Mersin, walking home, cooking and eating an omelette and having a bath, it was time for bed.

Hi from Adana

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Today is a beautiful, sunny day, although still relatively cold. At 12:45 pm I caught the train (1.9 million TL) 70 km east to Adana, Turkey’s 4th biggest city.

I came here to visit IES’s Adana office to see how it works. Buket and Sebiha work at the office which was established 1 year ago.

Tonight I will stay at Toygun’s place and tomorrow we plan to visit Yilankale (Snake Castle) east of Adana. I have seen this castle from the highway many times when on the way to either Gaziantep, Antakya or Sanliurfa.

Rain, very nearly November Rain

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I wake up this morning and it is raining and has been raining for a while. For the next 6 months Mersin will be puddles and mud.

At least the tap water quality should improve. For the past 3 weeks 3 basil cuttings have been shooting new leaves and growing roots at a merry rate – all in a glass of Mersin tap water! The mineral content of the water is very high – I guess. The tea pot and tap also show evidence of mineral solidification from the local water!

Yesterday

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Yesterday, after work, I walked into the city centre. There were lots of people around and all the shops were open even though it was supposed to be a holiday. On the way back from the city centre I went into the local bookshop/newsagent, Kitapsan. The only Turkish Daily News newspaper in stock was Sunday’s. I decided to pass on it. I then walked around to the music section of the shop. There, in the discount bin, was Bridge School Concert cassette for 4.5 million. My music collection just became larger.

On the way back home, I stopped at the local, weekly bazaar, a couple of streets east of my flat to buy some fruit and vegetables. I stocked up on cauliflower, 700,000 TL/kg, pomegranites, 500,000 TL/kg, carrots, 200,000/TL kg and possibly the odd other thing.

The evening

At 6:30pm I arrived at the port to meet 2 Aussies, Kylie and Bronwyn from the ship ‘Poulos’. Orhan, my Turkish friend, also came. Whilst waiting for the girls I chatted to a German, Lizzie. She was was from Chemnitz, Germany, and was shocked when she heard that I had visited the ‘ZV Bunker’ nightclub there! I was there in 1999 as the roadie for Ronnie.

Kylie, Bronwyn, Orhan and I then walked along the coast until Pozcu, talking about Turkey and everything else. I guess I was doing the most talking!

On the way, at the river outlet near the military base, there was a parade of military sailors with a military band. They were followed by young people in uniform, probably scouts. This parade was another event commemorating the Republic’s 80th birthday.

In Pozcu we stopped for a hot drink at the ‘Shangri La’ cafe. My hot chocolate-coffee drink was very tasty. After the cafe, I visited Mado to buy a piece of their awesome raspberry cake, 1,750,000 TL. Mado is famous for its icecream, which originates in Maras. We then walked all the way back to the port where Kylie and Bronwyn made it back on the ship before the 11 pm curfew.

It’s winter time

Yesterday was the start of the blanket using, winter pyjamas and jumper-wearing, blind-lowering, window and door-shutting period. Yes, I believe winter has arrived. I guess the temperature ranges from 12-22 degrees C. I don’t keep my eye on any weather forecast, so I don’t know the temperature exactly.

The weather in Mersin changes so fast, but, really only changes 3 or 4 times a year, when the season changes!

Today is the 80th anniversary of the Turkish Republic

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Modern Turkey is a young country, established in 1923.

Today is an official public holiday in Turkey, ‘Republic Day’. There are thousands of Turkish flags flying from houses, lamp posts, boats, buses, businesses and everywhere else. Before work this morning, I walked to the yacht harbour and the Republic Square. On the square they were getting ready for some formalities.

After some discussion this morning, work will finish at 1 pm. In previous years I have worked all day on Republic Day.

In 1923, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded the Turkish Republic. This is one of the many changes he helped bring about. Ataturk, the changes he made and the legend he is in Turkey today is a massive subject, something I may attempt to detail later.

The weather has got cooler

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Yesterday there was wind and and some scattered showers. Last night in bed, I was cold for the first time this autumn. I guess, from now on I require more than a single sheet on my bed!

Also, this morning I did not here the drummer and yesterday morning I only heard him once.

Heaven Fruit

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In the last 2 days I have eaten 2 kilograms of persimmons. One name for these fruit in Turkey is ‘cennet meyvesi’ or ‘heaven fruit’. I can vouch for this name – these fruit are simply delicious.

Similar looking to an orange tomato, persimmons are eaten when over ripe with the flesh extremely soft and skin very fragile. Upon first sight of ripe persimmons in Mersin, 2001, I wondered why there was so much rotten fruit!