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Fethiye, Turkey
27 hours after stepping onto a bus near Urfa, I finally arrived in Fethiye, Turkey. I set my pack on the bed and reached down to take off my Teva sandals. What I saw was shocking… my ankles were swollen as big as hams, bulging around the sandal straps. Suddenly I had sympathy for the …
The Storks of Selçuk
When I checked into my room at the hotel in Selçuk, Turkey, I could see what looked like a giant nest on top of the remaining pillar of what was once a Byzantine aqueduct. I went out for the afternoon and saw some of the sights in Selçuk — including the ruins of the Basilica …
Lacrimosa dies illa
Everyone has a story about that morning. Mine began at the YMCA. Oblivious to what would happen a mere mile away, I wore headphones and trudged and sweated to the beat of music on some kind of exercise machine while demons with first class one way tickets slit throats and prepared to do the unthinkable. …
Ephesus, Turkey
As I continue my backlog of images and tales of my travels this past summer, here are some images of Ephesus (Efes), often called one of the best preserved ancient cities in the Mediterranean. It’s just down the road from the site of the Temple of Artemis, which was one of the Seven Wonders of …
Upscale Cappadocia
This week’s Sunday travel section in the New York Times features a piece on upscale tourism in Cappadocia (“A Moonscape Carved by Nature and Man,” September 9, 2007) the region of Turkey where I hiked and traveled last month. The writer, Gisella Williams, describes the Pigeon Valley near the town of Uchisar as “an outrageously …
Are You My Home?
I arrived at JFK on a day New York taxi drivers were out on strike. “This is going to cost me,” I muttered to myself as I queued up with others heading Big Apple-ward. I wondered what the taxi driver’s little book would say the fare is to get me to Jersey City, where I’m …
Journey to the Giant Heads
The cover of the previous edition of the Lonely Planet guidebook for Turkey features a photograph of a stone head, its face filled with cracks as though it were made from dried mud, sitting among boulders and scree, soaking in the sunset. Among the icons of Turkey – the flag, the fez, the whirling dervish, …
I Am Single Malt
The other day, when I thought I was logging onto a website, I was actually doing a google search (I’m a little absentminded lately), and my name with no space between yielded this as the top result: It turns out I’m ten years younger than I thought, and I have Sherry Butt number 2513. Who …
More from Cappadocia
My apologies for being off line for a while. A few days into my trip to Turkey, the Turkish government decided to block all access to wordpress.com. Apparently someone said something on a blog they didn’t like (I don’t think it was me). So we have some catching up to do: It’s my prerogative as …