Istanbul trip

We didn't know it, but we timed our November visit to Istanbul badly as it coincided with Bayram, the Turkish festival of sacrifice. That meant big crowds of Turkish holidaymakers on top of the usual hordes of tourists. Since we aren't used to seeing more than a dozen or so people in Finike at any one time, it was a bit of a culture shock.













Where do you start your tour of Istanbul? With the Blue Mosque of course. Head covered (for the women that is) and shoes off.


Massive space for the men.....

.........and the women are penned in here








































                                                                                                                 
The view of Aghia Sophia from our excellent pension, and inside...

...is the largest covered space in Christendom at one time....

.....topped by this magnificent dome inlaid with gold mosaic


One of two bridges linking Europe and Asia over the Bosphorus














Intense blue and red Iznik tiles are everywhere

Classic Byzantine architecture - this is in Topkapi



























 This is the entrance to the harem - a one-way street for the concubines who lived out their lives here.

















Balik Ekmek for lunch - mackerel in a bun served from boat rocking in choppy waters of Bosphorus














Freshly squeezed oranges and pomegranates from Finike

Making lurid coloured twists of candy































If you think your bargaining skills are up to scratch - think again. The Grand Bazaar is where you meet the real pros.  The crowds were something else as well - think Oxford Street on the first day of the sales.
Abandon hope..........we needed a compass to find our way out

Peshtamal salesman - he's just made a sale

Buying up the lighting shop

Hand-made in Iznik - which one to choose?

A free cat with every carpet






































































The Museum of Ottoman Science and Technology showed we Europeans were way behind the Arabs in clever inventions like water clocks, telescopes, siege engines and the like back in the Dark Ages.  And how about these to solve our energy problems these days?
Ingenious water wheel  moored in a fast-flowing river

A wind turbine without blades - clever, eh?


    
Which one is the Hittite lion - or is it a bear?


















Daily life in Finike














Happy New Year! May you have fair winds and calm seas for 2012.

Finike is all about oranges - they're legendary - and you get a 10kg sack for 8 lira (£2.50). The town lies in the centre of the orange-growing region of Turkey.

Surprise, surprise, the town's emblem is an orange.



We were given all these oranges while we were out walking one afternoon





























The Saturday market is amaaazing. All the fruit and veg is locally grown and unbelievably cheap.

Although it's only February, the stalls are loaded with fresh strawberries, mange-tout peas and broad beans. We eat very well for ridiculously little.
The simit seller doing his rounds in the market

















Finike has a benign microclimate which protects us from much of the bad winter weather. Even when thick cloud hangs low over the hills, we often have a patch of clear sky above us.

Snow lies on the mountains inland which makes it bitterly cold in a north wind. But we don't mind if it's sunny.
View of the marina on a calm day
Our pontoon - all bikes and satellite dishes































Plenty of activities take place in the Porthole common room for us liveaboards - potluck suppers, quiz nights, movies, coffee mornings, yoga. We tend to spend most days writing (Cathy's now working on the second novel; Leighton is getting down his thoughts on how to save the planet).

The marina dogs Sugar Bear (left) & Tripod (right) - so-called as he's only got 3 legs!
Puzzle on the lookout from the next door boat
The coastguard patrol boat and helicopter on exercise in the marina