July 23, 2012

Trip 35: Faulhorn

Trip date: Saturday June 2, 2012

One of the most quintessential hikes in Switzerland in the Interlaken region is the hike from Schynige Platte to Faulhorn to First. Stunning views of the Eiger mountain and the Interlaken's other mountains as well as rich green valleys and beautiful Swiss scenery are on the itinerary. This hike has been on my agenda for months and months and here in the early week of June, during Eric's visit to Switzerland, I decided to attempt it.

All in attendance: Kristen and Eric

We took our gleis7 pass to Interlaken on Friday night as stayed at the Happy Inn Lodge for 27 CHF. We woke up early, took a fancy and nostalgic (but slooooow) train up from Wilderswil to Schynige Platte (17 CHF).

Here there was a big sign which said the path from Schynige Platte to Faulhorn to First is still closed due to the winter snow. The train station employees told us that it needed one more week for everything to melt. Armed with our ego and disregard for negativity, we set off.



We did some side treks including up to Oberberghorn which is off the main path and offers you a good view. About 1.30 hours in, the snow started to set in and we were stomping out way through to Faulhorn.

We passed a few people who had turned back and even though the weather was warm and the views were stunning, eventually the snow became too treacherous and we lost the trail markers.

To get our hiking fill though, we decided to hike from Schynige Platte back down to Interlaken - Cue: Steep hill of death.

We will come back before the year is done and attempt this beautiful hike once more!!

Trip 34: Istanbul, Türkiye

Trip date: Saturday May 26 - Monday May 28, 2012

A complete turn around from all these Turkish small towns I visited - 13.5 million people call İstanbul home. It is a crossroads place where part of the city is in Asia and part is in Europe. Here there is an overwhelming amount of people everywhere at every given moment. If you want to see a modern Muslim cosmopolitan city - look no further than here!

All in attendance: David and Kristen!

We arrived in Istanbul quite late and walked to our hostel near the Blue Mosque/Sultan Ahmed Mosque and Hagia Sophia. We stayed at Mavi Guesthouse. We have ran into so much luck throughout our entire Greece/Turkey trip with barely full hostel rooms and sweet private room upgrades. So upon our arrival, the empty 4 person dorm seemed so much more appealing than the 22 person dorm so we just forked over the extra costs just for some space and good night sleep.

The next morning, we had arranged to meet Eric and a few of his friends from Dresden who were visiting Istanbul as well. They were friends with two people, Felix and Katja, who were doing an internship there. We took the very posh modern tram to Taxim Square but a slight misunderstanding between groups moved the plans to meet up to after dinner.


David and I walked along the busy shopping street called Istiklal Street. We happened upon the S. Antonio di Padova Catholic Church and countinues our way through the infinite maze of small shops and busy locals. The biggest surprise is just how crowded the city is - by no means what I would expect in China but there is rarely a time where you are alone on a street in central Istanbul. The streets, shops, parks and bridges are always heavily populated with cats and people.



Passing the Galata Tower, we arrived at the Galata bridge where there are Turkish fisherman there 24 hours a day! We peaked into the fish market and the fancy fish restaurants (here you can buy a great fish sandwich I'm told by the gold and black boats, we didn't and I do regret it). Across the bridge is the New Mosque/Yeni Cami and our first stop for a peak inside one of Istanbul's many Mosque.



A complete beautiful prelude to every mosque we were to see. Stunning and ridiculously un-crowded! Going to this mosque made me wish we had the time to visit the other less popularly visited mosques in the city.

We also happened upon a really nice artist studio off of the side streets. I really wish we had the money to spend on some of these paintings and sketches!


I got some over sweetened spun sugar on a stick and we went into Hagia Sophia. The biggest drag here is that information pamphlets and maps of the museum are only given to those which purchase the audio tour. This is common for most of the sites we visited in Istanbul. No matter, we will just soak up the atmosphere. The colours, the magnitude of the domed roof, the paintings and the grand atmosphere were astonishing.



Off we went across the park toward the Blue Mosque and slipped off our shoes and hid our shoulders and knees. Inside, you are shuttled like cattle and it is very noisy (from all the tourist) and near uncomfortably crowded (crowded like the streets of Venice crowded). Here we had very little time to soak up the atmosphere. Tranquility was at an all time zero.


We then went to the spice market in Istanbul. Contemplated all the different types of spices and teas as well as other knick knacks and touristy souvenirs. The haning metal and glass lamps they sell are extremely beautiful and if a 45L backpack permitted it, I would've taken one all the way home to Canada. We left with some nuts - nuts here are delicious - and munched on cashews, pistachios and other delights for the rest of our day. All the side streets around the spice market have goods to sell as well. They are really specialize stores (we went into a 2 floor store devoted completely for buttons!) and I felt comfortable haggling for the first time in my life.


David and I lounge lazily in this one giant park (special because there is a lack of green space in central Istanbul) for the better park of the afternoon where we people-watched cute Muslim couples and big family picnics. We watched old turkish men climb trees and play backgammon. We watched parents take cheesey pictures of their children. We also watched people taking pictures of us!

That night we met up with Eric and his friends and listened to some jazz music and hopped between a few cute and comfortable bars before returning to our hostel room (which was no longer fully private) to sleep.

Morning included a hostel breakfast and a day which began at Topkapi Palace. It is a bit steep to go inside ($$) but the previous day we took a look into the gift shops for photos of what the palace looked like. Beautiful mosaics, a parade of colour and a high recommendation from Felix and Katja were enough to sell us on this place. It was also bittersweet pleasant because a torrential downpour of rain occurred while we were there which chased away a lot of tourist (or immobilized them under dry cover) while two Canadians paraded about without care.


Off we went to the Grand Bazaar where I got a "handmade" backgammon set. David got a few scarves for some friends and we wandered the seemingly endless rows of shops and stalls; a parade of "where are you from" and "hello my friend" in our wake. Prices here were not necessarily better than the ones we saw in other parts of Turkey. Product selection, however, was much higher.

After we grew tired of the markets, we boarded a boat to take us all the way to Kadıköy - the Asian side of Istanbul. Here, everything is even cheaper! We got more nuts and sat in a coffee shop and played backgammon on my new set with the blurry rules that I could remember. Cue: scoffing Turkish men who knew we were doing it wrong.



That night we met up with Eric and his friends again and took a boat way up to a further district of Istanbul. Here was also very crowded and we bought kompir for dinner - crazy large backed potato with anything you could want inside. Something curious about Istanbul is that you can bring food you bought elsewhere into a different restaurant and sit down as long as you order something else.

We spent the rest of the night at Felix and Katja's apartment on their deck eating delicious snacks and enjoying the view. We took a taxi back to our hostel (met an over zealous taxi driver who got our spirits all worked up) and just like that, my time in Istanbul was up.


Things to do next time:
  • Eat those fish sandwiches by Galata Bridge
  • Go to a Hamam
  • Buy a Turkish hanging Lamp
  • See Whirling Dervishes 
  • See other mosque in Istanbul
  • Go to the Prince's Islands
  • Spend at least a week here!
Things I learned:
  • People are infinitely curious about David and I - especially when we tell them we're from the same country
  • The corn vendors are selling non-sweet corn
  • 13.5 million people is a lot
Things I loved:
  • Ridiculously large döners!
  • Turkish lentil soups and Turkish nuts
  • Visiting a crowded and lively city

July 20, 2012

Trip 33: Kapadokya, Türkiye

Trip date: Wednesday May 23 - Friday May 25, 2012

Cappadocia is in Turkey's Nevşehir Province. It is a dreamy place where fairy chimney and unique rock formations are plentiful. Early Christian settlements here carved impossible cave rooms and houses into the cliffs and modern day tourist come here in the hoards to see them.

All in attendance: Kristen and David

I made the same joke from time to time about me being "cute size". I am 5'3 (155 cm) which is the tallest in my immediate family but shorter than 80% of my friends. Being small has its advantages which include being able to get comfortable more easily on hot stuffy turkey night buses. The buses are similar to the coach greyhouse buses back home. Every seat has a personal television (all in Turkish) and they load you up with complimentary drinks (tea, coffee, water) while you ride. However, their middle-of-the-night stops to 24h bathrooms and small bus station restaurants are a complete drag because they turn on the lights which not only wake up you but the screaming children in the seat in front of you too.


Needless to say, when the bus attendant woke David and I up when we arrived in Göreme, we had the most dazed mad dash off the bus ever. It was barely 6am and we were seemingly alone in a town which consisted of 70% hostels, hotels and pensions. We staggered in hazy sleepy confusion towards Star Cave Hotel - the cave hostel we booked through the sketchy Metro guy in Pamukkale. We woke up the people working the front desk stumbled into our dorm room. Cave hostels in Cappadocia are wonderful because they are freezing - perfect for Canadians.


We were suppose to take a tour at 9 o'clock that morning so we only got 2 or so more hours of sleep. We also booked this tour through the sketchy Metro guy. We chose it because it drove you to many places in the Cappadocia region that would've required a vehicle to get to (or a full day hike). The Green Tour is offered absolutely everywhere. Highlights include:

  • Göreme panorama (near the town of uchisar "oo-shi-sar")
  • Derinkuyu underground city (I think once you see one underground city, you see them all)
  • Ihlara valley (small 3 hour hike through a valley with a whole bunch of small cave houses and churches. It was followed by a delicious meal which was included in the price)
  • Yaprakhisar (crazy panorama)
  • Selime monastery (Incredible set of cave homes and monasteries ! We were lucky to be some of the few people there!)
  • Pigeon valley viewpoint





After such an exhausting bus ride and a lack of sleep - it's no surprise we soon went to bed at the end of the tour.

The next morning was the big splurge of our trip - a hot air balloon ride at sunrise! We figured we may go on a hot air balloon ride only once in our life so it might as well be here and now. Is it incrediably touristy? yes! Expensive (150€)? yes! Worth it? I sure say so!


They picked us up early in the morning, about 4 or 5 o'clock and drove us to a building near the Göreme Open Air Museum for some basic breakfast. Here they cram you in a room completely packed past fire code regulations (maybe not Turkish fire code regulations though) where you sit and try to stay awake while you wait for them to call your name. They drive you out to the launch site where you have many Turkish people yelling for you to move this way or that way and to go faster. This is standard "zero-patience-for-picture-taking-tourist". They put us into a balloon (ours was just like to colourful ones in the photos!) with small compartments (4 people to a compartment) which weren't overly cramped but still quite full and off we went.




We flew over the rose valley and our pilot was a lady with a crazy strong face. She was probably a milatry commander in another life, but in this one, she pilots hot air balloons for tourist. I never knew a hot air balloon ride could be so ridiculously steady. We took a trillion photos. It was a cloudy day and we had gotten air born a bit after sunrise but these are trivial things in the scheme of it all.

Once landed (we landed on the back of a truck!), you have some champagne and get a fancy certificate with your name on it. They also try to sell you photos of yourself that they took professionally and printed at lightning speed while you were ballooning. They drove us back to our hostel where we slept a bit more before breakfast which (as usual) consisted of a gluttonous amount of hardboiled eggs. Once we woke up, we went to the Göreme Open Air Museum, walking from our hostel. Cue: A disgusting amount of tourists and tour groups. We did mad dashes towards cave homes and churches in between Japanese and German tour groups. Overall, I was a bit disappointed! Though beautiful, the open air museum here is quite small and not as dreamy as the Selime Monestary from the previous day.



We started hiking from the open air museum towards pink valley and Ürgüp. Here there were so many cave homes/rooms that you could peak into. What do you find inside? Usually beer cans and cigarette butts. Sometime you are lucky and there are paintings still on the ceiling though. Cue: stunning views and steep crumbly paths. Once in Ürgüp, we went all the way to see the fairy chimneys before heading back to Göreme for a fruit smoothie and dinner.

Dinner here - things like basic kebab, pizza, meze - is really expensive compared to the other cities we went to in Turkey. It was also a bit more dry and less tasty too.

The next day we decided to take a nice break. A few light showers occurred during the day. We spent the day smoking nargile, eating food and relaxing in the sun. We browsed tourist shops but didn't see anything that authentic (no surprise). Not wanting to have another overnight bus experience, we booked a cheap(ish) flight from Kayseri airport to Istanbul leaving that night. Our time in Cappadocia was done - something off of my bucket list.


Things I learned:
  • Turkish men love backgammon
  • Turkish men who work in tourism like to play coy-and-flirty to awkward Canadian-Asian girls
Things I loved:
  • Tourists who ask to take photos of David and I
  • Apple tea, lemon tea, orange tea, turkish tea
  • Beautiful hanging Turkish lamps
  • Surprisingly few tourists in May
Things to do next time:
  • More hiking!
  • Get crazy clay pot kebab.
  • At this point - I am starting to wish I we had more time to go to the East of Turkey - maybe to the less touristy parts.