Sunday, January 24, 2021

Welcome to Kas, Turkey

Finally, finally, finally!  It is good to see Talaria again - its been a long time.  Although, we are grateful that we were able to get to our boat as many other people are not able to return to their boats.  Covid, Covid, Covid!   Kas is a lovely little town with a population of around 7000.  We rented an apartment for a month while we work on Talaria and it is about a 15 minute walk from the apartment to the marina.  

The front of our apartment building

The walk to the marina is pleasant as its all downhill but coming back...😏.  Lets just say our legs are getting a much needed workout.  No complaints however ... the temperature most days is high 60s or 70s and sunny.  The locals think its winter and cold but we are very, very comfortable.  

One of the many hills to climb

 Life is apparently not the same in Kas, as with the rest of the world they are trying to mitigate the spread of Covid.  That means that restaurants are carry out only and on the weekends and week night evenings there is a curfew.  Masks are mandated and you will be fined for non-compliance.  Hopefully, things will get better soon.  Overall the Covid risk in Kas is low but we are still being careful.  

Downtown Kas - by the harbor

 We just walk to the marina and work all day, then walk back to the apartment to cook dinner and collapse!  Boats are like houses and need constant maintenance (maybe even more maintenance than a house) so a year of neglect really shows.  But after a week we are starting to see maybe a trickle of light at the end of the tunnel😊.   Life is good!

View out our window/balcony.  Island to the left is Katellorizo, Greece

 

 

 

 

 

 


Sunday, January 17, 2021

Hadrian's Gate - Antalya, Turkey

Antalya, Turkey (in ancient times called Attaleia) was once surrounded by large, defensive stone walls.  There were gates to pass through which could be closed off if attacked by invaders.  Hadrian's gate is the only remaining gate and likely the most ornate. Built in 130 AD to commemorate and honor a visit by the Emperor Hadrian it stands amazingly well preserved today.

The stones over which countless carts passed for centuries are also well preserved.  Their deeply grooved footprints remain in the stone as evidence of the traffic in and out of the ancient city. 
 

The towers on either side of the gate were actually built later and then attached to the gate - still ancient they seem "modern" compared to the gate itself.  They date back to the 1200's!  Hadrian's gate continues to serve as the entrance to Kaleici (Old Antalya).  Back in the day Kaleici was all there was of Antalya.  Now it is a preserved historic district filled with little shops and hotels down narrow, winding roads.  The larger city of modern Antalya has built up all around "Old Antalya".

Sadly, we are still in the middle of a pandemic.  And there is currently a curfew in Turkey on the weekends, in an attempt to mitigate the spread of the virus, so none of the little shops were open.  


 We will have to visit again once the Covid-19 crisis has passed and we can visit the shops.  For today we simply enjoyed a stroll around Kaleici and the nearby park.  Tomorrow we leave for Kas. 

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Not the 3rd or the 4th or the 5th time... but finally the 6th time was the charm!

Proudly displaying the Turkish Flag in Antalya
       


 

Four flight cancellations and one false positive Covid test for Michael later we have finally made it to Turkey.  I had to change our flights, hotel, taxi and transport to Kas so many times I was sure the folks on the other end thought we had lost our mind.  We tested on the 10th of January for our flight on the 12th and were quite surprised when on the 13th the results came back positive for Michael but negative for me.  So... we had to make a flurry of phone calls to un-arrange all the arrangements we had made... including the flight.  We went and got the camper back out of storage and set it back up.  But Michael was not ill and I tested negative (even though we are together all the time).  It just did not make sense so I asked if we could re-test thinking that it could be a "false positive".  Of course, health care workers now have such blind faith in the PCR Covid test that they believe it can't possibly be wrong.  Regardless, they agreed to re-test after 48 hours.  On the 12th we re-tested and received our results on the 13th which now showed us as both being negative. - guess the PCR can be wrong after all.  An expensive lab error for us but at least we get to leave!  Another entire day of phone calls in order to re-schedule our flight for the 14th and make all the other arrangements yet again.  We did manage to rent a car to drive to Chicago at the last minute - so we packed the camper up yet again and dropped it off at the storage place.  We drove to Champaign, Illinois that night and then on to Chicago the next day.  Phew!  What a week.

An array of water tanks, satellite dishes and solar panels

 As we had to arrive on Friday night instead of the Wednesday night that we had planned we have to stay in Antalya for the weekend.  There is a curfew on the weekends (for Covid) so the fellow can't let us in the apartment until Monday.  Its all good though as we have serious jet lag and just want to sleep anyway.  We are on the 11th floor of the hotel so we can see the rooftops of all the apartment buildings.  As in other countries we have been to they store and heat their water on the rooftop.  Most of the roofs have an array of water barrels, solar panels and satellite dishes.  

The Mediterranean out the window
 

We managed to get up and walk to the grocery today but otherwise we are just taking a day to rest - its just hard to sleep on a plane and hard to re-set your internal clock for a new time zone.  The day is lovely - sunny and warm.  And we can see and hear the Mediterranean  What more could you want :). 
 

 

Saturday, January 9, 2021

Fifth time is a charm??

 Rend Lake - Southern Illinois

STILL in the US... Our flight to Turkey has been cancelled four times so far!  After the first cancellation I decided to work a bit longer so that I could get both doses of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine before leaving.  We are still not sure when Michael will be able to be vaccinated but our hope is to have him vaccinated when we return (provided we actually leave)!.  After the second, third and fourth cancellation we decided that we needed to find a direct flight from the US to Turkey, as it was often the last leg from somewhere in Europe to Turkey that was cancelled.  We managed to book a flight direct from Chicago to Istanbul BUT we have to drive to Chicago to catch the flight.  That is about a 6 hour drive.  And to make it even more complicated Turkey now requires a negative PCR Covid test 72 hours before your flight.  That means we have to test tomorrow - January 10th and pray that we get the results back the morning of January 12th.  We then have to drive to Chicago to catch our 2130 flight.  Fingers crossed :).

 
Rend Lake
 

 The good news is that the latest flight (so far) has not cancelled!!!  There is hope.  The timing on the test results is dependent on the number of people being tested.  As of yet we are not seeing the Christmas/New Years surge of Covid cases so maybe we will be lucky and there won't be many testing tomorrow.  Again - fingers crossed. 

 
 The community left us all kinds of nice messages at the hospital - Pandemic Art









 
 Sidewalk leading to employee entrance at Good Samaritan Hospital

With any luck the next post will be from Turkey.  Stay tuned!