Tuesday 27 November 2012

The future and the past


I have just received a booking from Hotels4u for next year – nice try but as we haven’t signed a contract with them yet I wonder why they are taking reservations?!  It is strange thinking of next summer already when I am only just recovering from this one.  Still, I am glad that some people are starting to think of next year’s holidays.  The general view over here is that this year was a terrible one – there were visitors here (Poppy was full at least from June to September) but they were not spending much.  This is understandable given the current economic situation at home but it affects the restaurants and tour companies particularly.  The Turkish Tourism Board’s new advertising focuses on all the attractions of Turkey – the history, beautiful sea and beaches etc – in an attempt to move it away from just a low-cost destination.  The current forecast is that 2013 will be about the same but 2014 will be a boom year.  That would be nice!
theatre at Pınara
 I took myself off to visit one of the local attractions last weekend – the ruins of the Lycian town of Pınara.  It was built a bit like a ‘new town’ to take some of the overflowing population of Xanthos.  It became quite large itself, having 3 representatives (the maximum) on the council of Lycia – Fethiye, for example, only had two.  Now, it is just a pile of stones in a deserted forest on the lower slopes of a hill.  I say deserted, though while I was there rather strangely a group of about 30 foreign walkers came striding through with their backpacks and walking poles – rather surreal!
The theatre is in tact and though not huge, quite impressive.  On the other side, there are interesting heart-shaped columns that were part of a temple dedicated to Aphrodite.  There is also a stone with a rather interesting phallic symbol which seems to have been part of the temple (see photo right)!  And then there are the tombs.  The mountain behind the main settlement is 450 m high and a sheer rock face – yet it is riddled with rock tombs.  I really can’t imagine how they carved them but assume they must have hung down from the top rather than climbed up from the bottom – and given that the settlement was founded in the fifth century BC they are rather impressive however they were made.  It was a beautiful day when I went there and the views to the Ak Dağları or White Mountains  - already with a dusting of snow on them – were stunning.
I put an ad on facebook (actually Cem put it on for me – I am still not facebooked up!) for Turkish lessons and have had a lot of responses leading to 6 new groups of students.  I am pretty much ‘full’ now in terms of lessons – 3 a day 4 days a week is about as much as I want to do.  Some of the new students have done lessons with various different teachers already but – without wishing to criticize anyone – they seem to come away with lots of stuff written down but unable to put together even a simple sentence.  I hope that I will be able to remedy that!
The kittens are getting bigger and walking around – though still a bit wobbly.  They are also getting very noisy and as they are in the room where I give my lessons they can be a bit of a distraction!  The puppy (Poppy) has also grown a lot and can now jump onto the garden wall (at home).  It isn’t very high from the inside, but from the outside it is about 6 feet above the road; it must be quite alarming for people walking past to see this dog perched above them – and even sometimes jumping down in front of them.  Unfortunately she hasn’t worked out how to get back in so sits outside the front gate until we notice her – or a kind neighbour lets her back in.
I have been busy designing an album of our digital pix.  It is a bit fiddly but a very clever system and it makes you look through all your old photos and remember nice times.  As so many of our ‘nice times’ take place at the hotel, many of our lovely guests feature in it.  Here’s a few photos – with love to all the people who have given us happy memories…