From sea level to Medetsiz (3524m) (and Tarsus)

It’s one thing to drive to a trailhead and walk up a mountain.  It’s quite another thing, and much more aesthetically pleasing in my opinion, to make your way under your own power to the trailhead and then continue to the summit.  Maybe Göran Kropp is the only one who has really climbed Mt. Everest?  Actually I’m sure that’s not true as there must be numerous Sherpa who have walked from their villages to the summit.

From my house in Boulder I collected a number of bike-then-hike summits: Longs Peak (with Craig), Mt. Evans (with Kurt), North and South Arapaho (with Karl), Bear Peak (with Kevin), Apache, Mt. Meeker, a number of times up Audubon, and others I’m certainly forgetting.  Once for Audubon I tried to do it fairly quickly and was pleased enough with my time that I posted it on one of the record sites that was up then.  I can’t find the site now, and my personal notes aren’t readily accessible, but I can assure you it was well off what the real athletes do.

From Antalya the only ones I can think of are Sarı Çınar and Geyiksivrisi.  For the latter I’m not too embarrassed to say it took 9.5 hours from my house in Kaleiçi to the summit and back.  Speaking of speed Héctor Ponce de León’s sub 24 hour time from the Gulf of Mexico to the summit of Orizaba is definitely something to be proud of.  Wow, while researching this post, I learned that an Italian bested Héctor’s time seven years ago, but the Mexican has come back and done it again in just over 13 hours!

Bagging summits on a bicycle tour is definitely a different style, perhaps the “Nice Michel” style, I can say?  Years ago, when warmshowers was a paper list mailed annually from Balboa Island, I took advantage of a similar French list, CAC (Cyclo Accueil Cyclo), to find hosts.  Michel and his wonderful family hosted us in their house near Nice.  I still remember Michel describing his US bicycle tour.  He flew to San Francisco, pedaled away from the airport, and along the way ended up on the summit of Mt. Whitney.  Wow, “that really counts!”, I’ve always thought.

Over the years I’ve been up some peaks in that style.  Two come to mind: Kaçkar from Erzurum and Doi Inthanon from Bangkok.  This week it was Medetsiz, the highest point in the Bolkar Mountains.  42 days from my house in Antalya to the top of Medetsiz certainly doesn’t set any speed records.  However, less than 48 hours before I was on the summit, I dropped into a canyon and crossed a river at about 500m.

IMG_20200707_105312 by bryandkeith on flickr
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Çamlıyayla loops: castles, mountains, and canyons

Fixing my infected tooth requires going to Tarsus (pop. 340,000; elev. ~sea level) once a week to see a dentist (she cleans out the infection, and once she doesn’t find any more, she’ll do a “permanent” filling, and I’ll be done; at least that’s the theory).  Meanwhile I’ve based myself in Çamlıyayla (pop. 10,000; elev. 1200m) and am able to take care of my weekly appointment as a day trip by dolmuş (public minibus).  I was rather ill during my first week in Çamlıyayla, but by the second week I was feeling well enough to get out and do some loops from my comfortable pansiyon (shown here).

Akın Pansiyon where I stayed for 11 nights (mostly recovering from an abscessed tooth) by bryandkeith on flickr

The first loop was just a walk to the castle, Namrun Kalesi, that towers above the window of my room.  It’s on an escarpment surrounded by lower hills — the perfect place for a castle.  When the Armenians were here, they maintained it.  Later, the Ottomans used and maintained it.  I’m not sure who built it.  It’s been over restored.
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Bicycle touring Bolkar Dağları (more mountain eye candy)

I said goodbye to Ferda in Ayrancı and knew that I had a climb ahead of me.  I was leaving the Konya Plains (Karaman, in this case, I suppose) and heading into the Bolkar Mountains.  The first 40km climbed a barely noticeable 500m, but the scenery did start to change.

It's not much, but it does seem that I'm leaving the flats. by bryandkeith on flickr
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Yenişarbademli to Ayrancı via the Konya Plains, by bicycle

Between the Dedegöl Mountains and the Bolkar Mountains, I knew we’d have less stunning scenery, but I also knew there were some interesting cultural sites along the way.  The highlights were expected to be the wooden mosque in Beyşehir, the ancient city of Kilistra, the Kubadabad Ottoman summer palace, and most excitingly Çatalhöyük.

As it turns out, we were one for four, but, hey!, the scenery was better than we expected.  The first dud was the ruins of Kubadabad Palace just east of Yenişarbademli on the shore of Beyşehir Lake.  It was just some piles of rocks from the 13th century.

IMG_20200610_131152 by bryandkeith on flickr
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Bicycle touring Dedegöl Dağları (mountain eye candy)

I had been to Dedegöl once before, with Özgür in the winter.  We went in from the north side, from Melik Yaylası.  I had heard people talking about the camping and climbing area on the west side of the mountain, Kuzukulağı Yaylası, but I had never been here before.

Uh, wow, it’s amazingly beautiful.  I crossed the Köprü Çayı at Yanık and after an approximately 630m climb, the road topped out, and I came to this view:

IMG_20200603_142934 by bryandkeith on flickr

The road I took got steep after Eldere, and I had to push the bicycle for about half an hour.  I learned later that the easier way is to take the right turn about 4km passed Yanık (on the road to Eldere).  There’s a good road to the left, but you want the smaller road to the right.  You have to cross the creek (no bridge).  The road is poor for the first ~500m and leads straight to the yayla.  It’s the route that most cars use.

Taking that route you’ll miss this section of road:
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