Köprülü Kanyon rafting and yet another Roman ruin

Antalya’s ridiculously hot in the summer.  Anyone with any sense tries to escape this place in July and August, and yet that’s hardly true at all since summer is the high tourist season in Antalya.  Headaches, dehydration, and sunburn must be better than whatever the visitors are fleeing in Russia, Germany, and the UK.

Well, anyway, I try to escape Antalya’s summers.  Last year Ferda and I flew to Switzerland.  Just a couple days ago I bicycled from the heat at sea level up past the local ski area topping out at over 2000m where I found a cool breeze as I sat in the shade.  Those solutions are a bit extreme, I guess.  Most people just go to the beach.  Also many people from Antalya go rafting in Köprülü Kanyon.

DSCN9590 by bryandkeith on flickr

Ferda’s friend, Bilge, now lives and works in Germany and, like many others (!), chooses to come for his annual vacation in Antalya at the hottest time of the year.  When he visited, we escaped to Köprülü Canyon and camped for a couple nights.  The elevation isn’t so high there, but it’s surprisingly cool near the streams.  Actually the water in the side stream next to where we camped was so cold I could hardly stand to be in it for more than a couple minutes.  Wow, how refreshing coming from Antalya’s furnace.
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Snow climb on Tunç Dağı

I think the activity I miss most from Colorado is the snow climbs.  The easy access to say, Skywalker Couloir on South Arapaho from Boulder, is pretty incredible.  And that’s one of many choices from Boulder.  The mountains around Antalya aren’t high enough to get a lot of snow, and the one with the quickest and easiest access is Tunç so we keep going back there.  These photos are from May, but it had been a particularly wet April so there’s more snow than one could usually expect in May.

The route we chose goes up through the large shady spot about 1/3 of the way in from the left of the photo.  Above the shade we did an upward traverse to the right and then straight up to the ridge. by bryandkeith on flickr
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Matterhorn preps: Geyiksivrisi-Sarp Katran Ridge

The ridge from Geyiksivrisi to Sarp Katran is another of the super fun scrambling ridges near Antalya.  Like the Sivri Dağı ridge traverse, this was also one of our training days for the Matterhorn.  We were even the same five people as on Sivri Dağı: Fahri, Hasan, Barış, Evren, and me.  Semra also joined Hasan, Barış, and me in Switzerland, but she lives in Rize and was doing her training in the Kaçkar Mountains.  The Kaçkars are certainly a better place than Antalya for this type of training, and it was apparent in Switzerland.  Semra seemed to handle the altitude and exposure better than the rest of us.

DSCN7638 by bryandkeith on flickr
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Two bike rides from Antalya: Kurşun Şelalesi via Aksu and Karain Mağarası

In the spring I did a couple fun bicycle rides (day trips from Antalya) with Nurullah and Nurhayat.  The first ride took us to a two waterfalls, an old Roman city, and a restored Ottoman-era mosque.  The second took us to another waterfall — this one into a narrow gorge–, an old cistern, a restored caravanserai, and a cave.  It’s amazing how much there is to see quite close to Antalya.  Also, I sometimes complain that there are no flats rides to do around Antalya, but it’s not really true.  Neither of these rides had much climbing.  Nurhayat was recovering from a broken ankle and wanted to stay on the flats.

The goal of the first ride was to go to Aksu, the next “city”, I guess you could say, to the east of Antalya.  Aksu is famous for piyaz and köfte.  Piyaz is a bean tahini salad with boiled egg, tomato, and olive oil.  It’s really good.  Köfte is grilled hamburger meat — much better than it sounds.  Aksu is also famous for the nearby ruined Roman city, Perge.

The goal of the second ride was to visit Karain Mağarası, a well-known cave NNW of Antalya.  Turns out it’s of more interest to archaeologists than casual tourists.  Inside the cave is evidence of 500,000 years of human history, one of the oldest records in Turkey.  However, it’s completely covered to protect the find, and I don’t think there’d be anything for non-professionals anyway.  It’s certainly a pleasant bike ride though.  Here are a couple photos from inside the cave:

DSCN7537 by bryandkeith on flickr
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Matterhorn preps: Sivri Dağı Ridge Traverse

When I first bicycled into Antalya about four years ago with Kurt, we both commented on the incredible mountain ridges near the city.  It looked like great scrambling to us.  Well, Sivri Dağı has one of those ridges.  I’ve been up Sivri Dağı a number of times by a number of different routes and climbed some trad routes lower down on the NE face of the mountain, but I’ve only done this great traverse once.  It’s the best non-technical route I’ve done on the mountain.  We did use the rope for a couple rappels on our descent route.  Does that then make it technical?!

DSCN7407 by bryandkeith on flickr
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