Tlos Turkey
History,  Turkey,  World food

Ancient Sites, Canyon Hikes & Deserted Cities: Last Days In Fethiye

Things just keep getting better. The more we explore this section of coastline and its scenery, the more we are in awe of its beauty, it really is a breathtakingly gorgeous area. And, after a slow start with food, we’ve fought our way past the tourist restaurants and found eateries which do complete justice to the Turkish cuisine which we already love. Even the weather is playing ball with clear skies, sun drenched days and seas still warm enough for a dip whenever we fancy it. Things just keep getting better.

Food in Fish market Fethiye, Turkey
Choose your meze from here

Our food breakthrough comes when we discover restaurants inside the fish market where not only is the fresh catch fantastic but the meze is everything you would want it to be. The rather perfect drill goes like this: choose your fish from the extensive catch, then choose five meze dishes from the appetising and colourful display which you then eat with pide bread during the period your fish is being cooked.  Enjoy both delicious courses while the musicians play traditional folk songs. The food is fantastic, the whole experience is an event, in fact a little slice of foodie heaven.

Food in the fish market Fethiye, Turkey
Choose your fish from here

The fish market Fethiye, Turkey
Reis Balik restaurant

After Reis Balik, the restaurant in the fish market, it all just falls into place and the uncharacteristically slow start is soon a distant memory; meals are as enjoyable as they always have been on previous trips to Turkey. Some, like at the tiny restaurant Lokanta Fethiye, are even better than that.

Food in Fethiye, Turkey


Hiring a car for a couple of days to see as much of the area as possible, the drives are dominated by wow moments as we scale twisting mountain roads and magnificent views open up again and again. Each bend in the road seems to bring another fabulous scene. Soaring mountains, plunging gorges, dazzling seascapes, sumptuous coves…it’s all here.

Çaliş Plaji, Turkey
Çaliş Plaji

At Çaliş Plaji, the seafront boasts a long run of restaurants and grants impressive views of the sunset. Whilst still clearly a holiday and expat centre, Çaliş is much more relaxed than Fethiye town with the distinct impression of year-round calm compared to the main town’s lively character. It feels a step up – but we are shortly to discover another level in that respect, at the gorgeous town of Göcek.

Before then though, we take an interesting hike through Saklikent Gorge, Europe’s second largest canyon, the longest in Turkey and one of the deepest canyons in the world. What makes this particular hike unusual is that for long stretches we are actually walking in the fast flowing, freezing cold water – this walk can only be undertaken in certain seasons when water levels are low, but it’s enormous fun picking our way through the uneven and unsteady rocks beneath the icy flow. Every footstep feels like a potential disaster! At times the water is knee deep, others less than an inch, but in any event it’s a good job that we’d been pre-warned to wear aqua shoes, no other footwear would be remotely suitable. Our starved feet need some TLC in the sunshine by the time we return for a Turkish tea.

From Saklikent we head to Tlos, where the ruins of an ancient Lycian city are spread across the hillsides. Tlos was in its day a prosperous and thriving city, one of the six principal cities of the Lycian League, powerful enough to be granted autonomy by Rome. The extent of the ruins really takes us by surprise, and as we take a bend in the road and the mighty site appears, we both let out a gasp. It’s a huge site, one of those understated destinations here which just serve as a reminder that Turkey is an almost limitless source of major historical sights, the nation’s claim to be the World’s largest museum is justified over and over again.

Tlos ancient site in Turkey
Tlos
Tlos ancient site in Turkey
Tlos
Tlos ancient site in Turkey
Tlos

Our second day with the hire car brings us to a lost city of a different kind – the deserted homes of Kayakoy, a legacy of the Population Exchange of 1923, when over a million Greeks were effectively expelled from Turkey and a smaller number – up to 400,000 – Muslims brought the opposite way. Kayakoy, a town exclusively occupied by Greeks complete with orthodox churches and cafe neons, was comprehensively evacuated and has never been re-occupied, since that time falling steadily into decay year by year. Clambering through its eerily deserted walkways, it’s still possible to spot on the walls traces of the blue paint so loved by Greek homeowners – a faded reminder of its former life.

Kayakoy deserted village, Turkey
Kayakoy
Kayakoy deserted village, Turkey
Kayakoy

Kayakoy deserted village, Turkey
Kayakoy

Fig and olive trees grow through and around the crumbling walls, descendants no doubt of plants cultivated by the Greek population; finches and flycatchers flit between the undergrowth and the houses, swarms of bees turn odd scented unidentified trees into a cacophony of buzz. For the most part all else is quiet in these homes now deserted for a century, a handful of other curious visitors poring over the remains in this town once no doubt filled with characteristic Greek chatter but now just a series of silent shells. 

Kayakoy deserted village, Turkey
Kayakoy

Kayakoy deserted village, Turkey
Kayakoy

And so finally to the delightful coastal town of Göcek. As if we hadn’t already become enamoured with Turkey, Göcek unexpectedly takes it all to another level. A beautiful, genteel town nestled inside another deep sea inlet, this little place just epitomises everything which is appealing about the Turkish Riviera, so much so that we find ourselves gazing in property agents’ windows, wondering what it would be like to use Göcek as our base for a year or so. We could happily handle that scenario. Until, that is, we see the price tags on the properties. 

Göcek, Turkey
Göcek
Göcek, Turkey
Göcek

Time is almost up in Fethiye, as we are about to move approximately three hours along the coast to our next destination, where the Mediterranean meets the Aegean. Did we go paragliding? No, in the end, we didn’t. Maybe we decided it’s a good idea to keep our limbs intact, we might just need them.

Sunset over Fethiye, Turkey
Sunset over Fethiye

Dusk descends, the orange sunset pales into darkness and the call to prayer once again echoes over the rooftops. Filling in this section of the coast which we bypassed on our last visit four years ago has so far been just what we hoped it would be: another delightful stay which has further enhanced our already strong affection for Turkey.

As ever though, the feeling as we prepare to move on is one of excitement at what we may discover next….

Pomegranate season in Turkey
Pomegranate season

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