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Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 October 2010

Georgia

Shortly after departing Goreme, Turkey, my guts collapsed. The chances to use a toilet, or even an array of toilets, had been ample but ten minutes later, not a light on the horizon. I calmly ask the male trolley-dolly when we shall be stopping and he informs me that it'll be ten minutes. He must register the panic in my face as he gets the driver to stop the bus, but no. I may be desperate, I may otherwise be a disgusting fucker, but I am English. And squat down by the side of a bus in front of an audience, I shall not. I am English and I shall fucking shit myself if need be. 10 minutes turned to 15 then twenty, my stomach sending increasingly violent flares up. Christina alternated between concerned tenderness, active panic and hearty amusement. Mainly amusement. Finally arriving, I run like the wind, my tea-towel holder heating up with every pounding step and I safely reach the squat pot. I don't know what it is about squat toilets. I think you are required to hover one small anal-shaped hole over the centre of a large toilet-shaped hole. There's just something in that complex formula that is alien to me. Relieving myself, I was then horrified to turn and see that I had completely missed and deposited evidence of Satan just behind the porcelain. I did what I could to clean up, sloshing water from a bucket around but I vacated that conveniance, leaving the impression that I had been potty trained by Pat McGeown. If being sat on the edge of the seat in a vehicle, terrified and doing everything in my power to keep the contents of my stomach from the inside of my pants, started my time in Georgia, it went on to set the tone. Arriving the next day with a bloodstream full of Otilonium Bromide, we disembarked at Hopa, Turkey and crossed the border into Georgia on foot. No visa costs, no bag searches just a quick look at my passport, a loud, "MANCHESTER UNITED!", and a more subdued, "Welcome to Georgia..."

Tblisi
From Batumi, it was a six hour minibus ride to Tblisi. The bus station in Batumi is madness. Loads of filthy kids begging, including one woman with Downs Syndrome which was especially uncomfortable. Stood by a huge Soviet hammer and sickle monument, a bloke in a Russian tracksuit hugged and kissed his girlfriend who was dressed like a ballerina. The bus was very cramped and had that constant pong you often get when you walk past a group of homeless people. Four hours into the journey, we stopped at a roadside hovel constituted the services. The carpets were so filthy that your feet clung to it as you tried to move across, much like the toilets in a student discotheque. . Not knowing what to order, we gave the huge old waitress an emphatic shrug and after slapping me on the back, returned with two ancient, chipped bowels of delicious unidentifiable meat stew. We slurped away whilst watching a South American soap in which all the characters voices were dubbed into Georgian in one monotone female voice. Waking on my first morning in Tblisi, I heard someone walk by my dormitory bed then stop and could feel them staring at me. For a bit of sport I pretended to be asleep then blasted my lamps wide open at him. This beardy bloke leapt out of his skin, nearly falling backwards before running off. There's a great market in Tblisi where ceremonial daggers are placed next to hardcore porn DVDs and envelopes stuffed with photos of anonymous Russian families are flogged not far from the skins of tigers, complete with bullet holes in their necks and backs.

We visited the popular Orbeliani bath house where I opted for a full body scrub. The man elected to do it was a huge bear of a chap, clad in nothing but old, emaciated underpants, with a Santa Claus beard. He barked a weight of instructions at me in Georgian, and I wilted and wanted to cry until a nice Georgian fella came to my aid. I was directed to lay on a bed shaped slab where he battered me for a while before scrubbing my body away. He even put his fingers deep into my ears and cleaned them out. At the end, all the animosity vanished as he extended his soapy hand and offered me and big bear-like smile.

Davit Gareja
The following day we headed off to the Davit Gareja monastery on the border of Azerbaijan. The views were sublime, as the walk actually entered Azerbaijan.


The caves on the mountainside were used by the Russian army as they geared up for their ill-fated adventures in Afghanistan. When they weren't taking practice shots on parts of the old monastery buildings, they whiled the hours away scratching the faces off of the painted angels and saints. On the way back from the Monastery, three busty peasant teens sat next to me on the public bus. I waited a good ten minutes before shifting my gaze from the guide book I was pretending to read and quickly yet discreetly, into the ample cleavage sat beside me. Just once. For no more than three seconds. Not long after alighting, Christina turned me after some bollocking or other and said, "Oh, and don't think I didn't catch your crafty glance down that young girls top..." As I stumbled and stuttered for an outraged riposte, she came in quick with an emphatic, "...Pathetic!"


Signahi
The following day we set off for the town of Signagh. The driving on the way was more of the shocking same we would never grow used to, yet far far from the worst. On the two hour drive there was a moment when three vehicles shared the exact thin two lane width of country road. There wasn't much to do in Signahi, save for fart around with two five-year old sisters, Kato and Kato, the two siblings phonetically differentiated by nothing more than a long and a short 'a' vowel sound. The town has been designated a 'Tourist Town', which means they have ripped down the town center's antique buildings and rebuilt them brand new for the tourists sake. It hasn't worked. The highlight of Signahi was drinking on the roof of the guest house, observing the family over the road. The man of the house would stagger up to the woman's quarter around 8pm and bark incensed orders at them until three generations of the families women folk brought him plate after plate of food, quickly removing themselves from his drunken presence. Through the meal he would scream at them through a gob stuffed with stodge. When he'd finished the last bit, he swaggered down the stairs, leaving the woman to clean up and evidently slag him to high heaven.

On the morning of leaving our hostess took us through the morning toast ritual. Having only just woken, a double shot of the vile firewater, Chacha was presented before each of us. We were informed that the first shot was ironically, for our own health. We were to follow this up quickly with one to the woman of the house, then the man of the house. I begged for reprieve after two, feeling instantly sloshed and unable to move. Apparently there are up to seven toasts of Chacha. For breakfast. Everyday. It's hard when your country has produced just one character of global fame, a man who you see as having roused the the Soviet Union into crushing the Nazis during WW2, yet the rest of the world only focuses on the naughty things he did. Like being directly responsible for a possible 60 million deaths. So it's with reluctance that Georgians readdress their view of Joseph Stalin as a hero to a heathen and there are plenty of statues, plaques and golden busts of the mustachioed swine all over the country. And until Katie fucking Melua leaves Beijing bicyclists to the Chinese and takes on or Putin single-handedly, this is unlikely to change.



Telavi

Telavi is a fucking dump and we had no idea why were were there. It's one of those places that's just miserable, like the German towns in school text books printed in the 70's. We took a bus out to the Alaverdi Cathedral. Shorts are considered terribly uncouth in Georgia and entrance is to historic buildings and churches is forbidden for men wearing them
. For the third time I had worn them and was barred entry to the fucking place, so had wasted an hours journey and had to wait for Christina whilst being tutted at by bearded monks. Our guest house for the night was a cosy place, housed inside what looked like a bombsite, ran by a lonely old lady who cried when Christina asked who the pretty young girl was in the photographs. Her kitchen was from 1890 and we sat chewing in her kitchen whilst she sat in the lounge watching her black and white TV. We went to bed very depressed, wondering what we were doing in Georgia. On the bus the next morning, we saw a middle-aged woman take a sly whiff of her left armpit before rubbing her fingers into it. She gave them a sniff before shrugging forlornly to herself.

Kazbegi
Kazbegi was just superb, some of the finest scenery I have ever clasped eyes from. It's best to let pictures do any talking when it comes to this area of the country.
One day, our host Vasili wrested the cars keys back from his 11 year-old son and drove us to see the Russian border.


On the way back, we saw various families gathered around the spots where male loved ones met their makers in brutal speeding accidents, probably whilst drunk. The families marked the occasion by drinking in-between sobs, before driving home. Gravestones have elaborate portraits of the departed etched into the slab, usually young lads with slicked back hair looking cool as fuck. We walked up to the Sameba Church, the most iconic image of Georgia but the weather was awful so we didn't even see the church till we bumped into it, let alone the mountains back-dropping it.


The next day, we went for a great walk up towards Chauki mountain though yet again, the views were obscured by the fog that descended on the area. We came across two lads sat smoking outside their tent with a huge riffle sat across. We approached them and asked for directions. They said they needed the gun as there were plenty of bears around. They were helpful but kept laughing and speaking in Georgian to each other. As we strode away, I braced myself for the first shot lancing the top of my ear off before turning, screaming, and getting the head shot.


That night we got utterly Blitzkrieged with a bunch of Germans and Georgians. There was a sad moment when Vasili interrupted us to introduce Christina to his cousin, a young man with calloused hands and a hard Russian face who longed to live and work in Canada. Vasili thought Christina may know someone who could give him a job in some archaic form of stone-masonry. The bloke seemed to think that his skills were enough to gain entry, once a job could be offered. Neither of them seemed even vaguely away of visas, a language barrier, Medicare, or electoral roles. He left looking hopeful but sobered and it was sad knowing that, no matter steps of advice we gave, he would probably never set foot in North America. The next day, with a hangover so formidable that even I was shocked, we hired a taxi to drive us up to the Trinity Chruch in Sameba for the view we missed when climbing up a few days back. It was well worth the extortionate charge.



When walking to the town square to get a Marhrutka (minibus) back to Tblisi, a car pulled up and the driver offered us the same journey for the same price, without the hassle and miserable conditions that cannot be ignored journeying in a Marshrutka. Saying yes meant we both endured the most harrowing journey of our lives. With his thirteen year old daughter in the passenger seat and a few drips of gas left in his tank, our driver floored it down the mountain roads of Kazbegi with a determination that could only be read as suicidal. Blind corners were taken a 100 km per hour, sometimes on the wrong side of the road. Cars were overtaken with seconds to spare before the truck coming in the opposite direction wanted the same stretch of tarmac. Skidding became customary. All this soundtracked by pounding Russian trance. Both of us were convinced we were genuinely going to die that sunny afternoon. And I realised that if we left the road and went hundreds of feet down a cliff, the discordant din of a Russian trance version of 'My Heart Will Go On', it would be infallible in those last few seconds that God fucking hated what I had done on this earth. If a stranger came up to me in the street and flicked my ear, I'd probably get angry. So when our mobility, face and existence was put in jeopardy, did I get vocal with the driver? No, I sat there clinging on to another human, sweating and slamming one foot into an imaginary brake, whilst easing the other of a non-existent accelerator. The average journey time from Kazbegi to Tblisi is three hours. Our guy got us there in one hour and forty eight minutes.

Svaneti
We took a sleeper train through the night to reach Zugdidi where a marshrutka took us through what is considered the most dangerous road in Georgia. There's loads of us crammed into the fucking thing as it wheezes it's way up mountains and chugs along the sides of terrifying drops, monstrous boulders from rock-slides littering the pothole ridden excuse for a road. For breakfast, we stopped at a cabin high in the hills. Whilst sat chomping on some past- encased cholesterol product, our driver walked past us with a bottle of vodka, four shot glasses and a bottle of champagne. He sneaked into a side room and drew a curtain, partitioning himself off from the passengers, along with numerous other drivers. An incredulous Israeli girl, deciding to say something, storms into their haven and is confronted by a female Georgian passenger who backslides the Israeli out. The Georgian girl then denigrates our concerns, proclaiming ALL the booze to be hers. She continues,
"...anyway, these drivers know the roads so well you don't need worry. Last week I had a driver who was so drunk that he couldn't even stand, but he was such an excellent driver..." She may have had a salient point as we discovered just a few minutes from our destination. Workmen were busy tarmacking the road. With a chasm just a few feet behind the back bumper, the wheels began spinning in wet cement as we rolled slowly backwards. Then the engine cut. An deafening silence erupted in the vehicle, a silent terror as everyone telepathically beamed driving instructions into the back of the shitfaced drivers witless fucking skull. Suddenly the car started, the front wheels prevailed over a sloppy lump of wet gravel and we were in our way again. The passengers applauded wildly, commending the driver on his inebriated command of the rusty lump of burdensome shite.

Mestia
Svaneti is a place that our guide book, printed as recently as 2006, warns travelers against visiting without a trusted guide. Svaneti is a place where some men still tote Klashnikov riffles as a kind of accesory. The menfolk of Svaneti were men who, "...like to quarrel", I was informed. In the past, if a traveller needed a bed to sleep in, a Svanetian would often donate the man a bed for the night and have a young female of the house sleep in the bed with the guest as a sign of trust. If the guest touched the girl, they would be killed. All heresay, some scant fact perhaps but we went to Svaneti hoping to encounter none of this and instead see, what is described as some of the finest countryside in the world.
Mestia is the main town in the Svaneti region and is currently completely being redeveloped to accommodate the thousands of Israelis who are presently descending on the country. Since May this year, when Israeli soldiers equipped with simple harmless water-pistols (and real guns) boarded a Turkish flotilla and shot nine Turkish peace activists/ arms suppliers / terrorists, sentiment between the two countries hit an all time low, so young Israelis have turned their attentions and pocket-money towards Georgia for a quick local getaway. The government men of Georgia are in overdrive to turn this one-horse-town into a bustling alpine mountain resort. The whole place looks like the assembly of an enormous movie set and not one building isn't adorned with wooden scaffolding. With our nerves shattered and in need of some booze, we headed straight for the local watering hole. The sight inside was fucking staggering. An old saloon, slap-bang out of the old Wild West. Tables of obliterated builders stopped to gawp at us for a second, before the racket continued, cement-caked. builders, smashing huge beer galsses together, hugging each other and downing full ales in one gulp, before ordering a tray or two more (Sadly their wasn't a honky-tonk pianist to continue playing.) The whole sorry scene was presided over by a punctilious sour-faced old bar wench, arms folded and scolding them inbetween considerations of whether to take my order of not. All of a sudden, they all downed the last few of their pints and staggered, some of them literally falling about the place, to the swinging doors at once. Lunch break was over. The place was suddenly empty apart from the two of us, a table of local women and the moody curmudgeon behind the antiquated pump. Within a few moments, the town outside came alive with sound of drills, hammering and old walls tumbling as the work continued. We did a good few walks in Mestia and in Usguli which is a few hours away by 4X4. Usguli is considered the highest permanently inhabited settlement in Europe. Whilst walking through the pastures to the blinding white of the Shkhara Glacier, we were accosted by two soldiers who wanted to see our passports. They looked drunk but then again, every male we had encountered in Georgia by that point usually was, so it was a fair assumption. Something about the situation was unsettling. They seemed to say that we could go on to the glacier but we had to come back straight afterward. Seeming as though to contravene their orders would mean scaling a glacier an entering an angry Russia illegally, their concerns seemed a little fanciful. The views in Ushguli were the finest the pair of us have ever seen. I'd like the photos to do it justice but sadly the memory card was lost, an incident that took some considerable days to come to terms with for both of us. I've tried to find photos on Google that do just an amoebic scrap of justice to the sights seen in Ushguli and this is the only thing that comes close:

A thirteen hour marshrutka ride with no leg room later and we were back in Tblisi. I promptly came down with food poisoning. I spent the night shitting and vomiting. The vomiting in particular was frightening, a ferocity that had me sounding a bit like the girl in the Exorcist around the point where she informs the priest that his old dear performs fellatio in Hades. We checked into a posh hotel for the night so I could shit and spew in peace, though I had to climb into three different beds and suffer two of Christina's hysterical tantrums before she was satisfied with the room. In order to leave Georgia we took a train back to Batumi. On the TV they showed old Georgian films from the late 1970's at ear-splitting volume. All the movies had at least one scene where an impoverished fool would be screaming incandescently at a photo of a family member on the wall. Batumi really is the worst place on earth. The Georgians view it as their Riviera. In an internet cafe, the bloke on one side was flicking between tabs of porn and Russian bride order forms. The young boy on the other side was looking at a close-up photo of a vagina. The only other thing to do in Batumi is try and keep the contents of your guts out of you trousers and watch homeless Indian kids throw bottles at jelly fish.
It was high time to leave Georgia.

Tuesday, 31 August 2010

Turkey

(This will bore the tits off most of you, but some of you seem to enjoy the self indulgent shit I wrote about my last trip, so for you sad wankers, here you go...)

After a fortnight of bickering, acute panic, and becoming familiar enough with the staff at the Syrian Embassy that first name terms are acceptable, the postman finally arrives with our Syrian visa and passports with but 3 hours to spare till our flight departs for Turkey...

We arrive in Antalya on the southern coast and stay with a wonderful lad called Alper, who takes us out on the piss. Apparently due to the incumbent religious government, booze is a fortune compared to what it was when I was last here 17 years ago. Not taking inflation ınto consideration, even with a 13 year old's paper round money, ıt was a lot cheaper to get pissed back then.

In the early hours of the morning, the call to prayer coming from the local mosque enters my dream and has me cowering under my sleeping bag, terrified. It sounds like the speakers have been moved from the minaret and placed a few inches from my sleepıng head. In between every couplet, I'm convinced it's over until it starts over again with added vehemence, every word personally admonishing me for my hung-over state.

From Antalya we head to Olympus, staying in the popular 'Tree-House' style accommodation . The path to the beach takes you past ruins from the 200 B.C. The beach however was packed, weekenders spitting unwanted chewing gum out and throwing cig ends all over the fucking place.
According to Homer, the God Poseidon looked out to sea at Olympus and saw the little gobshite Odysseus sailing away from Calypso's island, and called up a great storm that wrecked him on the shores of the island. All that Poseidon could muster the rage to destroy during our stay was a poor sea turtle who was wrecked upon the shores minus his head. All the young men in attendance gathered around with great interest, yanking bits of its shell off and posing for happy photos, holding the medal of shell aloft, whilst keeping the bobbing cadaver still with the other. After a while they all tired of the decapitated reptilian and kept attempting to push it out to sea, only for it to sail right back, perhaps wondering why it was suddenly so unpopular.
There was little to do of an evening save for drinking which İ was far too cheap to let us indulge in, or watching Manu Chao cover bands which I was too snobby to let Christina enjoy. I was much happier at the local Aussie-favoured haunt, watching young male antipodeans play surfing games on their iPhones whilst their girlfriends drank and spat variations on the word 'fuck' lots.
On a similar note, it shocked me just how many couples masked the moribundity of theır relationships with laptops. One lad looked up everything that entered his head on Wikipedia, whilst his sighing girlfriend resembled something from an early Morrissey Lyric, staring into the lens of an SLR, pouting and that. Couples without gadgets gawped at everything but each other before resuming the small talk. Christina and I papered over the cracks ın our own union by judging the rest of them and becoming closer again in the process.

From Olympus we headed 150 km west to Kas. The Turkish are the kindest people I have ever met and want to help with such benevolent gusto that it can set you back at first. As we staggered around in the bewildering heat, a young lad pulled up and offered to help us find the campsite. Once there, we set up the minuscule tent we had recently purchased for the first time. That night, was utter Hell. Waking up after a few hours, all my senses told me I'd pissed the bed - The sleeping bag was drenched, I was miserable, Christina was unhappy and uncomfortable and everything felt wrong. However, the wet was sweat, the misery was due to ıt being about 37c inside, and Christina was pissed off for the above reasons and we didn't have an inch of spare room. For the next few nights I slept under the stars, on big cushions from the local bar. The boat cruise around loads of islands was fun.
One day we watch in flabbergasted horror and awe as two Hungarian teen twins of both sex sunbathed together and regularly started touching each other in ways that, regardless of nationality and custom, MUST be inappropriate. Their older brother looked on occasionally, appearing to feel left out. Even when they tired of it and/or their bad tempered mother came back from a dıp in the sea, the girl would occasionally remove one hand from the book she was reading and use it to twist her twin's nipple (and even her own on one prolonged occasion.)

At the coach station there's a gay French couple who we've watched necking pink champagne and posturing for the last few days. Christina chats to one ın French for a bit and when they leave, he brazenly winks at me which she catches and is finally convinced that, even though women find me repellent, gays always like me.
We head to a place called Kabak (courgette) Valley which enjoys the same whispered, enigmatic status as the Thai beach in the book and fılm, 'The Beach'. It's spoken off as a 'hippy paradise', which holds disconcerting connotations for myself, but Christina can't wait. My fears are heightened when a fellow bus passenger is carryıng a conga under her arm.
Getting a bus from Fethiye, a small bus drives us past the package holiday shite of Oludeniztreck down into a beautiful valley, stopping at a camp called, 'Reflectıons'. Permanent construction is forbidden in the valley so all accommodation is made from log cabıns or tents. The vıew from our cabin ıs astounding, with open sides looking into the surrounding mountains and the beach and ocean at the bottom. Most staff are volunteers who trade graft for free rent and food. Christina quickly decides she wants to do the same and she signs up to become the breakfast cook.
Our tıme in Kabak is wonderful. The congo player actually teems up with bongo players, as well as a tablaist and one fucker with a didgeridoo and as cynical as I wanted to remain, the sounds they concocted at night were quite agreeable.
The yoga sessions, ayurvedic milkshakes and dreadlocks actually mask a sizeable commercial operation in full swing, as evidenced by the angry reaction of one member of the 'Flintstone' camp manager when I canceled my room reservation, pausing from hammering into her laptop and shoutıng at people on the phone to give me a good bollocking.

It was possible (although with some coughing, spluttering and sea water swallowing) to swim from the beach to a cave about 15 minutes from the shore. Inside the cave, underwater, blue light shone through a hole and semi-courageous swimmers swam through to the ocean side of the huge rock. I watched as real men did this with the grace of jellyfish. When I attempted it (on my second visit to the cave) I did so with the adroitness of a fat Geordie pisshead, attempting ballet to Ravel. Not going deep enough under the ceiling of the rock, I scrabbled through awkwardly, scuffıng feet on the jagged coral and, losing oxygen, grabbing onto the sharp material to pull myself through the last bit. After watching Christina do her go with dejected envy, we swam back to the beach, me coloring it red with blood along the way.

Had a great Alan Partridge moment when a group of us were chatting about travel. An Italian girl told us about how she had gone to Iran when she was 13 years old,

I once went to Iran, but I didn't have to wear the head scarf as I wasn't yet a women...

She later said that she had also been to Zimbabwe, to which I replied,

And were you a woman by that point?

We stayed ın Kabak a week but it could have been longer. A safari style truck picked us up and drove us up dirt tracks, at break-neck speed to Faralya at the top of the mountains. The drive was not too dissimilar to the pace and movement at the start of a roller-coaster ride as it begıns its ascent to the first summit. The vıews of Kabak beach from the top of the valley were of the stuff tour companies concoct in Photoshop to send unwitting hard-workıng folk to some Canary Island hovel. The conductor on our second bus was the 10 year-old son of the driver and had the face, body and dejected, world-wearıed demeanor of a hard-worked curmudgeonly 60 year-old Brıtısh bus drıver, jumping off to back it into the bus stop, barking at passengers who attempted to board without his say so, ordering passengers about and tutting and shaking his napper indignantly when passengers attempted to pay with a large denomination.
Kabak Valley from above


George House is situated atop of one of the huge mountain ranges in the area with views down onto Butterfly Valley and with sheer drops off the side. The views remove the breath from your lungs wıth their mix of vertigo-inducing drops and sheer beauty. We met a great young French couple and dıd a walk into the the blazing sun with them and slept outsıde on the side of the mountain. The peace and solitude was destroyed however, when a loud-mouthed gaggle of French school kids showed up. They all raided the swimming pool and made absolute cunts of themselves. Just before their miserable arrival, the few people in attendance listened to the eerie cry from the mosque as ıt echoed through the valley. In the advent of French school kids, such endemic incantations were replaced by the French boys loudly announcing how they were struggling to rank their female compatriots in terms of facial features and body form, as the girls with not an ounce of self-respect, waited nervously for the result.

The pool at George House


French Mathieu and Christina

Walking above Butterfly Valley

From there we took an overnight bus to Çanakkle, where my aunt and uncle live, running a wonderful hotel wıth some of the most amazing food İ've ever tasted, food they would lovingly shovel into our faces every day. The kindness and hospitality they showed us cannot be put into words. On the last night a bus load of '2wenty' somethings turned up as part of a pan-Euro tour group. Christına and I had considered one of these tour groups to provide us with (semi) safe passage through parts of Northern Africa, though our misgivings were proved correct as we watched them sauntered around the restaurant in wet swimwear, swearing and one scantily-clad girl tried to perform a provocative dance for a ramadan-observing waiter as he trıed to serve other guests.

Perhaps the highlight of Çanakkale was the set of scrotum-clad bollocks I saw growing out of an old man's face at a cafe on the water front.

Next, onto Istanbul, were my cousins Yasemin and Çan live. On the way there, Christina's patience with the never ending bullshit I spill was nearing fever pitch. Take this conversation on the bus;

Ben: Did you see the name of that town we are passing soon?
Christina: No, what was it?

Ben: Wait, we'll see ıt again...

Christina: (sigh) Just tell me...

Ben: Hang on, I think there's another one coming up...

Christina: 'Kumburgas'...? Yeah, and?

Ben: Yeah Kumburgas... burgars but made out of cum...

Christina: (turns to window and presses forehead against it, until temples visibly pulse)

İstanbul is a fucking brilliant city. We saw main sights such as the Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace and took a cruise along the Bospherous River all in the first few days and then spent our time shopping, the opportunities for which are endless.
Christina needed a rabies booster shot and we just tried our luck at a public hospital in the Taksim area. Instead of being asked to fill in countless forms, held ın endless queues, being stared at like scum and eventually being charged a month's wages, we were instead led to a room were she was sat down, had her armed spiked and then smiled at by numerous people. When we asked how much was to be paid (£50 ın the U.K), the nurse just shrugged then shook her head and said we could come back again if we needed anything else. Although confusion and a lack of a common language may have accounted for such an episode, yet I wonder what would happen if a Turkish national attempted to see a doctor in the U.K or Canada.

Weird mannequins at Grand Bazaar


Christina fussing over 8 millionth cat in Turkey


Twat at Blue Mosque

Kids jumping off Bridge

The picture quality in which some T.V is broadcast in here means that it's hard to take anything seriously as everything looks like those pointless 'screen test' extras you get on DVD special feature menus. No Country for Old Men looks lıke a crappy student film, James Blunt's insipid sentimentality on VH1 is more laughable that you could imagine and Gossip Girl is even shitter than it was before...

Favourite sight in Istanbul: A Headscarved female market trader selling boxer shorts featuring an living condom chatting up a big-tıtted slag in a bar.

Finally we visited Cappadocia where we saw a sky full of hot air balloons, staggering scenery and a few hundred thousand Koreans melting in the heat. We stayed at a campsite and there were loads of Brits who were traveling overland from UK to India and then flying to Australia. There had all coughed up a small fortune to the company and then were all thrown together in a bus for 7 months. They were of all ages and all types and seemed to be enjoying themselves, however observing them was a bit like watching the first few weeks of Big Brother - Factions were forming and minor sniping was taking place. In other words it was my idea of Hell.

We pottered down to a 10th century church housed in one of the odd chimneys but walked off when the ticket bloke told us it was about 50 pence to enter. He gave us a two-fer-one and we went in.

Frescoes in said church

After he asked to to have a cup of tea with him in his little shed. He told us he had been sat in this shed selling tickets since 1997. He cut a very forlorn figure. Then he asked me if I liked massage. I said yes. He asked if I wanted one there and then. I said OK. He gave me a massage while Christina stared at me trying not to laugh. Then he gave Christina one and I stared at the wall. We then walked off quick and he looked broken.

Cappadocia

Rich bastards in balloons

Now, fuck off...