NOA HOTELS Kusadasi Beach Club
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Travel Blogs from Kusadasi
Exploring little village sirinci
Legend has it the village started in 4AD by freed slaves under the feudal system n named their village ugly fugly to discourage other visitors! There s a lovely market in the centre if village filled with handicrafts, crochet, felt etc. A very relaxed and laid back atmosphere with genuinely nice villagers. After walking around for a little while we rest of weary feet at a local restaurant called something starts with an "O". Their Turkish pancake called ...
Turkish Delight
... normal conduct of commercial activities they interacted with Europeans, and nature took its course.
Ephesus is about twenty minutes from Kusadasi. It is another ancient city like Petra, and Jerusalem. Its age dates roughly from the 7th Century BC.
Whereas Petra is carved out of rocks, Ephesus is built of stone. Its architecture reflects Greek, Roman, Dorian, ...
The Day that spoilt our travels ..... .
... postcards. A local man then took us to his uncle's rug store where we did end up buying a rug. It was very nice, but we felt they expected more from us (like another 2 rugs at least, and much more expensive than the little one we bought).
We felt like the locals saw us as the fatted cows delivered to them on a plate by Cunard.
The aroma of the town as we were leaving at dinner time was incredibly exotically fragrant.
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11/9 Athens
... having drinks together on our balcony before dinner. Because we have rooms next to each other, the attendant took down half the balcony barrier so we go between rooms and have more space to talk, drink wine, laugh and watch the sunset. Our attendant is very attentive, he sees us coming way down the hallway and yells hello Sir William and Margaret, did you have good breakfast, how did you sleep, have a good day in ...
Day 19-22 Beach Bums to Miller Rice
... a brief stop at Gallipoli, at Anzac Cove to pay tribute to the soilders who had lost their lives in the thousands back before WW1. Led by a then First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill, the mission to capture the Ottoman capital failed because of chance and luck on the Turk's part. As a tribute to all the Australian and New Zealand Corps troops who lost their lives, the Turkish renamed the coast and a cemetry was set up in a beautiful spot next to ...