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"MYTHICAL
PLAYGROUND IN THE MEDITERRANEAN"
Islands Magazine:
April 2000
By Tony Perrottet
On a sailing cruise along Turkeys Turquoise
Coast, its oh so easy to succumb to a lifestyle fit for the gods.As
I lolled on the deck of the Amazon Solo, enjoying the opalescent waters
of the eastern Mediterranean, I could see why even the crustiest of ancient
mariners would wax poetic here. In these surroundings callous-palmed oarsmen
had imagined Aphrodite as a ravishing young woman surrounded by singing
water nymphs and muscular mermen blowing on conch shells.Who could blame
the sailors for adopting as their patron deity the winsome Greek goddess
of love? And what power over those mortals Aphrodite had! Hard-bitten
captains maintained small alters to her and made sacrifices at seaside
temples. The most famous shrine was in Cnidus, gateway to the stunning
cliff-lined kingdom of Lycia, known today as Turkeys Turquoise Coast.
Conveniently for sailors, Aphrodite was frequently worshipped with Dionysus,
the ecstatic god of wine ( and thus the promoter of love) who was depicted
reclining on sailboats whose masts were entwined with vine leaves.In this
sensuous seascape, myth and reality often blurred: When Queen Cleopatra
sailed from Egypt in 41 B.C., intent on seducing Mark Anthony, she presented
herself as the "New Aphrodite." Her royal barge sparkled with
precious metals, and silver-plated oars kept time to the music of flutes.
Cleopatra reposed beneath a canopy of woven gold, fanned by plump young
Cupids, while lovely nymphs worked the rigging. Mark Anthony never stood
a chance. When they became lovers, the New Aphrodite sailed again
this time accompanied by her New Dionysus, who had taken to wearing vine
;eaves in his hair.Alas, Anthony and Cleopatra were doomed, and Aphrodites
temple at Cnidus has long been destroyed. Meanwhile, the Turquoise Coast
has weathered some of the great battles between Europe and Asia, Christianity
and Islam, West and East. The kingdom of Lycia, purged of almost all Hellenic
influence, is now part of Turkey, remembered largely because of the haunting
rock tombs carved in sheer cliffs. But myth and romance continue to reign
here. In the early 1960s a quartet of Turkish bohemians sailed along this
forgotten coast in a rustic fishing boat. Navigating from cove to isolated
cove, they discovered that the ancient Greek passion for beauty represented
by Aphrodite had become part of the very fabric of the Turquoise Coast:
The goddesss soothing touch could still be felt in its warm, clear
waters while the liberating call of Dionysus echoed from every
lonely beach. The waterborne bohemians, led by a writer who called himself
the Fisherman of Halicarnassus, dubbed their idyllic sailing trip "the
Blue Voyage," and a new legend was born. Today the ancient kingdom
of Lycia is the Meds ultimate sailing destination, the new plus
ultra of escapes from everyday cares into an aquatic Eden. I signed up
for my own week-long Blue Voyage, which would take me into Turkish waters
dotted with deserted islands, Byzantine saints, and sunken cities. The
plan was to explore the playground of Aphrodite and Dionysus. Where else
could a modern pagan gnaw on fresh figs, plunge from the deck of a yacht,
and glimpse the ancient dream?I quickly discovered that todays Turkish
sailors are no less hedonistic than their ancient predecessors. The M/S
Amazon Solo had barely eased its way out of Goceks marina, when
Serhan, the boats amiable owner, raised his glass of milky, anise-flavoured
raki and made a ritual toast: "For a safe journey: Pruvan neta olsun!
May the ships prow stay clear.""Pruvan neta olsun!"
chimed in young Captain Mustafa, knocking back his glass and taking the
ships wheel. They both nodded towards a curious bauble hanging above
their heads concentric blue rings around a tiny yellow-and-black
ball, a venerable Mediterranean charm against the Evil Eye, " Serhan
confided, rapping his knuckles on the wheel. "I prefer to touch wood."
His was a most convenient superstition to have on the Amazon Solo, a stunning
107-foot Black Sea schooner. The hull was made of chestnut, the deck of
African iroko, and the interiors crafted from cedar and Indian walnut.
In fact, the Amazon Solo named for the race of warrior- women that
legend had placed in Turkey was the closest to Cleopatras
luxury barge.Scarlet Turkish carpets warmed the state rooms; up on deck,
white canvas lounge chairs were positioned to catch the suns rays.
And, of course, there was a canopied dining table in the stern
although it was hung with blue sailcloth, not spun gold.Our first view
of the coast was unexpectedly dramatic: The Twelve Islands in the Gulf
of Fethiye were looming through the heat mist. Jagged silhouettes rose
from a sea of glistening silver; sheer ochre cliffs plunged into the waves,
where dolphins were frolicking. It was a theatrical setting fit for mythic
events: Daedalus and his son Icarus had launched their flight on wings
of wax and feathers from these pine covered mountains. And the legendary
meeting between Anthony and Cleopatra had a modern echo: Prince Charles
and Lady Diana are said to have had a secret rendezvous in these isles
once, arriving in separate yachts in a vain attempt to rekindle passions
flames.Our Blue Voyage was taking place in mid-October, at the end of
the sailing season, when Turkish yacht owners like Serhan traditionally
invite a group of friends for one last sail. Hence the cross-cultural
mix of passengers: three Brits, a Turkish restaurateur, me (the lone New
Yorker), and a gaggle of retired Italians.It sounded as though there were
50 Italians especially when they all bellowed into their cell phones
at once. But I counted only eight.An amazing bunch, the Italians, whose
habits proceeded to set the laid-back tone for the cruise. Theyd
already caused us to depart four hours late by spending the whole morning
in port looking for fresh basil to make pesto. Their leader was a frail,
urbane, white-haired bachelor named Giorgio, who behaved like Louis XIV
with his court, at least with regard to the five Gucci-clad women in the
group. Doctors in Rome had insisted that Giorgio not smoke or drink coffee
or wine. He spent every moment of the day smoking and drinking coffee
and wine, all solicitously supplied by his bevy of elegant beauties.Giorgio
quickly proclaimed himself my tutor on Dionysian principles.
"Antonio!"
"Giorgio?"
"It is important to travel with a private harem," he instructed,
as one of his admirers put on a tape of his favourite opera Italian,
of course.Next morning at daybreak, I slipped over the side of the Amazon
Solo and swam a few strokes to Gemiler island, pulling myself up onto
a stone landing that had been placed there centuries ago. Branches of
Mediterranean pines dipped to the water; a forest trail led up from the
shore, past the Byzantine apses and columns of a ruined church whose hollows
swarmed with bees.Gemiler was also known as St Nicholas island, in honour
of the popular fourth-century bishop who became Noel Baba to the Turks,
Father Christmas to Westerners. Saint Nick was renowned for his generosity:
He once visited three virgins whose father had been left penniless and
threw purses of gold into their house for the girls dowries. In
the centuries after his death, Saint Nicholas became an international
celebrity. (His grave was one of the holiest outposts of medieval Christendom,
and he even came to displace Aphrodite as patron saint of sailors.) Eventually
his cult extended to the wintry climes of Russia and Germany, where Protestants
converted him into the jolly Santa Claus who delivers Christmas presents
to children.Christmas snows were a long way from Gemiler that bright autumn
morning. Ancient steps led me steeply upward, past a covered tunnel
a long passageway that ended at the island summit, where the remains of
a church still commanded a view of the surrounding water. In Byzantine
times the air would have been thick with incense, but since nature has
reclaimed the breezes, every breath was rich with other scents.
"Take a blind man
to Lycia," wrote the Fisherman of Halicarnassus,
"and hell immediately know from the smell of the air exactly
where he is. The acrid perfume of lavender, the pungent fragrance of wild
mint and thyme, will tell him." Not to mention jasmine, honeysuckle,
myrtle, and orange blossom.Back at the boat, the scent of fresh espresso
assailed me. Giorgios harem had laid out a morning repast worthy
of any Italian pasticceria, to the accompaniment of Puccinis "Nessun
Dorma."
"Antonio!"
"Giorgio?"
"What did you see on the island?"
He listened indulgently to my account before turning to more serious matters.
"Interesting. But Antonio, today we have squid ink pasta for lunch."
By now I realized that, for Italians, the whole purpose of travel is to
find the perfect place to eat spaghetti. They had transported their own
pasta in bulk from Rome, along with fresh bulbs of mozzarella and a giant
wheel of parmesan cheese. They had no less than three espresso machines,
as well as saddlebags of Lavazza coffee. If they werent eating,
they were talking about food. Food was more than an obsession, it was
life itself.The key gourmet item, brought by a silver-haired chap named
Corrado, would turn out to be a bottle of wine vintage 1898. Corrado was
an architect, and while renovating an old Roman villa, he had discovered
a cellar with 300 bottles of Chateau Lafitte. Half were being put up for
auction these bottles, selling at $15,000 a pop, were going to
make him rich the other half he was slowly drinking. Here on the
boat, the bottle became a subject of feverish discussion among the Italians:
When should Corrado open his 1898 time capsule?A question that was, of
course, in keeping with the spirit of Dionysus. Punctuality is not a strong
point for either Italians or Turks, but the next morning we cast off from
our anchorage at 10 A.M. on the dot, just as Serhan had scheduled. Giorgio
got up from his deck chair and looked at his watch in mock concern: "What
is this, Switzerland?" As the Amazon Solo headed into the open sea,
past the wild Seven Capes, it became obvious that the name Turquoise Coast
was an understatement: The Mediterranean's palette is never limited to
a single colour. Close to shore the waters tone is emerald green,
bright as mouth wash; farther out, its depths are almost burgundy
recalling Homers "wine-dark sea."
For us the eastern Mediterranean had the same astonishing clarity it must
have had for the wandering Odysseus: We could watch the floor of the sea
passing 60 feet below; it seemed the boat was floating on air, not liquid.
The water sparkled as if a million broken mirrors were scattered on its
surface, so blindingly reflective you had to avert your eyes. For the
next few days we drifted in and out of anchorages; one glorious spot,
Butterfly Bay, was a mere sliver cut into sheer cliffs, visible only to
an experienced captain. Every headland was encrusted with relics of the
Lycians, whose forgotten culture is, as one Turkish writer put it, "an
unsolvable riddle."
One thing is certain: The Lycians had a fine eye for real estate. All
their cities had spectacular sea views. I saw the vestiges along our route:
a sand-filled amphitheatre above the glorious 11-mile beach in Patara;
stone sarcophagi like orange mushrooms littering the rocky coast. But
none of these relics quite compared to what I found in the waters of Kekova
island; the "sunken city."
While the Italians headed to the mainland to check out the local cappuccino,
I took the dinghy and skirted the islands shore. The Lycian coast
is next to one of the most volcanic areas of the Mediterranean, and villagers
claim that a great eruption 2,000 years ago flooded the channel here,
drowning thousands and sweeping an entire city of marble into the sea.
Archaeologists have a slightly less dramatic version: Kekova island was
actually edged by modest market towns that slowly slipped beneath the
waves, as earthquakes caused the coast to crumble like a biscuit dipped
in coffee. I maneuvered the dinghy back and forth, peering into the water
and trying to reconstruct the scattered bones of the past. In the 1980s
this seafloor still held scattered amphorae and Byzantine mosaics, all
long since stolen by antique hunters. But I could make out the foundations
of buildings, a vague hint of a plaza, and what I took to be an ancient
street. It was all very fragmentary, another Lycian riddle, the meaning
utterly elusive and in my imagination, irresistible.This place,
where tectonic plates collide, is a better place than most to ponder the
vagaries of destiny. One of historys few surviving Lycian voices
is a soldier in Homers Iliad, whose philosophical words might just
be an epitaph for this entire, ruin-riddled land. "The race of man
is like the leaves of a tree," he says. "You look one way, and
the wind blows them to the ground. You look the other, and spring returns.
It gives birth to the new, makes green the forest. Thus one race departs,
and another is born
"
Back on board the boat, the Italians had convinced Serhan to seek out
a harbour where they had heard decent gelato was sold.
"Antonio!"
"Giorgio?"
"Why are you so busy with old stones? It is not healthy."
The next day, we eased into Kas pronounced cash a once-quiet
sponge-divers town that now resembled a budget Cote dAzur.
The waterfront proudly sported a new marina beneath palm trees; cafes
crowded the plazas with flower strewn tables. ("The Italian verdict
on the chocolate gelato: "molto bene.") The streets were full
of Turkish carpet vendors, plus a mock-Greek temple advertising Aphrodite
Jewellery. But you could turn a corner in Kas and be faced with a 19th-century
world of smoky dives packed with Turkish men always men
sipping hot tea from slender glasses, playing backgammon, and puffing
on sweet tobacco through gurgling water pipes. At dusk the air became
heavy with the scent of lamb kabobs on fragrant wood fires and alive with
the wail of a Muslim muezzin drifting across the harbour.In fact, Kas
straddled the Asian-European divide in a way that seemed distinctively
Turkish just as the Amazon Solos four-person crew did. On
the conservative side were the deckhand Marem, a cherubic carpenter from
the Black Sea who had recently taken a wife in an arranged Islamic marriage;
and the cook,the somber, inscrutable Imdat, as animated as a ships
figurehead, who looked like he should really be wearing a fez and long
robes. On the Western side of the spectrum there was Captain Mustafa
habitue of every late-night bar in the Mediterranean whose designer
T-shirts and eyewear made him appear more European than the Europeans.
And there was also the unflappable Serhan, a former shipping agent in
his late 30s, who looked as if hed be as comfortable living in London
or New York as in Istanbul.After dark I accompanied Serhan on his social
rounds in Kas. The town, so somnolent by day was now humming with activity,
shops ablaze with lights as if Noel Baba was expected any moment. The
sidewalks were piled with antiques and pyramids of fluorescent pink Turkish
sweets. Next to French restaurants serving nouvelle cuisine, huge sides
of meat were being carved in the open, and the bars kept pounding out
classic rocknroll.It took the Amazon Solo only 15 minutes
to motor from Turkish Kas to the Greek island of Kastellorizon, and two
hours for Serhan to arrange the paperwork a comment on the sorry
state of official relations ever since the bloody wars of the early 1920s,
which resulted in forced population exchanges between the two countries.
Unofficially, however, at least on Kastellorizon, the Greeks and the Turks
behave more like rival siblings than angry nations. Mustafa made the mistake
of leaving the Turkish flag flying above the Greek one, and the islands
harbourmaster triumphantly sent him scurrying up the mast to change it.
"Up with the Greek flag!" he cheered. "Down with the Turkish!"
Kastellorizon, about 80 miles from Rhodes, is the most isolated of all
Greek islands. This remoteness has not been without its benefits: Ignored
for decades, it may well be the most picturesque island in the Mediterranean.
As we sailed in toward the row of pastel buildings lining the waterfront,
old men flicked their worry beads and fed fish scraps to cats, luridly
painted fishing boats bobbed at anchor, bougainvillea framed the weathered
blue tables of the tavernas. At the only café, a grandmotherly
woman named Angela, dressed all in black, gave me a pomegranate to go
with my Greek coffee in the middle of the afternoon.
"I didnt know Greek islands like this still existed",
marvelled Caroline, one of my shipmates. "It looks like a film set."
"Looks?" Giorgio shook his head at our ignorance. "Eh!
Pellicola italiana: An Italian movie. Academy Award, 1991. Very, very
beautiful."
He was talking about Mediterraneo, a film about a handful of Italian soldiers
stranded on a Greek island during World War 11. When the producers needed
a location that hadnt changed since 1942, they were delighted to
find Kastellorizon. Today, with fewer than 300 inhabitants, it still looks
like a vintage postcard although a bevy of Greek-Australians have
returned here in recent years, restoring old family houses and bringing
new life to the place.The back alleys of the village zigzagged toward
a medieval fortress above the harbour. There, two Greek soldiers sat by
a pillbox, their shirts off in the sun, nibbling a picnic of olives and
tzatziki and waiting for a Turkish invasion. Five hundred whitewashed
steps farther, at the peak of the island, the wreck of an Orthodox monastery
was being guarded by goats. And at dusk, instead of the lonely wail of
a muezzin, church bells tolled over the streets far below. And yet
you could never tell this to a Greek or Turk to an outside observer,
the similarities between the two countries were more striking than their
differences. After dark the waterfront became an outdoor living room,
with TV sets propped up on tables, all tuned to a soccer match in Athens.
Sea bass and octopus were being barbecued on grills, and glasses filled
with ice-cold retsina. Sounds of a swing band from a passing yacht added
Glenn Miller to the party atmosphere"You know, if the population
of this island falls below 200 people," Serhan challenged the Greek
taverna owner, "by treaty it reverts to Turkish control!"
"Only if you come with lots of guns!" said the Greek, laughing.
"G-o-o-o-a-l!" cried the Italians, glued to the TV.
The next day , we navigated remoter straits to Gokkaya Bay, where the
landscape became more unearthly by the hour. Until now, the Lycian mountains
had seemed oddly familiar, even vaguely Californian. But here the coast
became brittle and rocky. Twisted claws of stone emerged from the water.
Jagged islets seemed to rise and fall with the tides no wonder
Greek sailors considered them the barbs of Poseidons trident. It
was as though wed entered an ancient water maze, with a million
coves hidden from the rest of the world. To my relief and the mortification
of the Italians even cell phones couldnt pick up signals
in Gokkaya Bay.It was in this lost world that I finally fell into the
rhythm of the Blue Voyage. Id wake in the still of dawn and set
off by kayak, listening to delirious birds as the sun rose through the
mist. Around me flying fish leaped out of the placid water. Then, after
a Homeric breakfast of honey and feta cheese, Id tackle a modest
excursion snorkelling over Lycian ruins, say, or hiking to an unexcavated
Lycian site where sarcophagi protruded from the pale soil. Id come
across scenes that recalled Ottoman era paintings: a quail hunter,
his rusted antique carbine slung over his shoulder, wandering with his
dog; a young Muslim man and his fiancee sitting in silence by the water,
the girls mother perched on a rock higher up, watching them like
a hawk. The climax of each day was the Dionysian, three-hour lunch. Although
Giorgio always insisted on his bowl of pasta, Imdat would lay out Turkish
specialities a succulent egg-plant dish called "the Holy Man
Swoons," lamb kafta, green beans in garlic, herbed yoghurt.Each course
was washed down with bountiful infusions of cold white wine, the full
glassed sparkling like diamonds in the warm sun, their contents slowly
but surely dissolving any afternoon plans. I would end up reclining on
pillows like a pasha feeling, in fact, not unlike Dionysus himself.
There was still one ritual left to perform. On our last day, under the
rising moon, Corrado announced that the moment had come to open his 1898
wine. By now anticipation had reached fever pitch. We examined the faded
label, which announced that this sauterne was an after dinner favourite
of the King of Spain. We crowded about Corrado as he peered at the cork
and smelled the bouquet. We watched in anticipation as he considered the
viscosity and measured the precious liquid into 14 glasses, half an inch
in each. To think that when this was bottled, in 1898, Cezanne and Toulouse-Lautrec
were exhibiting in the salons, a new Strauss composition was premiering,
and Chekhovs Seagull was opening in Moscow.It was a touching Europhile
moment except that Asia stole the show. As we stood on deck, the
Turkish coast glistened in silver moonlight. The Milky Way the
ancient Greek pathway to heaven swirled into eternity. Giorgio
made a toast: "Guarda che luna," he proclaimed, sweeping his
arm to encompass the wonders of Gokkaya Bay. "Guarda che mare."
Behold what a moon. Behold what a sea.How did the wine taste? To be honest,
like a $1.99 sherry. But nobody cared. East and West had joined once again
on the Turquoise Coast, and the afterglow was delicious.
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