Monday, December 14, 2015

the beat goes on … 2015


Was I tempting fate with my tongue-in-cheek pessimist's view of life in last year's xmas news? Maybe, because this year really has been a challenge.

First the good news: We were so happy to celebrate our 30th wedding anniversary - some kind of miracle! We celebrated with two weeks in North Queensland (Daintree, Mission Beach and Magnetic Island). It was also our 25th anniversary of living in this beautiful part of the world, and (unbelievably!) the 35th year of my working at UNSW.
Early in the year we found out that both Chris and I had work selected for the Hazelhurst Art on Paper Award - a feat that has become much harder to achieve as the profile of the prize has risen. As well, a portrait that I made of Chris was selected for the Olive Cotton Award, a major biennial photo prize based in Northern NSW. Not the eventual winners, but this was a good start to a year when I planned to take time off to focus on artistic endeavours. This hasn't gone to plan, of which more later!
So, Dan having bravely given up his games art day job, he and his team in Auckland are now full-time indie developers, living on 2 minute noodles, and planning to release their first game early in 2016 - look out for Swordy!
Sam is still plugging away at his engineering job that has had him frequently travelling to various parts of regional Victoria over the year - he is looking forward to taking a leap into some international travel next year, when he will go with Leisa for her work in the UK factory of the digital textile printing company she works for, then for some exploration of the cafés of Europe. We are hoping to meet up with them in London in June, as I amazingly won airfares for Chris and I to fly over to catch up with Chris's brother Bob!
Will this plan work out? I am nervous because this year for Chris has been one of escalating health problems with a recurring lip cancer. For now – the recovery is slow but the prognosis seems good. This forced us to return early from our long-planned trip to Japan, derailed my leave plans, and has now made our retirement plans rather more urgent (well, I admit I don't need too much encouragement). So it may be that next year will see us drop out of our long-held day jobs to resume a bohemian and creative life style. Another impetus is my big birthday in February, which will be celebrated (fingers crossed!) at a small music festival on the banks of the Murray River, followed by a few days on a houseboat.
While Chris has been on sick leave since September, I have been on long-service leave from my job. While it's not exactly how I planned to spend my leave, it's been fortuitous that I am around to support Chris in a relatively stress-free environment. We have been quite reclusive, and I have avoided other commitments and anything resembling work over this period, but somehow there is still not enough time in the day for all the things I plan to do … While Chris has been adding to his archive of offbeat videos and soundscapes, I have occupied myself with domestic therapy like gardening and cake-baking, and a new-found addiction to Antiques Roadshow ("You know you are getting old when …").
I did recently manage to take a week off to visit the family in Adelaide to commemorate what would have been Kates's 40th birthday, and to spend a few days away with Mum in the Grampians - you can read more about it in my blog. And with Chris on the road to recovery, we plan a brief camping trip on the way to Adelaide to meet up with the boys and family for Christmas.
Love to all, and best wishes for smooth sailing in the new year.
Belinda (and family) xx

North Queensland photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/belindaallen/albums/72157662089129561
Dan’s team: http://frogshark.com/ and Swordy game http://swordygame.com/

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Japan - the best laid plans

Chris and I - last day in Japan, in Nara - more photos here

Tues 1 Sept: Sydney – Kyoto

It seemed for several days last week that we might be unable to travel. The shock of Chris’s recurring cancer was overlaid with weariness at the idea of having to cancel everything. But at last the surgeon approved scheduling the operation following our return, so at 4am this morning, off we went.

4.15am – The taxi arrived promptly at S&M’s where we stayed overnight, and we arrived at the airport with time to spare.
9am – arrived in Cairns and had to retrieve our bags to transfer to the Osaka flight. Waited for 30 minutes in a queue at Departures only to find that there is a separate International terminal for our departure – poor signage! A few moments of panic before finding that we still had time to check-in for the flight.
11am – 5pm – Flight to Osaka. Reading, crosswords and sudoku (we didn’t purchase the entertainment pack!).

Kyoto neighbourhood
5pm-7pm – Kansai Airport Immigration Control has the longest queue I can remember. EVER! 90 minutes, then Customs, withdraw cash, buy rail tickets, exchange rail passes, board the Kansei to Kyoto Express (Hanuka) at 7.15pm – Phew!!
8.30pm – Kyoto at night is bright, warm and crowded. I think that we can walk to the guesthouse so we set off. The streets become progressively less crowded and no-one recognises the address … We admit that we are lost and find a taxi that seems to have arrived from the 1960s and after some head-scratching and GPS wrangling we find ‘Fujitaya’.

9.15pm – Fujitaya is tiny, in a neighbourhood of tiny wooden cottages. Koho welcomes us and we find our tiny room next to the tiny bathrooms ($104). Check-in, then head out to local (tiny) restaurant – Okonomiyaki Miki - which does traditional vegetable pancakes and other BBQ dishes (we have scallops with spinach), washed down with cold beer as we sit at the counter and watch the cooks do their stuff – aaaah …
10.30pm - Tiny room has futons, aircon and no sheets, but is comfortable enough. A long day …

Wed 2 Sept – Kyoto II

Rustic shopfront
Whatever you think Japan is going to be, seems that it’s different. Not so modern – more retro. Not so robotic – more rustic. At least in this town ... Unmistakably an Asian city, but without the chaos. It seems so civilized. Everyone is so polite. Not much English spoken, but Western influences everywhere.

The first thing that happened today, when I finally got online, was finding out that our AirBnb apartment was cancelled - all apologies but no reason given. Damn! We are supposed to check in today! The guesthouse we are staying in has no vacancy, so I trawl AirBnb and find an apartment near the river in South Higashiyama, a few km south of the previous booking ($140/night). OK! It’s booked!

Kyoto Museum
We walk over to the station area to do some shopping – a SIM for my phone, a HDD for video files, toiletries, reading glasses. We get everything at BIC Camera – a veritable superstore (it also has a great liquor section)! Then pick up our bags and hail one of the retro taxis for a lift to the new flat. Same routine of scratching head and driving in decreasing circles. We have the Japanese address this time so it’s not a language thing – it’s a Japanese address thing! Finally find the flat and check-in – it’s smaller than we thought, and the tiny ‘balcony’ is crammed with washing machine and aircon unit. But the location is good, between Kyoto station and Gion, close to the Kyoto Museum.

Maiko makeovers - and selfie stick
In the afternoon we walk via the museum (amazing new building, fabulous room of Buddhist statuary, no photos!) up to Gion (busy! Hundreds of fake-Geisha-Maiko makeovers!), over to Minami-za Theatre to pick up our booked tickets for the Kabuki (box office closed! Damn!) and back down the river to our apartment.
Tenryu-ji garden with umbrellas
In avoiding the restaurants of touristy-Gion we seem to avoid all of them – it’s certainly slim pickings in our local neighbourhood (seems that many are closed on Wednesdays). We pick up supplies to cook at home at the local ‘Family Mart’ and then spot a tiny eatery near the flat – two tables and ½ dozen menu items, mainly okonomiyaki (again). We try tempura (deep fried gristly bits of meat – a far cry from real tempura) and a noodle/pork pancake (ok, but not a patch on last night). Oh well, it’s local and inexpensive, but mediocre food (2 out of 3).

Thu Sept 3 – Kyoto III

Bamboo grove tourists
Out of the city to Arashiyama Bamboo Grove. A gloomy day, I finally buy an umbrella, and then get maps and directions from the tourist office at amazing Kyoto station. Just a 15 minute train ride, than 15 minute walk via Tenryu-ji temple (lovely garden!). It starts to rain. There are a thousand tourists! And tourist shops! The little girls (and sometimes their boyfriends too) dressed up as Maiko are a little pathetic in the rain, but seem to be having fun anyway. We find a reasonable noodle restaurant for lunch (udon with duck) and wait for the rain to stop. It doesn’t. Squelch our way with new umbrella to the bamboo forest. It’s lovely in the misty drizzle, or would be if not packed with tourists in raincoats and umbrellas. It’s a laugh really. The minute we get back to the train station the rain stops!

Kyoto tower from the station
Back in Kyoto, we spend time checking out the impressive modern station building, with 15 floors, restaurants and skywalk. Kyoto is a funny mix of old and quaint, modern and ugly, super-modern and monumental. Much of the modern architecture is 1960-s to 80s – Japan’s economic heyday – and has a shabby Jetson’s feel.

Kyoto station
Tonight we cook the supermarket food we bought – noodles, steak, spinach, mushrooms and eggs. With a little sweet teriyaki sauce it is yummy.

Fri 4 Sept – Kyoto IV

Our last day in Kyoto and time to bite the bullet for some temple visits. The south Higashiyama route:

  • Sanjusangen-do, just around the corner. It’s early when we get there so not crowded. The garden is somewhat unkempt, but the drawcard is the enormous hall with 1001 statues of the Buddhist goddess of mercy. Like many other locations – no photos!
    View from Kyomizura-dera
  • Kiyomizura-dera – the tourist shops lining the pathway up to the temple warn of its popularity. It is crawling, teeming, with visitors of all and every kind. We look briefly around and check out the view, but are not enticed inside.
  • The quaint laneways of Sannen-zaka and Ninen-zaka are pretty but likewise infested, lined with ice cream shops, teahouses and gift shops. We stop for a green tea ice, then into the less populated detour of Ishibei-koji. From there to Kodai-ji temple – surprisingly quiet and with a lovely garden and bamboo grove.
  • Chion-in is apparently the temple that attracts more pilgrims than any other, and certainly the ranked tour buses don’t inspire. The complex is dominated by what looks like a giant warehouse or hangar – turns out that it houses the main hall in the process of reconstruction. The gateway is certainly grand. We have a look around, but don’t pay to enter the temple buildings.
  • Just a few minutes north is Shoren-in. It is a modest temple with a gorgeous garden, and just a handful of visitors. We love this place and spend quite a while exploring.

Shoren-in temple garden
We run out of time to visit Ginkaku-ji, Nanzen-ji and the Path of Philosophy in north Higashiyama, let alone Fushimi-Inari, because we have to be at Minami-za for Kabuki!

Gion laneway
Retrieving our tickets from the machine without problems (so civilized!), we head into the historic theatre. It’s delightfully retro, like so much else in Kyoto, laid out in steep tiers as a traditional opera theatre. The play is ‘Arashi no Yoru ni (One Stormy Night)’ based on a well-known children’s story of a friendship between a wolf and a goat. It’s marvellously done, although of course we understand nothing. And again – no photos allowed. All parts including female are played by males (reminiscent of the gender swapping in traditional English pantomime).

After 2 hours there is a third interval, and we feel we have had enough, and head out to find Kisui bar, recommended in LP. After walking in circles for some time we find a handwritten note pinned to a door to say that it closed earlier in the year.
Agedashi tofu
But there is a restaurant upstairs where we have lovely agedashi tofu, and prawn cutlets accompanied by the ubiquitous mayonnaise (this time on a coleslaw-style salad).

Sat 5 Sept – Kyoto – Hiroshima

Chris is anxious about his cancer and wants to go home. We try to call the hospital, but it is Saturday. I try to check flight availability but the website isn’t working. We decide to leave it for the weekend and try again on Monday.

Exhibit at the Peace museum, Hiroshima
Heading for Hiroshima, we buy sandwiches and snacks for lunch at a bakery in the station. The branding suggests a whole grain, healthy vibe, but the products are pure white bread and sugar. The train is super fast and comfortable, but our allocated seats are right at the front of the carriage with limited view, so we spend the time seat hopping, to the consternation of the conscientious conductor.

After checking in at K’s House hostel (tiny room + ensuite, $90), we take the tram to the Peace park and Peace museum. The museum is old-fashioned in presentation, but it is an effective mix of factual history, science and human stories. Harrowing. And a reminder that such experiences (albeit non-nuclear) continue in the world today. There are several other memorials, notable the A-Bomb Dome, the dramatic remains of an early C20th industrial building that is now the icon of the city and its history.

Peace dome, Hiroshima
For dinner, we had thought of checking out an oyster restaurant on the river, but concerned that it may be expensive, we look up nearby Tempura Tenkou, that has great reviews. If I read the reviews more closely I would have realised that it, too, is quite pricy. Still, it looks elegantly authentic so we decide to treat ourselves. It’s excellent, fresh tempura (the prawns are swimming in a tank in the kitchen), and the final rice/soup course is also delicious. With 2 beers, it’s almost Y10,000, more than double the price of any other meal. It’s a pity the service doesn’t quite match the quality of the food (and the price).

Sunday 6 Sept – Naoshima

Sushi bento!
The more I thought about it, the more worried I was about going to Miyajima on a Sunday – surely it would be packed with tourists? So changed the plan to Naoshima- the ‘art island’, of interest to the artistically inclined rather than the regular herd. Also quite a bit harder to get to: train to Okayama, two local trains, then ferry. It takes half the day, but we are there in the early afternoon, after eating our sushi ‘bento’ boxes on the ferry.

The Yayoi Kusama Pumpkin at Naoshima
Wow, the cottage on the beach (at Tsutsuji-so Lodge) is lovely – a simple but classy (and large!) Japanese room with paper screens, tatami and futons. The ensuite has the biggest bath I’ve seen! ($120 with bf).

We hit the museums – Chichu, Lee Ufan and Benesse House, all designed by architect Tadao Ando. The buildings are certainly amazing, much more than bland art houses – they are the art and the artistic contents are their complement. The art itself is of high quality although spread somewhat thin (when compared to European museums). But the buildings themselves - in combination with nature, weather and art – are the point. The tour of the museums is certainly interesting, as is the price tag – around $100 for the two of us to visit 3 museums over 3 hours. Feeling rather like poor rellos come to take a glimpse of how the cultural elite live. Unfortunately, the other face of art in Naoshima – the Art House Project – we are not able to visit (time, weather, closed Mondays). That project sounds more accessible to mere mortals.

Our beachfront cottage at Tsutsuji-so Lodge
Back at our lovely cottage we find that we cannot eat dinner at Tsutsuji-so without booking 2 days ahead, but we are given directions to Umikko restaurant in nearby Honmura village, More onomiyaki pancakes! In fact the signature pancake with seafood and noodles is fine – sweet and smoky – although the accompanying grilled garfish is (unexpectedly) made from dried fish, so very chewy. It’s a ten minute walk back on a balmy evening. I try for a bath but can’t get the hot water working (doh! there's a switch to turn on the heater!), so after a cool splash we sit on the deck and drink sake, watching the myriad ships on the Inland Sea.

Mon 7 September: Naoshima – Nara

Me! at Guesthouse Sakuraya, Nara
After an early breakfast (in the boarding school-style café) we call Chris’s surgeon. They agree to try and reschedule his operation and we will call later to confirm. But first – to Nara: 1. Ferry, 2. Train to Chayamachi, 3. Train to Okayama, 4. Train to Shin-Osaka, 5. Train to Tennoji, 6. Train to Nara. Thank goodness for the Hyperdia website, and the efficiency of JR!

Chris in Nara, with the essentials - vidcam and umbrella!
From Nara JR it’s a 20 minute walk to the tiny and charming Guesthouse Sakuraya in Naramachi district ($120 with bf). Our hostess Kayoko is bubbly and welcoming. But our first task is to sort out Chris’s surgery and our return trip. The op is scheduled for Friday 11th, we fly back on Tues 8th. Tomorrow! Amazingly easy via Skype and wi-fi to arrange everything.

Nara pagoda and lake by night
Our fate is arranged, and we go for a walk around the district, which is somewhat Paddington-esque with funky shops and cafés. The nearby temple complex is closed, but we can walk around the area, see pagodas and the lake (turtles!). We check out some recommended local restaurants. One is closed, one looks a bit touristy, the last is a local izakaya with no English sign – perfect! Izakaya is a Japanese 'bar and tapas', and in fact we have probably the best meal of our trip – sashimi, tempura, endmame, skewers of veg and meat, green tea soup with rice, and a weird marinated squid dish with tiny raw squid. The total cost, including 3 beers, is around $20 each – one of our cheapest meals as well as the best!

Deer and tourists at Todai-ji temple
Back at the guest house we drink sake and chat to a young Parisian couple who are keen to visit Australia – “but it is so far away!” Yes, we know. Our futon beds have been made and we settle down for a final night.

Tuesday 8 Sept – Nara

Best. breakfast. ever.
So, we will miss out tonight on the laboriously organized Shojoshin-in temple stay at Koyasan. And will have to pay 100% cancellation. But other bookings (Takayama, Tokyo) have been more easily cancelled and will be refunded. Now my consolation is a whole day to explore Nara. (And, incidentally, have the best breakfast ever at Sakuraya!)

Giant Buddha at Todai-ji
We head off in the rain to see Nara Park, where the main temple sites are – Todai-ji Buddhist temple, and Kasuga Taisha Shinto shrine. But it is the walk through Nara Park that is truly stunning – tame deer, prehistoric trees, avenues of stone lanterns …
Forest of lanterns at Kasuga
Todai-ji temple is enormous and the huge bronze Buddha inside genuinely awe-inspiring. The forest of lanterns surrounding Kasuga Shrine is unbelievable picturesque. Isuien Garden is closed, so we explore nearby Yoshikien, which is lovely (and free for foreign visitors!). Nara Park is an amazing place that we can’t really do justice to in half a day.

Chris in the Yoshikien Garden
Rather damp, we head back to the malls for food and some last minute shopping. After some hunting we find a cheap ramen bar – great! But … you get what you pay for and the soups are not impressive.
Yum! plastic food in Nara shopping mall
Quick supermarket dash for some Japanese whisky (Nikka Yoshi and Miyagikyo, Suntory Chita – all single malt), but can’t in our rush find any nice (affordable) ceramics. There is no time to browse, or check out the funky, vintage shops that look so cool. Grab our bags, then another wet walk to the station to connect to the airport express. Fortuitously, we find some small rustic dishes with stoneware glaze at a street stall on the way – my one souvenir.

The trip to the airport and checking in all goes smoothly – we have plenty of time. It’s a long overnight flight (we get the entertainment pack this time!), and a five hour wait in Cairns for the Sydney flight. Then, at last we are home – one week ahead of schedule, and with a gruelling period of surgery and recovery ahead of us. I so hope that we can return another time.
View from RPA hospital at dawn - before Chris's surgery
See more photos on my Flickr page

Thursday, December 25, 2014

not the news ... 2014

So many friends tell me that they are sickened by the relentless good news of the annual newsletter – so, to reassure you all that life for us is far from perfect, here is the bad news … 

We had planned a holiday to New York and New Orleans, but damn, those airfares were expensive! Impetuously we decided to go to India, in midsummer. Wow, hot! We focused on Kashmir as it’s the coolest in summer, but it was still pretty relentlessly dry and hot, not to mention the altitude, and Chris developed a respiratory infection from the dust. We still got some pretty cool photos though, check them here. Did I mention the altitude? The only relief that Chris got from vertigo while travelling over the highest roads in the world was to take lots of videos – you can see some of them here.

Sam is still plugging away at his fairly boring engineering job – somehow he had to get the money together for he and Leisa to visit Vietnam. Leisa was struck with the travellers’ curse, and got a nasty respiratory infection while they were away. I think they managed to avoid food poisoning though. Leisa has graduated from her textile design course and has a job in a textile printery, where they pay her almost nothing because creative people like doing it for free, don’t they? Maybe Sam and Leisa will finally realise their dream of opening a café, where they can work 24/7 doing fairly menial work, because cooking is the new rock and roll! 

Dan is over his job too, doing art for a video game company in NZ, their corporate values are not to his liking. So he has quit, and is currently unemployed – well, except for working for nothing on his indie game project (because creative people like doing it for free, don’t they?). The game has done quite well at a recent expo in Melbourne though … 

Chris and I did have our exhibition planned for this year, in June coinciding with Chris’s 65th birthday, combining lots of the photos we have taken in remote (and less remote) places, with books, book pages and … some other stuff we found. Didn’t sell much, but that’s because creative people like doing it for free, don’t they? You can see the exhibition here and here

While on long-service leave this December, we have been camping along the Victoria and NSW coast. The weather was terrible while we were in Geelong visiting Mark & Rosie, cleared up briefly while we were in Melbourne, rained again, cleared again … it only took 3 days for Chris to stop saying “Why are we camping? You know I hate camping!” and begin to enjoy himself just in time to come home. While we were away, an electrician who did some work on our meter box neglected to turn the power back on so … well, suffice to say that the fridge and freezer were quite empty for the first few days at home. 

So, the long-service leave is really relaxing … NOT! What with packing up for camping, actually camping, coming home and getting organized for xmas, having Mandy and family visiting, my friend Sarah from France, letting out our airbnb studio, and Mum and Dad between xmas and new year I wonder how I ever have time for my job. Sadly, I do have to go back to work in February … 

And by the way, don’t even mention politics! 

Hope your year has been just as eventful ☺ 
With love
Belinda (and family) xx 

Kashmir photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/belindaallen/sets/72157646176168782/ 
Chris’s videos: http://vimeo.com/christopherlawrie/videos 
Leisa’s textiles website: http://www.creaturetextiles.com/ 
Dan’s indie game: http://frogshark.com/2014/11/swordy-pax-aus-press
Our exhibition: https://belindaallen.wordpress.com/exhibitions/recovering-roots/ and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obPI1_zw8ik
Where we went camping: https://www.google.com.au/maps/@-36.55724,147.751135,7z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!6m1!1szI0IwEw4owPs.khIaAwo0aSvE 
Belinda web portfolio: http://belindaallen.wordpress.com/ 
Chris web portfolio: http://www.users.on.net/~designart/historyofsalt/index.htm

Saturday, September 15, 2012

at last ...

the photos are in flickr! take a packed lunch ;)

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Istanbul or bust ...

Major train engineering works mean that our sleeper from Bucharest to Istanbul was cancelled, so we arrive by plane. It's only a one hour flight, but from leaving our hotel for the airport, to arriving at our hotel in Istanbul takes 7 hours - almost as long as the train. We eventually arrive in Gulhane (Sultanahmet area) about 8pm and book into the hotel restaurant for dinner. It's a lucky choice - a roof terrace with lovely food and service - chicken with pomegranate, lamb with chestnut and cranberry, and some amazing eggplant and goat cheese fritters.

We have 6 days here, maybe some time to relax?
First we walk to the waterfront at Eminonu - it's a bit of a shock: hot and chaotic with cars, buses and trams going everywhere. We also check out the nearby train station at Sirkeci - it's a lovely old station, but almost deserted with so many trains not running. Sultanahmet, the area where the main historical and cultural sites are located, is a five minute walk in the other direction from our hotel, and most of the places we'd like to go are close by, or a short tram ride away.

Unfortunately Chris's virus is still bugging him, so we will have to take it easy. First up - Ayasofya, where we learn of its fascinating history first as a Byzantine Christian basilica, then Roman Catholic cathedral, before conversion to a mosque after the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in the 15th C, and finally to a museum. It is certainly an amazing and evocative building. Then a look around the Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum - a rich repository of artifacts: manuscripts, ceramics, sculptures and particularly carpets. Too tired now for the Blue mosque, we seek out a local restaurant of good repute. Turns out it is right opposite the hotel we will be moving to on the following day, and is a sister restaurant to the one we ate at last night. The menu is similar, the wine list identical, and again we have a lovely meal, the highlight being a seafood stew.

No trip is complete without a visit to the Grand Bazaar, and the Spice Bazaar, and the quirky local shopping alleys in between (shop mannequins, handguns, boys circumcision day outfits …). The Grand Bazaar is surprisingly spacious and cool, although busy. Of course I am not planning to buy anything, but of course I do. The rental at the Grand Bazaar is famously extortionate, and therefore it's not the best place for a bargain, but still I emerge with a shoulder bag, some soap, a scarf and a small rug. I would really like to buy some plates and tiles, but the sellers are so aggressive that it scares me off. Chris does somewhat better with some bargains outside the bazaar - nice leather sandals and a shirt. We decide to drop off our purchases and check into our new hotel before going on to Eminonu for one of the famous fish sandwiches, purchased freshly cooked from a moored boat, and consumed sitting on a small plastic stool - delicious!
For dinner, we walk to the waterfront at Eminonu again, seeking a cheapie with a view. Hamdi, apparently a waterfront institution, has its top floors booked out for Ramadan, but we can get a table on the first floor. The view is minimal from our table, the service perfunctory, and the kebab is dry.

Next adventure is to take the tram over the Bosphorus to the Istanbul Modern art gallery. It's in a beautifully converted warehouse and is an amazing gallery, with plenty to look at, including a potted history of Turkish art from 1900 to the present day, a collection of impressive international contemporary art, and a retrospective on the 'Urban Walls' of Burhan Doğançay. After a cup of tea in the gorgeous but pricy restaurant, we head for Taksim Square (a chaotic mess of traffic and buses), and walk down Istiklal Caddesi (a historic boulevard) to Galata Tower. Stop on the way for a beer and snack, and to check out Salt, a classy gallery with international conceptual art. Don't have luck finding a restaurant around Galata Tower, which is crowded with tourists, so we keep walking and pick up a pide (Turkish pizza). Walking back over the Galata Bridge to Eminonu we stop for a beer at one of the fish restaurants lining the bridge  - we will eat here another day.  And we do, on our final night, eat mezze and sardines with a view of the full moon rising over the Bosphorus.

Can you spot Chris at Ayasofya?
A Spice Bazaar shop
Istabul from the ferry
We also fit in -
  • Ferry ride up the Bosphorus to Anadolu Hisarı, almost at the Black Sea.
  • The serene Blue Mosque.
  • Topkapi Palace and the amazing Harem.
  • Performance of whirling dervishes at Sirkeci Station - this is the real deal, in an informal but beautiful space, with incredible acoustics. We are so close we can see their sweat and feel the wind from their whirling robes.
  • Istanbul Archaeological Museum(s) - vast and interesting, with substantial historical context and explanation given of objects on display. We learn much about the history of the places we have already seen. There is thunder just before we leave, and sure enough, we are caught in an incredible downpour and get soaked to the skin as we make our way back to the hotel for the car to the airport. 
It's been a rich and interesting visit, but we look forward to leaving the city and having one last stop - in a small town this time.

Blue Mosque domes
Beautiful corner of Topkapi Palace
Whirling dervishes at Sirkeci Station
Full moon over the Bosphorus
To arrive at Goreme we fly to Nevsehir Airport, then drive through Gulsehir and Nevsehir - the outskirts of Nevsehir are frightening - there are dozens of huge developments in the process of being built. Hotels? Tourist apartments? Finally we arrive at dusk at the fairytale chimneys of Goreme, which seems still small and charming. Our accommodation is in a small hotel/pension that is family operated. It's built around a 9th century Byzantine cave church, and the remains of arches and wall paintings can be seen. Our room is in the old kitchen, carved out from the rock, with many hollows and a large basin carved into it, which was originally for winemaking. It has just two tiny windows high in one wall for light and air, but the door opens onto a terrace with a view to the whole of Goreme. It's a lovely change from the comfortable but mostly quite bland hotels we have been staying in.

Flying in to Cappadocia
Breakfast on the terrace
Hotel entrance showing Byzantine church remnants
Our cave room
Moonrise over Goreme
The best way to see this area is to walk the valleys, but Chris is still recuperating and not able to do long walks. We walk around the 'open-air museum', a collection of frescoed cave churches and monastic dwellings that were Byzantine Christian sanctuaries until the Ottoman invasion. It's fascinating, but is enough walking for the day. We hoped to sample the home-cooked dinner that is offered by the hotel, but it is Ramadan and the ladies of the family are busy with cooking for the nightly feast at the Mosque. Oh well - we find some pide and kofte stew at the nearby takeaway and eat by moonlight on the terrace at home.

We have booked for a balloon flight so have to get up at 4.45 - ouch! But it is worth it as we float above the landscape, the rushing gas sounds like surf and the sun is rising over the horizon along with dozens of other balloons - stunning! We spend an hour skimming the tops of rocks and trees, then rising to 1500 metres, above the clouds. We see not only the amazing catacombs and valleys, but the neighbouring villages, workers in the apricot orchards, and the distant volcano, Mt Erciye, responsible so long ago for creating this surreal landscape. It is striking how every corner of the landscape is cultivated with vines and orchards between the rock formations.

There is a music festival on, and Seten, a nearby restaurant is hosting a concert. We manage to wrangle a table on the terrace with a good view of the stage and we listen to the Anatolia Ensemble playing traditional and contemporary Turkish classical music on Turkish kemençe and cello - it's captivating. And the food is pretty good too - we have the mezze platter which is lovely, and a beef kebab with garlic yoghurt and potatoes, which turns out to be slabs of steak sitting on chips bathed in yoghurt, a bit strange … but it's good enough for us to book again for the following night - when we eat dolmas (stuffed vegetables) with a smoky lamb and eggplant kebab. Seriously yummy!

Balloon over Cappadocia
Yikes! how high are we?
The ugliest souvenirs
Zelve landscape
Sunset over Goreme
Finally - we hire a scooter to explore the nearby villages. We check out Uchisar (pretty with lovely views, the ugliest souvenir stand ever), Ibrahimpasa (not sure they've ever seen a tourist. We try to get coffee or juice but no-one speaks English and everything is closed for Ramadan), Ortahisar (we meet Crazy Ali, who sells fresh orange juice from his souvenir/'antique' shop, and gives me autographed postcards and a small ceramic bowl after I agree to read some of his poetry), Urgup (large town with large hotels and busy roads - we get out asap), Zelve (amazing landscape but crawling with tour groups), Avanos (I finally get to buy some ceramics after avoiding the Istanbul sellers - not sure it's cheaper, but it's a nicer experience), and home via Cavusin.

A last drink of raki watching the sunset, then 6am wake-up, and at long last we are on the long flight home - Nevsehir - Istanbul - Singapore - Sydney. Back to work and winter, but looking forward to seeing our friends :)