| |
Sign up to receive our bareboat newsletter.
Enter your e-mail address:
|
 |
|
|
|
YACHT CHARTER TURKEY
Home to more than 20 different fascinating civilizations, Turkey has a 10,000 year-old heritage of which signs will for sure be on any route in addition to the coasts covered with pines on the shore or lined with jagged cliffs. Bodrum's imposing coastal fortress and 15th-century castle, Church of St. Nicholas, the Greco-Roman ruins of Olympos, the submerged ruins of Apelae and Kekova, Fethiye’s medieval fortress and Lycian cliff tombs, the sunken Roman bath at Batik, Loryma (bozuk kale) and Knidos are only some of them.
Surrounded by four different seas, Turkey is a beach paradise with over 8000 km of sunny strips of sand and 430 nautical miles of coast side. Turkey, a sea of options for sailing the Mediterranean and Aegean , is the home of unique sailing experience with its great number of bays, peninsulas, lagoons and lots of arms of the sea created by nature.
During the voyage in this heaven, there is no need of traveling far from the boat to taste traditional rich Turkish cuisine and buy hand made souvenirs. There are bays fronted by restaurants where souvenirs are also sold beside the delicious Turkish food and some of which can be only reached via sea. Even having warm house made organic bread in a breakfast at an isolated bay is not a dream. Local people from the surrounding villages come to those bays by a fishing boat with the sun rise to sell the bread just taken from stoves and the pastries, called Gozleme in Turkish, which cooked at those fishing boats.
The Sunshine, historical sites, fair wind for sailing, the turquoise crystal clear warm water for swimming, and fine cuisine: adding it all up makes Turkey the best spot for an unforgettable blue voyage vacation.
There is no doubt that one visit will not be enough, one extraordinary place will be discovered after another in each visit to Turkey in where Carians, Dorians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines and Ottomans all sailed once. One thing will be in common: the friendly people and strongly developed sense of hospitality in every harbor.
|
|
|
|
|