As always
when living in a big city the passage of time led to an intimacy with the
place, with the result that finer and finer details were gradually noticed in
familiar districts, a bit like peeling away the layers of an onion to reveal
hitherto unseen aspects. So it was with Istanbul . Every day I
noticed new things, like oversized street dogs fat from chips and kebabs lounging
listlessly on the pavements, pedestrians literally stepping over them; the
small boy or old lady tenderly placing a handful of cat biscuits on a street
corner; the shoeshine men; the elderly woman sitting on the cold floor of the
underpass selling her hand knitted woollen socks ready for winter; the immense
cruise ships like apartment buildings moored on the quay, the rubbish boats
sucking up the debris from the Golden Horn, the Syrian beggars with their
sleeping babies huddling by the air-vents to keep warm, the ever-present riot
police strutting pompously, guns cocked and water cannon at the ready. Such was
the tapestry of life in Istanbul .
As ever
though, it was refreshing to get out of the city. So one weekends in October we decided to
visit the Black Sea coast. Only a little over an hour out of Istanbul by
a combination of metro and bus, our destination was Rameli Feneri, a seemingly
insignificant fishing village where the Bosphorus empties into the black sea
overlooking a harbour shielding the fishing boats from the choppy Black Sea
waters. We found a Turkish coffee in a cafe and gazed at the tankers trundling
back and forth. The town played a fairly
significant role in history, the lighthouse being built by the French during
the Crimean war – there is a separate lighthouse on the opposite side of the
Bosphorus – to guard this strategically important access to Istanbul .
The coast
is rugged and reminded me of North Cornwall
with rocky headlands backed by sandy pine forests. Our plan was the walk along the coast, a plan
which was thwarted slightly by the fact that the road led through a beach
resort – private and, in autumn, stubbornly closed. Rows of empty chalets, forlorn sports pitches
and unused beach umbrellas brought to mind the holiday parks popular in 1960s Britain . Undeterred we forged off on forest paths to
find an inland route to our destination, Uzunya beach where miraculously the
restaurant was open for lunch, overlooking the chilly sea and the coarse sandy
beach. It’s worth adding that the forest
was deserted and beyond the firebreak tracks, impenetrable, and even if it
seems unbelievable that an hour out of a city of 14.6 million people that there
could be wolves or bears living in the forest, I would still like to know what
left a paw-print a good six inches in length…..
Back in Istanbul , one weekend saw me visiting the intriguing Museum of Innocence . Fans of the Turkish author Orhan Pamuk will
know this as the title of his most famous book and the museum occupies the
former home of the man who was the inspiration for this book. The author tells the story of this man’s obsession
with a young Turkish girl, which led to him collecting items such as pepper
pots or spoons pilfered from the family home, along with the butts of every cigarette
she ever smoked in his presence – which are all preserved in the museum. No doubt it may have made more sense to have
read the book first, but as a microcosm of life in Turkey in the 1960s and 1970s it is
a veritable time capsule, not to mention a slightly spooky and unsettling
place.