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Natural History Tours 
 
NATURAL HISTORY TOURS
19 Days / 18 Nights


Our Natural History Tours focus equally on the nature and the history of Turkey. 
The Anatolian peninsula has a variety of natural regions. Its fertile coastal 
strips are backed by steep mountain ranges that form an almost continuous rim 
around the vast, steppe-like plateau of central Anatolia, where our exploration 
begins. From the unique landscape of Cappadocia, we cross the mighty Taurus 
Mountains, then follow the Mediterranean and Aegean coasts to the Dardanelles. 
The tour begins with three nights in Istanbul, one of the great cities of 
history and our base to witness the phenomenal spectacle of the migration of 
raptors and storks. Soaring birds avoid long sea crossings, for they depend upon 
the thermals of warm air rising over land. Each spring and fall, therefore, 
hundreds and thousands pass over the narrow straits of the Bosporus.
DAY 1: ISTANBUL
Arrive to Istanbul Ataturk airport and transfer to your hotel. Afternoon explore 
Topkapi Palace, the magnificent palace of the Ottoman Sultans between the 16th 
and 19th centuries. The extensive exhibits include priceless world-class 
collections of jewellery, porcelain, textiles and costumes of the Sultans. A 
visit to the Harem quarters is an absolute highlight. Overnight Istanbul.
DAY 2:ISTANBUL
Bbegin the day with sightseeing, then spend part of the morning on Camlica Hill, 
which rises to 875 feet on the Asian shore of Istanbul, providing panoramic 
vistas of the great city and its surrounding waters. For the naturalist, the 
sightings of storks and raptors that cross the Bosphorus here in autumn are even 
more spectacular than the view. Up to 200,000 white storks, 6,000 black storks, 
13,000 buzzards, 9,000 honey buzzards, 5,000 levant sparrowh­awks, and many 
other species have been recorded on a single day. Raptor migration begins in 
midmorning, and we ourselves have seen 600 alpine swifts, 500 spotted eagles, 
and lesser numbers of a dozen other species on a single morning.
DAY 3: ISTANBUL
Start the day with the exploration of the city's cultural treasures. Itinerary 
includes the Basilica of Santa Sophia, built in the 6th century A.D. during the 
reign of Justinian; and the Suleymani­ye Camii or Mosque of Suleiman the 
Magnificent, built by Sinan in the 16th century. Other highlights are the land 
walls, the Golden Gate, and the Byzantine Kariye Camii (the former church of St. 
Saviour in Chora).
      DAY 4:ISTANBUL - ANKARA
      Rising early, fly to Ankara, Turkey's capital, situated in the center of 
      the vast, semi-arid plateau of Anatolia. Ankara is the country's 
      second-largest city, with a population of 2.5 million. It boasts a Roman 
      bath, the 1st-century Temple of Augustus, the 15th-century Haci Byram 
      Mosque, and the Mausoleum of Ataturk, completed in 1953. The city's oldest 
      quarter, the Citadel, is encircled ­by fortifications and built on a hill 
      that commands splendid views. Here stands the Museum of Anatolian 
      Civilizations, renowned for its collection of antiquities (all unearthed 
      in Turkey) from the Pale­olithic through the Classical Greek and Roman 
      periods. Assyrian cuneiform tablets, Hittite carved reliefs, and Lydian 
      gold jewelry and coins are among its treasures. After seeing the sights 
      and birding at Mogan Lake, overnight in Ankara

      DAY 5: ANKARA - CAPPADOCIA
      From Ankara, drive south, through the driest part of Anatolia. Pause at 
      small lakes where black-necked grebes, greeenshanks, ruffs, whiskered 
      terns and other birds might be seen. The route skirts the Tuz Golu (Salt 
      Lake), which is 50 miles long, 32 miles wide, and thought to be saltier 
      than the Dead Sea. At Aksaray, turn east, passing through gently rolling 
      country cultivated with wheat. In Cappadocia the land is covered with a 
      deep layer of tuff, a soft rock of solidified mud, ash, and lava that were 
      deposited millions of years ago by the now extinct volcanoes Erciyes Dagi 
      (12,848 ft; ancient Mt. Argaeus) and Hasan Dagi (10,672 ft). Afternoon we 
      visit Kaymakli, south of Nevsehir, to explore an underground city hewn 
      from the tuff. It was probably begun in the 6th century and completed in 
      the 10th and could accommodate several thousand people in its eight 
      subterranean levels. 

DAY 6: CAPPADOCIA
Investigate the area east of Nevsehir, where erosion of the tuff has created an 
amazing landscape of rock cones, pinnacles, and ravines. The cone is the most 
frequent form, and many are more than a hundred feet tall. Some are topped by 
basaltic caps, a remnant of the resistant layer which overlaid the tuff. These 
are known locally as peri bacalri, or fairy chimneys. Dwellings were carved from 
these rocks as long ago as 400 B.C., when Xenophon mentioned them in his 
Anabasis. Explore the famous rock chapels at Goreme and the monastic complex at 
Zelve.During Byzantine times more than a hundred churches, chapels, and 
monasteries were hewn out of the tuff. 
      DAY 7: CAPPADOCIA - MERSIN
      Drive to southeast, over the Topuzd­agi Gecidi (5,036 ft) and down a steep 
      escarpment to a great basin which shelters the Sultansa­zligi, or Sultan's 
      Marshes. On these vast, seasonally flooded salt flats, we should find 
      truly spectacular numbers of birds, wintering or in passage. Flocks of 
      greater flamingoes, spoonbills, ruddy shelduc­ks, black-tailed godwits, 
      and many other species of waterfowl and waders are possible. Continue 
      through a lovely landscape of villages, farms, and scenic rivers as we 
      head into the Taurus Mountains. These mountains, which roughly parallel 
      the Mediterranean coast of Turkey, reach their highest point in Ala Dag 
      (12,251 ft) at the eastern end of the range. Enroute lies Tarsus, one of 
      the great crossroads of history. Sennache­ri­b, Alexander, Pompey, and 
      Hadrian are among the conquerors who passed through Tarsus, which also 
      witnessed the first meeting between Cleopatra and Marc Antony and was the 
      birthplace of St. Paul. Observe how the flora on the hillsides changes to 
      a typical "gareque" flora as we come out of the mountains and approach the 
      sea. See black pine plantations, orange groves, and cotton fields on the 
      way to Mersin on the Mediterranean.

DAY 8: MERSIN - ANAMUR
Drive westward along the Mediterranean, reach the coast and the road clings to 
pine-clad slopes that plunge straight down to the azure sea.It is a coast 
studded with classical and medieval remains. At Korigos are two notable 
12th-century castles, one on the shore (incorporating a Roman triumphal arch) 
and the other on a small island. Twenty-three towers and turrets adorn the 
medieval castle at Silifke, which lies on the banks of the 150-mile-long Goksu 
River, one of very few rivers that originate in the Taurus. Along take 
opportunities to look for African monarch, clouded yellow, and other butterflies 
and to watch for ravens, Montagu's harrier, crested larks, squacco herons, 
golden orioles, and other avian species.
DAY 9: ANAMUR - ANTALYA
Drive westward along the Mediterranean resumes to Antalya, the ancient 
Pamphylia, whose cities shared the same general history as other Greek 
settlements in Asia Minor. Subjugated at various times by Lydians, Persians, and 
mainland Greeks, they were conquered by Alexander the Great, fought over by 
Alexander's successors, and subse­quently absorbed into the empires of the 
Romans, Byzantines, Seljuks, and Ottomans. On our route lie the ruins of two of 
Pamphylia's most important cities—Aspendos and Perge. Highlights among the 
remains are the 2nd-century Roman theater at Aspendos (reputedly the 
best-preserved theater of antiquity) and the stadium at Perge.
DAY 10: ANTALYA
An excursion inland, and upward, to Termessos National Park, where 16,600 acres 
of wilderness surround the still partly forest-covered ruins of the Lycian 
fortress-city Termessos, founded in the 3rd century B.C. Set in a rugged 
mountain valley at 5,400 feet, the site affords wonderful views of the Gulf of 
Antalya. Junipers, Aleppo pines, holly oaks, Spanish broom, pink mallow and sage 
are examples of the park's flora. A visit to Antalya's Archaeological Museum, 
which houses statues from Perge and Aspendos, completes the day 
DAY 11: ANTALYA - PAMUKKALE
Leave Antalya, turn north into the Aegean zone of western Anatolia, a region 
characterized by old, low mountain masses between which stretch the sunken 
plains of the Gediz (Hermus), Buyuk Menderes, and Kucuk Menderes (Scamander and 
Cayster) Rivers. Travel a scenic route via Termessos, Tefenni and Salda Golu 
(Salt Lake), where we pause to bird the marshes. Pamukkale, the "Fortress of 
Cotton." Three hundred feet high, Pamukkale rises abruptly from the plain, its 
white cliff face a dazzling array of stalactites that look like petrified 
cascades. These were, and are, being formed by lime-bearing streams that issue 
from a hot spring pool fed from the lower slopes of Cal Dagi. Atop this plateau 
stood the ancient city of Hierapolis, built in large part on the calcareous mass 
the streams deposited. Tour the ruins, which include remains from the 
Hellenistic, Roman, early Christian, and Byzantine periods.
DAY 12: PAMUKKALE - KUSADASI
Motor on through country lanes and villages to the ruins of Aphrodisias. 
Aphrodisias was an important cultural center sacred to Aphrodite in Greek and 
Roman times, but its prehistory dates back to the third millennium B.C. The 
well-preserved remains include public baths, a stadium that accommodated more 
than 60,000 people, a portion of the Temple of Aphrodite, and more. After 
touring the site, drive west to the port and resort town of Kusadasi, on the 
beautiful Aegean Sea.
      DAY 13: KUSADASI
      Devote the morning to Dilek Yarimadas National Park on the Dilek 
      Peninsula, investigating the Mediterranean "macchia" vegetation which, 
      with bay and chestnut trees, is the peninsula's prevalent flora. The 
      higher regions have red and black pines, and the park harbors lime trees 
      and certain oak species that are peculiar to the forests of northern 
      Anatolia. Seals and turtles breed along this stretch of the coast. After 
      lunch in Priene, tour Miletus, birthplace of the philosophers Thales and 
      Anasimander, and look for waterbirds, herons, and shorebirds at Bafa Golu.

 
DAY 14: KUSADASI - MANISA
From Kusadasi it is just a few miles north to the impressive remains of Ephesus, 
which was Ionian Asia Minor's most important city. Its wealth was proverbial, 
and its Temple of Artemis was considered one of the Seven Wonders of the World. 
Ephesus became an early center of Christianity, was visited by St. John and by 
St. Paul (who addressed an epistle to the Ephesians), and was the seat of the 
Council of Ephesus in 431 A.D. This ancient port now lies several miles from the 
sea, its harbor filled in by alluvium. Only one column of the Temple of Artemis 
has been re-erected, but there is much that is well preserved. Walk the marble 
paved Arcadian and Sacred Ways, admire the restored Library of Celsus and the 
Corinthian reliefs of the Temple of Hadrian, and stand in the Great Theater 
where St. Paul preached. In the afternoon motor north to the Cigli saltpans, to 
enjoy hundreds of flamingoes and a wealth of other waterbirds. Dalmatian 
pelicans are often seen here, along with herons, egrets, gulls, and terns. 
Continue through Izmir (ancient Smyrna), Turkey's third largest city (pop. 2.5 
million), which rings the gulf of the same name and is backed on the east and 
south by mountains. Overnight at Manisa (ancient Magnesia ad Sipylum).
DAY 15: MANISA
Begin the day with a field trip to Spildag National Park where tulips, which 
were introduced into Europe from Turkey in 1554, are part of the natural 
vegetation. The 13,603-acre reserve lies on Spildag (5,020 ft), a few miles from 
Manisa. Look for Kruper's nuthatch in the vines near the summit of the mountain. 
In the afternoon, the site of Sardis is the focus. As the capital of Lydia, 
Sardis was the political and cultural center of Asia Minor from 650 B.C. until 
the death of Croesus (c. 546 B.C.). Lydia's legendary wealth was based on the 
gold washed down from 7,000 foot-high Boz Dag (ancient Mount Tmolus) by the 
Pactolus River, and it was in Lydia that coinage was invented. Upon returning to 
town, visit Manisa's 14th-century Ulu Cami (Grand Mosque).
DAY 16: MANISA - ASSOS
Drive northward to Bergama, where tour the ruins of Pergamon, a brilliant center 
of Hellenistic civilization in the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C. Pergamon's library 
contained 200,000 volumes written on parchment (which takes its name from the 
city) and was second only to the library at Alexandria. Continuing north, motor 
along the Aegean coast and around the Gulf of Edremit to the seaside village of 
Assos, where the Greek island of Lesbos can be seen across the bay.
DAY 17: ASSOS - BURSA
Start the day from Hissarlik, the site of Homer's Troy, on a hill above the 
plain of the Kucuk Menderes River and commanding a view of the entrance to the 
Dardanelles (ancient Hellespont). Since its discovery by Heinrich Schliemann in 
1871, archaeological evidence has uncovered nine main levels and some 46 
sublevels that testify to continuous habitation of the site from the 3rd 
millennium B.C. to the 4th century A.D. The Troy of The Iliad is believed to 
have been destroyed in about 1260 B.C. From Troy drive east, enjoying 
spectacular views of the Dardanelles and the Sea of Marmara on the way to 
Kuscenneti (Bird Paradise) National Park. Here, among the willows and reedbeds 
of the shallow Kus Golu (also called Manyas Golu), great number of birds breed, 
winter, or make migratory stops. Black-crowned night heron, gray and squacco 
heron, little egret, pygmy cormorant, Eurasian spoonbill, purple and little 
bittern, Eastern white pelican, and glossy ibis are among the 239 species 
recorded in the park. In the late afternoon continue east to the city of Bursa 
(ancient Prusia ad Olympium), which was the capital of the Ottoman Empire for 
much of the 14th century.
DAY 18:BURSA - ISTANBUL
Bursa lies in a broad plain at the foot of Ulu Dag (ancient Bithynia­n Mount 
Olympus), the highest mountain in northwestern Anatolia (8,343 ft). Drive to Ulu 
Dag National Park, see plain, olives and bay trees give way at about 820 feet to 
a belt of beech, chestnut, walnut, elm and other broadleaved trees followed by 
the Austrian pines and Bornmueller firs of the coniferous belt, which is 
replaced in turn by the dwarf vegetation above treeline. The vistas are stunning 
as the road climbs, and keep an eye out for lammer­geier, alpine chough, alpine 
accentor, Kruper's nuthatch, and red-fronted serin. Ravens are plentiful here, 
and swallowtail and brimestone butterflies might be spotted. Leave Bursa in the 
afternoon and drive to the Sea of Marmara, rounding the Gulf of Izmit on our 
route to the Bosporus and Istanbul. The slopes that lie to each side of the 
20-mile-long Bosporus are steeper than those along the Dardan­elles and are 
covered with rich vegetation. Just 1,800 feet wide at its narrowest point, the 
Bosporus is easier to cross than the Dardanelles, and the wide, deep natural 
harbor of the Golden Horn favored the establishment of Byzantium.
DAY 19: DEPART
 



      

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Last modified: September 17, 2009