Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cyprus: Hiking In The Forgotten North

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cyprus: Hiking In The Forgotten North

    CYPRUS: HIKING IN THE FORGOTTEN NORTH
    Alistair Fraser

    Daily telegraph
    2:04PM BST 23/06/2008
    UK

    Three decades of isolation have left their mark on Turkish Cyprus,
    but Alistair Fraser finds simple pleasures mean much more.

    The habour at Kyrenia About 20 minutes into our first walk in North
    Cyprus, I began to wonder if I was having an entirely authentic hiking
    experience - fitting, I suppose, as we weren't in an entirely authentic
    country. I wouldn't have minded the clammy shirt and grit in my boot
    had our stony path been miles from anywhere, but so far we had been
    walking parallel to a perfectly decent mountain road. Getting off
    the beaten track is fine, but when the beaten track is deserted and
    10 yards away, why twist an ankle slithering about on shingle? We'd
    still be able to see the jagged Kyrenia range; the Mediterranean
    would be just as visible; and all those plants scratching my calves
    could be admired from a respectable distance.

    Then again, if we'd stuck to the road, we'd have missed Nathan's
    near-death experience.

    Before we five hikers had set off, Gizer, our Turkish Cypriot guide,
    warned us about the island's three types of snake. One was black
    and harmless; another mildly poisonous; but the snub-nosed viper was
    deadly. Don't worry, though, said Gizer, they're rare and we won't
    see one.

    "Snake!" said Nathan minutes later in a surprisingly high voice for
    a strapping lad from Cumbria. "What kind is it?" We gathered round
    to peer at a little beige thing, about 9in long and no thicker than
    my thumb. "It's, um, it's... hmm," said Gizer, sounding a little
    flustered. "It's a baby snub-nosed viper," he declared at last, and
    we all stepped back. Still, this was more like it. A proper hiking
    adventure. Even better, we soon veered away from the road and into
    the hills.

    The morning air was warm and still and as the path led us higher
    we fell into a companionable rhythm, catching glimpses through the
    trees of the sparkling sea far below and enjoying a profound silence
    broken only by the crunch of dead pine needles beneath our feet and
    the wheeze of old lungs sucking in air.

    After a tasty picnic, we came across the ruins of Sourp Magar,
    a monastery used by the island's Armenian community from the 14th
    century but abandoned when 40,000 Turkish troops landed on Cyprus in
    1974. An orange tree in full blossom grew where the entrance hall
    had once stood. In a quiet corner, a startled wild cat ran off,
    leaving her six kittens shivering with fright.

    Watching her flee reminded me of how the Armenians must have felt
    in the Seventies as their old persecutors approached. Turkey said
    that its troops had gone in to prevent an imminent attempt by Athens
    to take Cyprus under Greek rule. Nonsense, said Greece, it was an
    invasion. The rest of the world agreed with Greece and refuses to
    recognise the Turkish Republic of North Cyprus.

    Inevitably tourism suffers as a result. No ferry can land in the north
    and direct flights are impossible, so most visitors endure a three-hour
    wait in transit at Istanbul airport. Much of the countryside is in the
    hands of the military and out of bounds. Unregulated house-building
    scars the landscape.

    The government's reputation for corruption doesn't help, and with no
    extradition treaties in place, it's a haven for crooks on the run.

    On the up side, for visitors at least, it's a tranquil destination,
    with pretty harbour towns such as Girne, attractive hillside villages
    like Bellapais (former home to the writer Lawrence Durrell), more
    archaeological sites than it knows what to do with, miles of unspoilt
    beaches and none of the problems associated with Greek Cyprus, such
    as out-of-control British squaddies and resorts like Aya Napa.

    The north, though, receives little aid from anyone other than Turkey,
    so inevitably it looks a little rough around the edges. Its contrast
    with the prosperous south was evident the next day, when we wandered
    around the historic quarter of Nicosia, the world's only divided
    capital city. From the roof terrace of the unlovely Saray Hotel we
    could easily see the difference - on this side, the buildings were
    old and run-down, while across the Green Line was a sea of modern
    glass and concrete.

    But with so little money available, everything seems authentic and
    few things are tarted up for tourists. This was especially true of the
    Belediye bazaar. Round the back of the market, near a butcher's stall,
    I came across an old supermarket trolley full of recently severed
    rams' heads. When I took out my camera, an old man nearby put down
    his glass of tea and rearranged the heads into a more pleasing tableau.

    Feeling peckish, I headed for the Buyuk Han, or Great Inn. This
    handsome, sandstone building was built by the Ottomans in the 16th
    century as a sort of medieval motel for merchants. They parked their
    camels in stables that are now cafés and galleries and slept above
    them in rooms more recently converted into artists' workshops.

    The Buyuk Han is one of the few restored monuments in North
    Cyprus, as money from Turkey is used for mundane projects such
    as road-building. This means numerous archaeological sites are
    largely untouched and unprotected, so later on there was nothing to
    stop us clambering all over the precious ruins of Ayia Trias, near
    Sipahi. Cultural vandals had already visited the site at Salamis,
    near Famagusta, where all the Roman statues are headless, thanks to
    Victorian treasure seekers. This unrestricted access was thrilling
    yet depressing.

    But not half so depressing as the "ghost town" of Famagusta. In 1974,
    Turkish troops confiscated roughly six square miles of property,
    including a long coastline and several dozen seaside hotels, which
    now look like a time-frozen cross between Seventies Benidorm and
    war-torn Beirut.

    But as we drove up into the Karpas Peninsula, we left behind both the
    mess made by politicians and the arid central plain. On the peninsula
    you'll find green and rolling hills and remote, sandy beaches where at
    night in July and August you can watch loggerhead turtles hatching. The
    peninsula is also home to wild donkeys, abandoned when their Greek
    owners fled south.

    Cyprus's ethnic separation is not total, as I discovered that night at
    the small village of Dipkarpas, where several Greek families still live
    peaceably with their Turkish neighbours. After dining in the village
    restaurant on plates of meze followed by a choice of grilled fish or
    kebabs, we drank beer before going to sleep in honey-coloured cottages.

    Next morning, Gizer drove along empty roads flanked by fields of
    swaying corn before stopping in the middle of nowhere. A 10-minute
    walk down a rough track and over a ridge took us to a wide, sandy
    beach. Apart from a set of large animal prints - made by a donkey,
    perhaps - the shoreline looked as if it had never been visited. I
    took off my sandals, closed my eyes and, with the sun on my face,
    allowed the gentle sound of breaking waves to guide me as I strolled
    along the shore.

    It was a blissfully serene few moments, only slightly spoilt when I
    felt the squelch of warm donkey poo between my toes. Now that's what
    I call an authentic walking experience.

    --Boundary_(ID_TFtU8YcI9XVutkPQ6R1Mnw )--
Working...
X