In the beginning of May a friend of mine, chris, invited me to co-guide a trip in the Toros mountains in Turkey, which I gladly accepted. Chris and his girlfriend had packed their van much earlier this year and left Germany for an epic adventure taking them to the rivers of Greece, Turkey, Georgia, and some other stops on the way.
So I jumped a plane with my boat..
arrival in Antalya:
the landscape is fantastic and the people are extremely hospitable. we had to turn down invitations to tea more than a few times... otherwise there wouldn't have been any time left for kayaking!
Upon arrival, we decided to check out some of the rivers. 4 Days until the group arrives, enough time to check water levels and for me to become aquainted with the local culture and some of the rivers.
The Alara was really high, so we couldn't run the classic roadside section.
We did however check out the lower part of the big gorge (too much water for taking the group) and the upper Alara, which is a fun grade 3 run with one difficult section.
me on the lower section:
upper:
here's chris running the hardest part of the upper Alara river:
When the group arrived, we started out with the classic Köpru Cay rafting run, and then went off to do a couple of the smaller creeks not far from the coast, all offering long stretches of great class 3 (sometimes 4) whitewater with crystal clear and rather warm water, and surrounded by old, gnarly trees.
Köprü:
we also did a little bit of teaching. herr stoiber demonstrating the boof
and some before-dinner rope technique
Freecamping was never a problem..
our driver mehmet ali:
cooking good food
and sometimes we went out for dinner
After Küprülü, Kargi, Karpuz and upper Alara we drove a bit to reach the Gevne river, which is much further into the heart of the mountains. Put in is at about 1500m above sea level - the other rivers we started at around 500m.
Gevne river, two days (but more are possible!) of class 3 to 4+:
the gevne is also threatened by the construction of a hydroelectric power plant..
hopefully, this won't affect the best stretches of whithewater. but generally, if you want to paddle in turkey, you need to hurry up. I was already too late in the Coruh region in July, but that's the next TR to come.
If you're interested in coming to Turkey or Georgia with a guided trip (which also offers a lot of world class whitewater and culture) you can contact Chris. He's currently hitchhiking somewhere around Rumania, but he will be back kayaking in the Antalya region in October (which, btw, is a really good time, enough flow, stable and warm weather, the sea is really warm too for swimming, and colored leaves as a bonus). Prices are extremely fair (but it's camping and cooking, not 4-star lodges), guiding and safety is excellent, and Chris has been intensively exploring Turkish rivers for a decade now and contributed a lot to the Turkish kayaking scene. His webpage is in German, but he speaks English very well.
http://www.toros-outdoors.de/pages/kontakt.php
cheers,
herr_stoiber
--- foto credit for pictures not from my flickr account:
look at
http://www.kanumagazin.de/touren/rei...ragen-5-gevne/
http://www.kanumagazin.de/touren/rei...nd-koepruelue/
http://www.kanumagazin.de/touren/rei...puz-und-kargi/
http://www.riverrunner.de/?p=1777#more-1777
(where you can also find additional pictures, and some german text).
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