Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Can I lie while travelling?


Lying is almost always wrong but when you're traveling there are certain situations where it's may be a good idea to do so. As travellers, we're often prone to scams, harassment, and many other terrible experiences and a simple white lie is often all it takes to deflect this unwanted attention. As far as ethic is concern about lying, I will leave it to you.

 Here are 5 lies you can tell to keep yourself safe on the road, especially in India
 

 "No, I know this place. I been here before"

This lie can be used in many situations and to avoid all kinds of unpleasant experiences.

When you take a cab from the airport, your driver will likely ask you if it's your first time in the city. While it can be tempting to say yes and see if you can gather some insider knowledge, it's best to say that you've been here before. If the driver knows this is your first time in a city, he can take you on a long and winding journey and make you pay double. If the driver thinks you've visited before, he'll be much more likely to take you directly there. At the airport you will find pre-paid taxis. Use pre-paid taxi and it will reduce been scammed.

 If someone finds out it's your first day in a city, they can use that to scam you. You're basically telling them that you don't know where anything is, you don't know how the city works, and you're an easy target.

 
 "Yes, I have a Boyfriend"

This is more for the solo female travellers out there, and can be used to deflect unwarranted attention. If a guy or a family is annoying you and they won’t you alone, tell them you have a boyfriend. Take a photo of you and a male friend before you leave to travel and show them the photo of you together.

 Have a believable story and it'll be much easier to avoid the harassment.

 
"Sorry, I Can't Remember the Name of My Hostel"

If you meet someone that seems to be taking a little too much interest in you, be sure to put your guard up and make sure you don't give information away. If someone asks where you're staying, pretend that you can remember the name of your hostel and only describe it to them in vague terms. The last thing you want is someone knowing exactly where you're staying.

 
 "No Speak English"

In some parts of the world, the touts can be unbearable. In these situations, simply telling them you don't speak English can be enough to deter them. If they knew  which language you speak then continue to pester you until they give up and walk away. It'll give you more space and a less stressful travel experience.
 

 "I'm Traveling with a Friend"

As frustrating as it is, solo travellers are targeted more than any other type of traveller. If you're in an uncomfortable situation or don't want to give too much of yourself away, say that you have friends but they don’t need to know that you’re not together in this journey. Telling people that you are traveling with a friend sometimes helps. It'll make you seem like less of an easy target, especially if you're female.

 
"I will go by bus"

Local forms of travelling can be a nuisance too. Although you may desire to travel by other forms of transportation apart from the bus, you don’t want to pay a high price for travelling.  If you do that, I suggest that you should always negotiate the price before getting in. If you are a foreigner or a local from other parts of the country, the drivers will ask for more money upon arriving at your destination. Always negotiate before getting in. If you feel you are scammed by the driver, just tell them you will take the bus because it is cheaper and slowly walk away. They will soon approach you again for a reduced price or ask you how much you are willing to pay. If you have google map, you can always find out how far your destination is and from there you can negotiate the price. Usually travellers are asked a 50% mark in in fares. The following is the cost for travelling in New Delhi [2016]. Other States would be different but not too drastic. Some States in India has no laws about Auto Rickshaw having meters. I hope this gives you a guideline about fares.

Auto-Rickshaw

Rs 25/- for first fall of 2 Kilometres (upon downing the meter) and thereafter Rs. 8/- per Kilometres for every additional Kilometres

Night Charges

25% of the fare (11:00 PM to 5:00 AM)

Waiting Charges

Rs 30/- per hour or part thereof (Subject to a minimum of 15 minutes stay)

Luggage

Rs. 7.50/- shall be charged as extra luggage charges whereas the driver/ operator shall not charge and money for a shopping bag or a small suitcase


“I got one like this”

You will be bombard with sale –people trying to sell you stuff. This can be annoying. Many times they will increase the price up since you look different from them. There is a saying among foreigners: We are paying white tax! Lol. Honestly, just walk away or say I already got one or I will get one from another place where it is cheaper than this.

 
"I don’t want it"

Well if someone is selling some so beautiful and adorable item, but the price is too much. We can simply say – I don’t want it but in fact we want it but not prepared to pay so much. Sometimes it is wise to let go. As a traveller we need to be aware of our travelling weight too. Some item may not go through our passport border control.


Well it is time to say good bye to this year and welcome another one. So stoked with what I have learnt this year. Have an amazing and a rewarding New Year everyone.
 
Cheers for 2015 and 2016
Ravi
 

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Turkey - Kusadasi


Kusadasi


Kusadasi is a resort town at the Turkish Aegean coast. The city stands on a bay in the Aegean with the peninsula of Guvercin Ada sticking out into the sea at one end.
The name comes from 'kuş' (bird) and 'ada' (island) as the peninsula has the shape of a bird's head.

Since Byzantine times it has been known as Ephesus Neopolis, Scala Nuova, becoming Kush-Adasi at the beginning of the 20th century.

There is something I didn’t like about Turkey. Firstly, the salespersons! Kusadasi is a very touristic district. If you are just strolling along or doing some window shopping, nearly every sale people have the same sale pitch tagline. The most frequent sale pitch I heard in Kusadasi was, “Mister today no business so today everything half price”! As I strolled along all these tourist shops, I was approached with the same sale pitch over and over again. It was annoying at first but later I found it hilarious.

Secondly, smoking! Nearly like every fourth person smokes in Turkey! I was exposed to a lot of passive smoking while walking along public roads and footpaths. It isn’t healthy and it isn’t pleasant.

Thirdly, once I went to a shop. I saw these beautiful lamp stands. I asked the sale person, how much does these cost? They replied 30 TL a piece. I believed it was a reasonable price. So I excused myself and told them I will be back tomorrow. So I went back the next day to purchase those lamp stands. I wanted to buy three amp stands. So while they were packing, I tied to pay 90 TL but they said it is 90 Euro! I was so shocked and then understood what was happening, so I kindly told them that I thought you said 30 TL each. I said sorry this is what I heard and it would be my mistake and cancelled my purchase. I clearly remember they said 30 TL. Well I am glad I was forced to purchase those lamp stands for 90 Euros. Tourist needs to be careful.

If you stay in any of numerous Kusadasi’s hotels you will not want to miss the perfect sunset view from your room balcony at which the sun seems to be sinking into the beautiful Aegean Sea!

Kusadasi - Slideshow
 
In the town you will see
·       The City Walls - There were once three gates. One remains today.
·       Kaleiçi Camii - the mosque built in 1618 for Grand Vizier Öküz Kara Mehmed Pasha.
·       The Öküz Mehmet Pasha caravanserai is near the docks. It was built in 1618 as a strong-room for the goods of seamen.
·       Guvercin Adası (i.e., 'Pigeon Island') - the peninsula at the end of the bay, has a castle and swimming beaches, including a private beach and cafe with a view back across the bay to the harbour of Kuşadası. There are public beaches at the back of the peninsula, towards the open sea.
·       Dilek Peninsula is the Peninsula lying between Kusadasi and Aydin centre. It is in Western (Aegean) coast of Turkey and it has many many rare plant species.
·       There are some good beaches both south and north of Kusadasi. All beaches are commercialized with hotels surrounding them. South of Kusadasi is the ladies beach, lost paradise beach and the long beach

 I loved the weather in Kusadasi during the month of October. It was very accommodating. I do love to visit Kusadasi again but I guess it maybe in the next 10 years or so.

Blessing
Ravi

Sunday, November 1, 2015

I am off to Turkey!


 
Turkey here I come!
So this month I had to go to Turkey to attend a workshop on Leadership. I was pretty excited about going to an exotic nation like Turkey. I haven’t been to Turkey. I heard a lot about her but never crossed my mind to visit Turkey. So I got my flight from New Delhi to Istanbul, than I found another domestic flight from Istanbul to Izmir. I booked with Turkish Airline. Flight to Turkey wasn’t that bad expect that it was delayed by 2 hours so I missed my domestic flight to Izmir. I learnt something from this experience. Always book your domestic flight in one single booking. I made two separate booking with two different airline. If I had booked with a single booking with one airline, they would have put me in the next connecting flight. I had to rebook another seat and thankfully I found a seat within an hour of my arrival. So I landed in Izmir.

Since my workshop was for only 7 days, I thought I took a week holiday in Turkey since I am paying a lot on travels. I found some affordable accommodation In Izmir. It was very near to Basmane Railway Station. I was only 200 meters. There is a train from Izmir Airport to Basmane Railway station and it cost like 4.50T. I was really surprised that there was hardly any signs or directions in English. I heard Izmir is quite a touristic place. So finally I made my way to my hotel. Thanks to google map, the hotel was exactly where it was pinned on google map. Rooms was quite small, but who cares. It was affordable, within my budget, quite close to railway station and in the city.

Avoid Private Tours
There are many historical sites in turkey. Izmir is a metropolitan city in the western extremity of Anatolia. it is one of the most westernised cities in turkey. The ancient city Smyrna was is the old name for Izmir. There are many private tours available. Your hotel can arrange one for you. However, getting around turkey or Izmir is quite easy. I found it is more economical to travel on your own and see these sites. All you need to do is do your research.

Some places I went to see

o   Ancient Theatre of Smyrna

o   Residence of St Polycarp

o   The Agora of Smyrna

o   Clock Tower [Konak District]

o   The Kemeralti Bazaar [Kadifekale]

o   St John’s Church

o   Bergama [Aegean]

o   Ephesus [Selcuk]

o   St John Church [Selcuk]

o   Church of Mother Mary [Selcuk]

o   Gulf of Izmir

o   Saat Kulesi

o   Luna Park

o   etc

In general, travel costs in Turkey are highest in Istanbul in April-May and September-October; and at Turkish beach resorts in July and August; lowest in the small towns of eastern Turkey, and off-season


Ephesus [Efes]
Take the train from Basmane Octogar to Selcuk 4.50T. From Selcuk walk to the city center and you will find Dolmus [Mini Vans]. You can ask anyone which Domus goes to Ephesus or Efes as the locals call it. It will cost 2 TL. Entrance fee is 35 TL which includes entry to the Efes Museum in Selcuk City too. You can spend a good 3 hours in Ephesus ruins. My total cost was 50 TL [$20 US]. Private Tours could have cost me more than $125 US. Selcuk also has a market every Saturday. Nothing much to see at the market but if you have nothing to do, I guess it will be fine.

While visiting Ephesus, make your way to the Efes Museum in Selcuk. The museum is about 100 meters where you board the Dolmus to go to Ephesus. Since if you have paid 35 T your entry fee is included for both Ephesus and the Efes Museum

Efe Ruins - slideshow

Some unique attractions at Ephesus

·       Temple of Artemis.

·       Great Theater

·       Harbor Street (Arcadian Way)

·       Marble Way

·       Brothel

·       Library of Celsus

·       Curetes Way

·       Hillside Houses (Yamaç Evleri)

·       Temple of Hadrian

·       Gate of Hercules

·       Odeon

 Signage at Ephesus is simply terrible (compare the far better signage at Aphrodisias), which no doubt promotes the sale of guidebooks, audio tours and the services of human guides, all of which are available at both entrances. Quality of human guides varies from guide to guide, but most are entertaining and informative. The books are mostly pretty expensive for what you get. Some are not very informative.

Selcuk – Efes Museum
The Ephesus Museum (Efes Müzesi) in the town of Selçuk holds the best of the archaeological objects excavated at Ephesus, a few artefacts from Ephesus's great Temple of Artemis, and finds from some of the many other significant ancient Hellenic, Hellenistic and Roman cities in the region.

The Ephesus Museum (Efes Müzesi) is open every day from 08:30 am to 17:30 (5:30 pm), but ticket sales stop at 17:00 (5:00 pm). Admission costs 10 TL but if you buy ticket for both the Ephesus Ruins and Efes Museum – total cost is 35 TL. You save 5 TL for coffee later on.

Selcuk – Church of St John
The impressive ruins of the Byzantine Church of St John mark the spot where St John the Evangelist was buried. The church is on the slopes of Ayasoluk Hill near the center of Selcuk (the town next to Ephesus), just below the fortress.

St John is believed to have spent the last years of his life in Ephesus writing his version of the Gospel. Emperor Justinian (527-565 AD) believed that a tomb dating from the 300s was John's, so he built a great church above it in the 500s.

In later centuries the ruined church was pillaged for building materials, but restoration allows you to see its extent and to imagine its beauties.


St John Church - Slide Show


 Selcuk – Home of Mother Mary
Legend has it that the Virgin Mary lived her last days on earth in a small stone cottage on Mount
Koressos (Bülbüldağı, "Nightingale Mountain" in Turkish) to the south of Ephesus.

This would be appropriate, as Ephesus was the ancient world's center of worship for the Anatolian Mother Goddess for millennia, since Hittite times. Mary followed in the footsteps of Cybele and her forebears.

Meryemana ("Mother Mary"), as the place is called, is located in a municipal park on the mountaintop 9 km (5.6 miles) from Selcuk, 5.5 km from the Upper Gate entrance to the Ephesus archaeological site
 
House of Mother Mary

Bergema (ancient Pergamum)
Pergamum (or Pergamon) was an important kingdom during the second century BC, having grown from a city-state captured by Alexander the Great.

Upon Alexander's death in 323 BC, his generals fought for control of the parts of his empire. Lysimachus took command of the Aegean coast, but was killed in 281 BC, leaving Pergamum in the control of Philetarus the Eunuch, who used Lysimachus's treasure to increase his power.

Take the train from Basmane towards Aliaga [Cost 4.50T]. Aliaga is the last stop. At the Aliaga Railway station purchase a bus ticket to Bergema [Cost 4.50T]. It is wise to buy a return tickets for this journey. The bus will take you to Bergema and back. There is also a National Museum in Bergema. It is also worth visiting. There are buses going up to the Old Bergema city [Cost 2T]. Bergema like Ephesus is ancient ruins as recorded in the New Testament Bible. You can also look around Bergema city. Make sure you ask the driver where to catch the bus to Aliaga Railway Station. There are many bus going to Aliaga Railway station. If you are not careful, you might end up paying double fare.

Ten first impressions on Turkey

1.      Turkish people enjoy olives for breakfast

2.      Many Turkish meals comes with bread

3.      Many Turkish people smoke cigarettes

4.      Many restaurant and fast food outlet provides free internet

5.      Turkish people are good sales person [Nearly everyone has the same sale dialogue, lol]

6.      Turkish loves football [Soccer]

7.      Turkish are hospitable people

8.      There are cheaper ways to visit historical sites [avoid private tours]

9.      Turkish people find it difficult to read maps

10.  Turkish coffee is the most expensive coffee I ever drank [20ml costing 6T].

 Ten highlights of my visit to Turkey

1.      Visiting New Testament city Ephesus

2.      Visiting New Testament city Bergema

3.      Visiting New Testament city Symrna

4.      Visiting St John’s Basilica in Selcuk

5.      Visiting the House of Polycarp

6.      Visiting the house of Mother Mary

7.      Visiting the coast and Gulf of Izmir

8.      Visiting the Kemeralti Bazaar [Izmir]

9.      Visiting John’s Coffee in Selcuk. They make good coffee

10.  Visiting Saat Kulesi
Smyrna
Smyrna was the second city to receive a letter from the apostle John in the book of Revelation. Acts 19:10 suggests that the church there was founded during Paul's journey. Due to the fact that the port city of Izmir houses the second largest population in Turkey today, the site of ancient Smyrna has been little excavated. Excepting the agora, theatre, and sections of the Roman aqueduct, little remains of the ancient city.
 
Smyrna sat 35 miles north of Ephesus, built near the ruins of an ancient Greek colony destroyed in the 7th century BC. Lysimachus, one of Alexander the Great’s generals, rebuilt Smyrna as a new Hellenistic city in the 3rd century BC. The city was later established as a Roman commercial center with a port on the Aegean Sea. Scholars believe the city grew to about 100,000 by the time of the apostles Paul and John
 

 







 Now these were some highlights of my visit to Turkey. Now I am off to Kusadasi …