She was about my age, stooped and wearing billowing, floral pantaloons, several layers of mismatched woollies and a daintily embroidered cream head scarf. She was carrying a bouquet of empty plastic paint buckets, an enormous bundle of thick polythene sheeting and a sleepy grandchild. She was following her husband who was also about my age, also stooped, and wearing an old suit and a well-darned cardigan. He was carrying three long thin bamboo canes.
Here in Yali, olive gathering is just one reminder of the onset of autumn. The season has felt much longer this year. The start of Ramadan, (advancing about 10 days every year) this time fell in an extremely hot August; 70 days after Ramadan, Kurban Bayram, the Feast of the Sacrifice took place. Thus the season was extended by a week or two.
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Regarding the wild boar, you might expect from my frequent moans that we are on first name terms but until this year I had never actually set eyes on them. In July, though, I came across a whole sounder (or is it a singular?) of them - Mr Porker, Mrs Porker and about a dozen little Porkers - mincing down my lane as I drove up behind them late one night. The whole family had scaled an 8 foot, vertical embankment, before I could even say “bacon sandwich”.
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if I have not got enough to keep me out of trouble, early in January, in a burst of keep fit enthusiasm, I bought a second hand Nintendo console with all the Wii Fit games. For a month or so I persevered with tennis and bowling, step aerobics and hoola hoop - as a child of the 50s, I excelled at this - and of course the balance exercises, including yoga.
Now, if you are feeling strong, try to imagine me attempting this, in my study, in my local (off-white, woolly, itchy, smelling of moth balls) thermals. “You are doing fine”, the svelte , self righteous on-screen trainer purrs, “But you seem to be swaying a bit”. Swaying? I am careening round my study, bouncing off the bookshelves, the walls and the piano, in my vain attempt to remain vertical. Clearly the trainer and I are not in the same room. As a friend said, Wii Fits are the Breville Toasted Sandwich makers of their day except they gather dust next to the DVD player rather in the loft. Well, that’s where mine is anyway!
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entioned H3A last year, I think. Herodotus Third Age Academy – so called after a local lad who made a bit of a name for himself as the Father of History - is based on the idea of the University of the Third Age and is the only one of its kind in Turkey. See http://www.hero3a.com/ to learn what we get up to.
One important activity is our reading group but again we had the problem of obtaining books. Not any more – Kindle really comes into its own, and I can make notes on it too.
One important activity is our reading group but again we had the problem of obtaining books. Not any more – Kindle really comes into its own, and I can make notes on it too.
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summer we organised a one day exhibition in the garden of one of our members. It was a great success. “Short and sweet” is probably the best way to describe it – at just a few hours long, it was the shortest exhibition of the summer but attended by over 80 people. You can see more images of the day at the abovementioned blog. Short though it was, some attending managed to drink us all but dry whilst “admiring the art”; a number of visitors kindly bought some of our work. A couple of us, having become a bit bored with producing yet more classic ebru tulips, decided to use our vast collections of bits of ebru to make collages. I came up with collages featuring a few batty animals, Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, and a couple of janissaries – not in the same collage.Another one was based on a view across our bay and I was especially pleased when this one sold. Next year we are planning to have a couple more exhibitions in Yalikavak, one in a disused water cistern.
I would like to say that my piano playing is coming along in leaps and bounds..... but then sometimes we cannot say what we like and simultaneously tell the truth. The truth is that making progress on the piano project is at the top of my New Year’s resolution list.
On to real music now and this year we had the usual splendid summer of festivals, in Turgutreis, Gumusluk, and of course the Bodrum Ballet Festival.
Turgutreis festival began with a wonderful concert by the Tchaikovsky Moscow Radio Symphony orchestra with the magical cellist Mischa Maisky playing the Rococco Variations. Vladimir Fedoseyev breathed new life into the Polovtsian Dances, ably assisted by several Turkish matrons behind me who got carried away, thought they’d joined the cast of “Kismet”, and began to sing along - “takka myand ama sitiranja n paradayz” – at the appropriate moment.
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umusluk festival had its moments and one of them was the final concert after the series of piano master classes. The youngsters taking part were terrifyingly good, not just with the standard repertoire but also with some Turkish contemporary pieces, full of violent, piano-leg-buckling, percussive passages interspersed with rests so long an elderly soloist could die in one of them.
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As extra entertainment, during the interval of the American evening, a local loony got up on stage to entertain the guest of honour, the American ambassador to Turkey, with a “Yankee Go Home” style diatribe. We were mildly amused until we noticed how long it took the police, gendarme and the private security to react. Had the man been armed he had time to pick off half the audience. Now you don’t get that at Covent Garden.
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nally, a couple of things that made me giggle this year.
Firstly, reflecting my love of Wales:
- On a beautiful summer's day, two American tourists were driving through Wales. They stopped for lunch at Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyllllantysiliogogoch,and one of the tourists asked the waitress, 'Before we order, I wonder if you could settle an argument for us. Can you pronounce where we are, very,very, very slowly?'
The girl leaned over and said:'Burrr … gurrr … king'
- Yali abounds with lovely examples of “Tinglish” (Turkish English). The owner of this little boat got his words right – but he just needs to brush up on his euphemisms!
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Merry Christmas and a healthy, happy and peaceful 2012
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