Wednesday, 5 February 2014

TERRY'S CHRISTMAS RAMBLE 2013

When I was writing last year’s Ramble, there was a youth in my garden with a JCB rearranging the boulders.   It turned out he was creating terraces, the better to conserve water for the ancient olive trees that grow there.   No doubt the olive trees were delighted, but I was not so thrilled.   The steep slope between the garden gate and my house, a distance of about 300 yards, meant that, when it rained, the newly disturbed earth formed a mud-slick which slithered its way down the path to my front door.  Still, I got quite nifty at slaloming up and down the slope in my Tofas - a Turkish hero of a car with the motor of a Fiat. 

The great wall of Ger has done the trick - no more wild boars in my garden!    They are still around though.   I nearly hit one on the track outside my gate. The size of a large sheep, he bounded over a neighbour’s wall and, in the blink of an eye, he had scaled the eight foot embankment on the other side.   A second or two earlier and the bonnet of my car would have been his stepping stone.  Even my Tofas would have felt that one.  To remind me of my years being plagued by porkers, my dear friend Carol sent me a wonderful metal sculpture of a wild boar for Christmas.   Here he is – all he needs is a name.   Any suggestions?
 


As if the industrialised landscaping of my garden was not enough, the track outside the gate also got a make-over.    The local council was persuaded by a famous Turkish newsreader, who had built a retreat nearby, that he and his rich Istanbul friends couldn’t risk their shiny Mercedes 4x4s on our dirt track.   The Council caved in, fearing an adverse mention on national news perhaps, and surfaced the track with “concrete parquet” - whilst Mr Big was away of course.   For the three weeks it took, we were more or less trapped in our houses by piles of parquet paving.  I’m no expert, but could the slow progress have arisen from trying to bed concrete blocks on sand, on a slope, in the pouring rain?   Surprise, surprise, the sand kept getting washed away.   The result is a surface that makes the Big Dipper at Blackpool Pleasure Beach look like a lesson in flatness by comparison.   Oh what fun!


When Landlord told me “Sabri Usta” was going to decorate the outside of the house, I knew what to expect.  I should explain that “Usta” (pronounced oostah) originally meant something like “Master” as in the master craftsmen of the medieval guilds.  Stonemasons, builders, painters, carpenters (even barbers) here still use the old terms.  Youngsters started as a çırak (apprentice), progessed to kalfa (journeyman) and some became ustas.     Presumably in the past, there was a guild mechanism that regulated this progression  but now it seems the term usta is often merely honorific.   Younger workers might call their older colleague “Mehmet Usta”, simply out of respect.  A cynic might say that the usta uses the title to justify higher rates; his customer uses it to flatter the usta into dropping his price. Rarely does it guarantee a higher standard of skill.


Sabri usta arrived in a battered transit van, with his wife and young daughter.   A man about my age, he settled down to chat with Uncle about the finer points of the job whilst his family unloaded the van, set up the camping stove, brewed the tea, borrowed my buckets and step ladders, mixed paint and generally made ready for the usta to perform.  In the three days he was there, I picked up some fascinating püf nokta (tricks of the trade) from this usta.     For example:  always use a tiny rusty old spatula tied loosely to a 10 foot bendy pole to remove flaking paint;   or if obviously blown plaster doesn’t actually fall off when you touch it with a brush, paint over it;  or if 1½ tons of logs are blocking a wall you ought to paint, get the tenant to move them immediately (he’s your çırak, your apprentice) or, if no-one is present, paint around them.   I opted to move the logs.   The list could go on… and he charged Uncle a fortune.   Lord, save us from ustas.
 


But by chance I really did learn something from Sabri usta.   When he brushed some “iffy” plaster a bit too hard, it fell off, revealing an old stone wall underneath.  Most of my house is modern, made of concrete, bricks and plaster, but we discovered that its foundations are the remains of a traditional Bodrum stone house.   This was confirmed recently, when I evicted sundry wildlife and rubbish from the cellar below the bottom terrace so I could use it as a store. The back wall of the cellar was made of stone and in perfect condition.  When I mentioned it to my neighbour, he came up with some photographs of the original house (right). Interestingly the old fig tree in the picture now abuts my terrace. If they had restored it, I might now be sitting in a much warmer if somewhat smaller house. With their pitched roofs and thick walls, these old houses are drier and more energy efficient. The larger ones used the ground floor as a byre in winter, the cows providing free under floor heating.   “Smell?  What smell? Sheep don’t smell” a shepherd smelling very strongly of sheep once told me indignantly. Also true of cows perhaps?

But did I fare any better than Uncle when, later in the summer, I hired someone to decorate the interior of the house?  Of course not! The person I hired I’ve known for years  so he thinks of me as “his mate”.   As his mate, his çırak, I am supposed to admire his skills with a paint roller – after all it takes a special talent to create that narrow rag-rolled smudge effect where the coloured wall meets the white ceiling.   As his mate, it is my job to prepare the room beforehand – remove pictures, deploy dust sheets etc - and my job to clear up afterwards and restore order, before preparing the next day’s work areas.   (In fairness, he did help occasionally, like replacing this clock on the wall but look closely).   As his mate, I’m supposed to be understanding when he drops paint down the length of a roller blind and then wipes it off with a dirty rag (“it was the roller, Terry mate”).    When the job is done, as his mate in the other sense, I am supposed to nod approvingly and cough up when he tries to charge me double the standard rate. “Well you know how much Uncle paid Sabri usta, Terry mate”.  
 


Not all paint spots are bad.   As most readers know by now, I spend hours flicking paint around as a hobby – it’s called ebru in Turkish and marbelling in English.   Our group, The Ebru Ensemble, had another exhibition in the pretty garden of one of our members this year.     There are worse ways, I suppose,  of spending a couple of hours on a warm Sunday afternoon than wandering around a shady garden with a glass of rosé looking at ebrus.     For many images of the exhibition and more about ebru  see The Ebru Ensemble Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/theebruensemble .  
Once again we had our summer feast of music.  As a curtain raiser, in the Roman amphitheatre in Bodrum, we had a concert by a chamber orchestra composed of amateur and professional musicians.      The opening piece, Handel’s Trumpet Concerto, came with an accompaniment not envisaged by George Frederick, a spring breeze which the unnecessary microphones amplified into a bass-laden gale.  Two soloists resorted to pegging their music between their stands like washing on a line to stop it flying away.  Soon the music stands were sailing across the platform.  Later, a huge beetle joined the concert, landing close to the feet of an elderly woman cellist – the audience was spell-bound but, before  it reached her foot, it took off again.    A few circuits later, it narrowly missed being swallowed by the young baritone who was midway through the Papageno-Papagana duet.   The baritone – a sight indeed in his long shorts, multi-coloured bird feathers and pink flip-flops – didn’t flinch but when it landed next to his foot, the tension was palpable.    Would he or wouldn’t he?    He stayed his flip-flop and the beetle survived.  What a star!

Turgutreis classical music festival opened with the Turkish Presidential Symphony Orchestra and soloists Angela Gheorghiu and her fellow Rumanian, a young tenor called Teodor Ilincai.   Angela looked stunning in an electric blue ball gown and suitably operatic makeup.  Teodor looked scared to death.  In their duets, Diva Angela would grab his hand when he least expected it and clutch it to her décolletage;  the big screens showed his eyes anxiously denying  all responsibility for his errant hand.   When she went in for a mock kiss, his face pleaded “But Angela, we didn’t do this in rehearsal”.   With each costume change, Angela became ever bolder and when she slunk on in a white draped Greek goddess number, was it the frock or Teordor’s final undoing that got the applause?  We had seven encores, which included Teodor’s impersonation of Mario Lanza singing “Be my Lerve” and Angela‘s version of, so she said, “'the most beautiful piece any composer ever wroted (sic)' ‘o mio babbino caro'.   After the last encore, Diva Angela made impatient shooing gestures at us as she led a visibly shaken Teodor off stage.
 

I have often mentioned my concerns about safety at the Gümüşlük festival.   Now, the festival has changed venue from the old Byzantine chapel to an even more ancient historical site.  This year it took place in the atmospheric setting of a stone quarry near the beach.   It was from this quarry in 353 BC that the stone was hewn for the tomb of King Mausolus;   later known as the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus,  the tomb was regarded by Antipater of Sidon as one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.  The quarry is located less than 10 minutes’ drive from my house but I did not even know it existed.   The organisers had arranged raked seating, a large platform area, a bar and even a computerised box office – not bad considering there is neither electricity nor water nearby.

The honey-coloured cliffs, which remain as the king’s workers probably left them 2,350 years ago, tower above the stage and provide a perfect backdrop, both visually and acoustically for the music.   It was a magical experience to listen to Pierre Réach playing the Goldberg Variations or the Endellion Quartet and Gulsin Onay performing the Schumann Piano Quintet as the moon rose above the cliffs. Incidentally, a few weeks prior to this event, Gulsin Onay had been amongst  many Turkish artistes who lent their support to the protesters in Gezi Park.   For many, her performance of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata under a full moon, is an abiding memory of those alarming but inspiring days.    However, “inspiring” isn’t the word I’d use about an Istanbul university a cappella Jazz Choir that also took part in the festival.    I enjoy jazz and was hoping for some really clever innovative music – a cappella versions of Walls of Jericho don’t count - but maybe a cappella’s just not for me.


As the festivals around here have grown in quality and prestige, they have become “must be seen at” events for nouveau riche Turks who now descend upon the area in droves during the summer.  Like parvenu the world over, they have all of the money and none of the taste.    They don’t come for the music of course, or so it seems, for they talk loudly throughout the concert and graze their smart phones for entertainment.  Their favourite playground is the new marina here in Yali.   Built by an extraordinarily rich Azerbaijani - with its huge yachts, so-called high-end shops, outrageously expensive food and drinks, marina taxis (helicopters) and a beach venue called, without a hint of irony, The Billionaires’ Club – it is vulgarity at its worst.   What’s happened to the little fishing village I settled in 14 years ago?
 


In May, my good friend Christine came over and we had a splendid time touring around the Turkish Lake district. First Pamukkale, named after the “cotton wool tower” rock formations there.   We slithered and slipped our way bare-foot up the wet, mineral rich rocks, and swam in an ancient thermal pool.   We visited nearby Aphrodisias, renowned for its academy for sculptors, where I checked out the workmanship (see first photo).  On to Lake Eğirdir, staying in the quirky but totally delightful Charly’s Pension http://www.charlyspension.com/ . Christine bravely drove us up a scary narrow mountain road to visit the ancient city of Sagalassos. Dramatically set high on the terraced slopes of White Mountain it is one of the most important ancient sites in the Mediterranean area. Famous for once repulsing the great Alexander in 333 BC, Sagalassos is exciting to archaeologists because its remote mountain location deterred later settlers from using it as a source of building material. (This happened to the Halicarnassus Mausoleum; the Knights of St John plundered the ruins to build their castle).The picture (left shows the magnificent Nymphaeum, a sort of municipal fountain.  Impressive!.


Speaking of fountains and water, my domestic water comes from a well which was up near the gate.  To fill the tanks on my roof, I had to trek up to the well and start the motor…. such fun, especially when the water dried up mid-shower! This well was running dry and recently some men with a huge drilling rig arrived to drill a new one.   Uncle’s nephew, a water diviner, found water about 30 metres from my front door and 140 metres underground and drilling began.   I knew it would be noisy and messy but I had not reckoned with the ocean of grey foam - a by-product of the drilling process -   which engulfed my garden and half the orchard.  The drillers even wore fisherman’s waders to slop around in this stuff.   They struck water at 190 metres and I now have a well nearer the house.    


Our H3A reading groups continue to keep the little grey cells active:  our non-fiction reading ranged over subjects as diverse as the fall of Constantinople in 1453, the “moral molecule” oxytocin and what a palaeontologist has termed “our inner fish”; in fiction we travelled from Texas with Lonesome Dove to Australia with Illywaker and Lillian’s Story via Holland with Girl with a Pearl Earring.    But undoubtedly my favourite was a real gem of a book called The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery.   As the blurb says,”Resistance is futile … you may as well buy it before someone recommends it”.    

Finally, I have a new skill to offer – hamster habitat design!   Some months ago, Metin bought a hamster and naturally it came in a small cage.   The problem was that Pış Pış is easily bored and bored hamsters gnaw at their cages and try to escape.   The answer?  A bigger and more entertaining home for him.   Commercial hamster homes are very expensive, so we had a go at making one ourselves, with the aid of a number of sites on the internet.   The result is one happy active hamster who no longer dreams of being a little Houdini
 

MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY, HEALTHY AND PEACEFUL 2014

And now for a Christmas Singalong
(you know the tune)

Mud slides and foam slicks and ustas and hamsters
Hedgehogs and bodgers and roads built by gangsters
Cotton wool castles, Gezi chapullings*   
These are a few of the year’s many things

Stone walls and deep wells and dark dingy cellars
 Sopranos and tenors and choir a cappellas
Paint spots of ebru and quarries for kings
These are a few of the year’s many things

Posh marinas, teasing divas, Billionaires’ Club, no jest
Then I remember it’s old Yali I’m in,
And say to myself “Well, I’m blessed!”


*a new word coined by the Gezi Park protesters, meaning “fighting for your rights”
 

 





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