Category Archives: Fethiye

Posts about Fethiye

Fethiye road chaos

We are used to living on a building site such is the rate of development round here but we have been suffering for months while the Belediye install a huge system of rainwater drains across half of the town. We’ve been living in a mud bath now being baked into a dust bowl.  It will be nice when it’s finished, as they say!  Of more concern to me is what happened at the weekend.

The new mosque then

The new mosque then

I went out to paint this scene, one that I photographed late last year as I roamed on my bike. A new cami framed by some splendid eucalyptus trees. Had potential, I thought……

 

 

 

 

 

 

And now

And now

…..but the scene when I arrived had been improved to this!

 

 

 

 

 

Lakeside Egirdir Sonbahar 10" x 8", Acrylic on card

Lakeside Egirdir Sonbahar
10″ x 8″, Acrylic on card

So I came home and painted this small lakeside view instead.

Fethiye Postcard

Fethiye Bay 2013 10" x 8", Acrylic on card

Fethiye Bay 2013
SOLD

This is my favourite view of Fethiye and my original photo, taken from the hillside above the Marina Vista Hotel and the boatyards, has a picture postcard quality that I rarely capture. The plan is to create a large landscape and this is my first studio sketch using that photo which I intend to follow up with some plein air work.  I limited my pallette to just the three primaries and white and worked with a large brush to try and keep the detail minimised.  I’m really looking forward to the challenge of developing this as it’s a more picturesque subject than most of my work on Kayakoy.

Machete Vs Machine

I was given a telling off yesterday by my neighbour, the farmer’s wife.  We have a beautiful Mimosa tree http://spiritrisingherbs.com/?p=33 which blooms throughout the summer but it was planted against the garden wall and, willow like, it’s branches hang down and block the road.  I can live with that but, annoyingly, they also grow through the electricity cables.

Our Mimosa

Our Mimosa

So every few years I have to give it a severe haircut. I had just climbed down after the latest operation when I was sharply interrogated about my intentions regarding the 50 or so branches strewn across the road. Up ’til then I’d been using a hand saw as chainsaws, me and ladders don’t mix but I explained that I would be using my chainsaw to lop the branches into firewood.  Makina yok! she said, zooming off and after a couple of minutes returned with a wicked looking and razor sharp machete and a chopping block.  I was then given a lesson in the art of stripping off the twigs and lopping the 10 ft. branches into one foot lengths with the same apparent effort as it takes to scramble an egg.  Suitably impressed, I was handed the heavier than it looked billhook and told to start.  Well, after two minutes I discovered, unsurprisingly, it wasn’t anywhere near as easy as it looked!

However, I persevered and managed to complete the job in record time with no damage to the enviroment apart from a couple of blisters.  I sure my neighbours enjoyed a good laugh….”Guess what! He was going to use a machine to make a bit of firewod!” And Gina has promised to buy me a machete for Xmas….mmmm

Kayakoy Chimney 10" x 8" Acrylic on card

Kayakoy Chimney
10″ x 8″ Acrylic on card

Anyway this has nothing whatsoever to do with my painting today which is of a lonely chimney stack back in Kayakoy.

Fethiye Palm Island

Fethiye Palm Island 24" x 18", Acrylic on canvas

Fethiye Palm Island
24″ x 18″, Acrylic on canvas

This little corner of Fethiye is in an area subject to major redevelopment at present, and often overlooked by residents and visitors alike, mostly due to being focused on the traffic hazard, I suspect.  Since I took this photo it has been enhanced with the addition of a huge TV advertising screen on the island and a massive pediment fronting the jeweller’s shop on the left. There is also now, to the right, the major works of the Fethiye Amphitheatre Restoration Project and there seem to be more buildings on the hillside too.

As I said last week, I’ve been getting the boat ready and not had much free time for painting but I’m really pleased to finish this scene as I think it highlights one of the easily missed views of this amazing place.

Antifouling blues

Daisy the Dog  10" x 8" Acrylic on card

Daisy the Dog
10″ x 8″ Acrylic on card

Well, it’s been a week since I last posted anything although I’ve been doing loads of painting. Unfortunately only rolling several coats of sky blue antifouling paint onto the bottom of my boat!  However, it’s finished now, until next year of course, and Daisy goes back in the water tomorrow. That’s the boat, not our Yorkshire Terrier who coincidentally shares the same name.

Bamboo

Bamboo 31" x 24", Acrylic on canvas

Bamboo SOLD
31″ x 24″, Acrylic on canvas

We were on our way to the Yoruk Museum and Restaurant, near Ciftlik run by the always hospitable Enver and Aysun Yalcin and their family.  The museum is off the beaten track and I took the wrong turning. We found ourselves on a narrow lane that soon dwindled into a track running beside a small stream completely overgrown with bamboo. We pressed on, eagerly anticipating our “eat and drink as much as you like” breakfast, the tabletop overflowing with a huge selection of locally grown and home made dishes. But as we motored on, like the Africa Queen on wheels, the lane became narrower, the bamboo denser and our guests increasingly nervous.  I kept thinking it would clear eventually but finally we were forced to a halt, surrounded on three sides by an inpenetrable wall of the stuff, and I had to reverse two or three kilometers back to the turn-off.  Perhaps I could add a machete to the car emergency kit for next time and send Gina out in front to hack a path.  Mmmm….

Cruise Ship’s Dockyard in Fethiye?

From the Land of Lights, 11/02/2013

Quote:  The State Water Supply Administration awarded the contract for the Gulf of Fethiye to be cleaned from mud last September and now the project has been inaugurated.

The contracting firm has erected its construction site and sent the relative equipment to the region. Work will begin as soon as the permit for the use of the stones used in the project is obtained.

Ali Boğa, Mugla deputy for AK Party, stated that all the formalities would be completed soon and endeavours would be made to finish the work involved ahead of time. Boğa said that the recent case of olive oil waste being poured into the Gulf of Fethiye proved that this was an emergency case, adding, “It is essential for us that this upgrading work is done. We want this project to be completed by the 100th anniversary and the Gulf of Fethiye must be cleaned up completely.”

Boğa also pointed out that the cleaning of the Gulf could not be achieved until the all the water systems entering into the gulf had been restructured, saying, “Our primary job must be to rationaize and upgrade the drainage systems. Then we shall clean the Gulf up. Only then Fethiye can be observed in all its grandeur. This will be of great benefit to our region, particularly in the field of tourism.”

Boğa also explained that as soon as this project was completed, dockyards for cruise ships would be constructed and that it was vital for the authorities and the contracting firm to do their utmost to complete this project.

Ali Boğa stressed that nature belonged to all of us adding, “There is no other Fethiye, nor another Gulf of Fethiye. All of us live here. In order to leave a better environment for our children, everyone, primarily the greenhouse producers, must act conscientiously. Empty bags of agricultural pesticides and chemical wastes should not be thrown into brooks In fact, citizens must report such incidents to the authorities. This is our duty.”   End of quote.

I must applaud the efforts to clean up the bay, it’s about time.  There are vast quantities of agricultural chemicals draining into the sea and anybody who keeps a boat here has a clear understanding of the water quality. From my personal experience, and that includes owning a water purification business in an earlier life, the hypertrophication ( see  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutrophication ) is the worse I’ve come across.

However, most of this is old news.  What is a surprise to me is as soon as this project was completed, dockyards for cruise ships would be constructed. “  This has been speculation for a long time, but is it now really about to happen? Is the location at the  Karayollari or where the boatyards are now?  Are they going to build pontoons out to the deeper water.  What is meant by dockyards exactly?  What about traffic issues?. I don’t know how much “nature” will be left afterwards. I don’t know whether to be excited or dismayed.  I await the next announcement with bated breath!

 

Not in Surbiton

The fields around Fethiye are all zoned and numbered as part of the City Plan. In it are drawn the roads and parks and schools alongside the residential plots.  In other words the whole area could be described as one large building plot and buildings spring up apparently at random, dotted around the unseen grid but actually located with all the precision that GPS can provide. These fields are, in most cases, still being farmed as smallholdings or greenhouses.  Many are sold and await the bulldozer, some are entangled by Turkish inheritance law and many may never be sold, despite their astronomical and ever increasing prices, because the owners are happy doing what they have always done.  Consequently, while living in a modern villa or apartment in a Turkish town, unlike in Surbiton, it’s not at all unusual to have neighbours keepng sheep, goats, chickens and the occasional cow;  growing a crop of cauliflowers or cabbages; tending greenhouses full of tomatoes and peppers and working a donkey or two.

Shearing time in Fethiye10" x 8", Acrylic on card

Shearing time in Fethiye SOLD
10″ x 8″, Acrylic on card

Last summer, I watched my neighbour hand shearing her flock of goats and sheep.  These animals are  moved to various bits of land around the neighbourhood in a complex grazing pattern that seamlessly interleaves with her neighbours. Sometimes you see them tied along a busy roadside verge, another time in a field, later fed on cuttings and scraps outside her house. If you can’t see them, you can probably smell them!  She worked long and hard that day in the heat of summer and I’m sure her flock appreciated the effort.

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