I really enjoyed your photos, Chris. Thanks for sharing. I know what you
mean about taking good photos in a good place, but don't sell yourself
short. There are some lovely compositions there and beautiful light.
Joel
At 06:45 AM 3/19/2003 +0000, you wrote:
Thanks everybody, I am glad that you like the photos... well it was not
difficult to take good photos of such a wonderful place.
Just to explain: I was stationed at Incirlik AB from Feb to Jun 2000 as
the Deputy Air Component Commander (DCFACC) for Op Northern Watch.
Although I do not like being separated from my wife and family, it was an
ideal opportunity to take a couple of OMs and as many lenses as the RAF
would carry for me <g> to a country that I had never visited, but whose
scenery I anticipated would be beautiful.
I was not disappointed: we used to have the main brief for the day's
flying at or before sunrise and the snow-covered mountains to the North,
West and East of the Plain of Adana were normally bathed in a sunrise glow
as I exited what was normally a tense and difficult brief (if I was in
charge that day). I normally had about 1 hour before anyone would start
needing monitoring so there was time to watch in awe at the wonderful
scenery about 50 miles away.
In March, the Feast of Sacrifice prompted the Turks to ban flying for some
days so 4 of us headed off to Cappadocia. The plateau to the North, past
the mountains, was covered with snow and was like the steppes of Russia -
desolate, bleak, cold and completely strange to my previous experience
(perhaps similar to the Shemiran Mountains in Iran). The first photo, of
the tree and Mt Erciyes was taken once we had passed a few hamlets.
We visited several sites of troglodyte dwellings, including an underground
one. I could almost imagine living in some of the villages. The one at
Goreme (or Nevesehir, I forget) contained a monastery built-in to the side
of the valley. The hill at Uchisar (Kale Uchisar) was like a fortress in
some futuristic Hollywood production, but it is crumbling and the steps
are dangerous, so get there soon and be careful ...
Marc, the roads through Turkey are particularly romantic as they are
ancient routes from West to East. You might almost say that we are all
descended from there in some way or another.
Chris
On Tuesday, Mar 18, 2003, at 21:06 Europe/London, ll.clark@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
In <FA3EA179-5939-11D7-9AC4-003065F568DC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, on 03/18/03
at 12:05 PM, Chris Barker <imagopus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> said:
http://homepage.mac.com/zuiko/PhotoAlbum6.html
Fascinating stuff...some of the places are exotic enough to star in a
Steven Spielberg movie!
-----------------------------------------------------------
les clark / edgewater, nj / usa
-----------------------------------------------------------
<|_:-)_|>
C M I Barker
Cambridgeshire, Great Britain.

+44 (0)7092 251126
mailto:imagopus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.threeshoes.co.uk
http://homepage.mac.com/zuiko
... a nascent photo library.

~~~~~ ><>
Chris Barker
Gamlingay, England
mailto:chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
mailto:cmib@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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