Nergis Canefe, Ph.D, Toronto, CANADA http://www.uvercinkaya.com/en/aboutus.html
Cappadocia is the ancient name of a
large region in the center of Anatolia, although when we speak of Cappadocia
today we refer specifically to the valleys of Göreme and Ürgüp, with their
natural pinnacles and rock churches. A long, long time ago a series of eruptions
from the cones of Mt. Erciyes and Mt Hasan covered the area in a thick layer of
volcanic ash which solidified to form the soft tufa that characterises the
surface strata. Both these volcanic mountains are still extant and dominate the
landscape. The signature of the region, the 'fairy chimney' is formed when a cap
of resilient stone protects the column of softer material beneath it while the
surrounding tufa is removed. The area is now a warren of caves, underground
cities, rock churches and chambers and it's almost certain that there are more
such sites waiting to be rediscovered. All that said, Cappadocia has gone
under an enormous transformation during the last 40 years. As a well-known
historical site, it combines the rare beauties of nature, culture and human
creativity. However, with the influx of thousands of tourists all over the
world to the region, the texture of life has changed at times beyond
recognition. Today, it is very hard to find a traditional, true
cave-dwelling in any of the major towns of Cappadocia, which is not already
transformed into a pension house or a modernized summer residence.
Most of these new built houses hardly respect to the old characteristics of
the local, vernacular architecture. Building forms of former times, which
had been different as one travels from one Cappadocian village to the next, are
increasingly replaced with standard construction and decor elements without
paying attention authentic ways of doing things, using local materials, and of
course the centuries long traditions of masonry so unique to the region as a
whole. The result is a rapid loss of the particular historical character
of different Cappadocian towns and villages. I first arrived in Akköy,
Cappadocia as an international law professor from Canada with my young family in
the late summer of 2008. The village is located 11 kms north-east of
Ürgüp, and the winding roads that lead to the Cave House we were going to stay
at were intriguingly obscure and yet welcoming. At the time, I already
knew that many of the local cave dwellers of traditional Cappadocian
rock-villages have been either moved to new, subsidized houses provided and
planned for the local population, or, villagers themselves deserted their
ancient dwellings and ways of life and moved to nearby towns for a better life
and jobs. There were indeed three ‘emptied’ stone and rock villages on
our way to Akköy, each more eerie than the other with hardly a handful of people
still remaining in these surreally beautiful clusters of ancient houses,
graveyards and arches. Since the 1970s, rapid urbanization, modernization and
the extensive growth of the tourism market as well as the allure of new building
materials caused dramatic changes in these villages, and for the most part, led
to their decay and total deterioration. Yet, Akköy was strikingly
different. The immediately observable decay of traditional, vernacular
cultural wealth and the disappearance of unique Cappadocian building styles were
not applicable to this village. It was, truly, like an open air
museum. What is more, it had real people living and farming in it.
Unbeknownst to me at the time, this was the beginning of a long journey for me,
and my dealings in Akköy. Fast forwarding a year, I am now a property owner
in the village, and a business partner for Mehmet Güleç, the owner and founder
of the Akköy Evleri we originally stayed at as a family. I have an incredibly
talented team of masons turning my own cave home, Uvercinka, into a Museum House
and a Children’s Library to be opened in summer 2010 as a philanthropic
enterprise. I named it Uvercinka, suitable for a region known for its love
of pigeons (güvercin in Turkish). My house is particularly designed as a
family residence, fully furnished for long-term stay. It will offer a
perfect escape for artists, writers, musicians who wish to hold workshops,
master-classes or run writing and creative arts sessions. I also began
making freskos on the cave walls of Akköy Evleri, the Cave Hotel, and we are
starting a winery business together with Mehmet. But why would I take
the risk and invest time, energy, love, compassion, and cash, to this esoteric,
ancient mountain village removed from all else except the timeless routines of
communal village life, crop cycles, silent and mostly empty cave houses, and
quiet roads leading to sleeping wine yards up on distant valleys? As I made
several new visits to the village between August 2008 and now, I learnt that
Akköy is a very ancient settlement that hosted Hittites, Asurians, Seljuks and
Ottomans in its long history. The village's unique vernacular
architectural style is readily observable in the stone houses carved into the
volcanic rock formations. The village as it stands was given its final shape
during the 1920s and 1930s by local craftsmen who created a spectacular vista of
terraced streets and cubic stone houses fully equipped with cave storage rooms,
sun roofs, open kitchens and multiple chambers. Once populated by hundreds of
people and beaming with activities and trade, today Akköy has become one of the
three adjacent ancient mountains villages in the vicinity inhabited mostly by
the elderly. The first wave of labour migrations from the village was to
Germany during the 1960s, followed by the second and third waves to Turkish
cities and again abroad. Today, the remaining population of 80 to 100 people is
proud of their ancient settlement and protects and look after their village for
future generations. The civil architecture of the village is preserved
untouched. The unmatched beauty of the rows of sand-stone houses carved by local
masons is a sight to be enjoyed on its own. The villagers also continue to till
the land and engage in animal husbandry and horticulture keeping to seasonal
routines, which allow visitors to engage in biotourism activities first hand.
The village has a unique graveyard that keeps to the Hittite tradition of
collecting and preserving the bones in a pile in order to open space for new
burrials. The guests to the village are truly welcome to spend time with
the villagers, visit their households, the communal coffeehouse, and join them
in their yearly activities. That is why; part of our yearly routine of moving
from Canada to Turkey now includes a family stay at Akköy. Both Uvercinka
and Akköy Evleri Cave Hotel's commanding location give the visitor the full view
of the ancient village of Akköy as well as the surrounding valleys and mountains
with three other rock and stone villages in sight, fertile fields, and the
unique landscape of Cappadocia. The whole place is marked by its serenity,
comforting hospitality, the unique and the magical features of the
village. The area around the village offers superb opportunities for
historical site-seeing, photography and nature hikes, and of course,
biotourism. In terms of accommodation, the quality of the cave rooms make
you feel cool in the summer and warm in the winter. Volcanic rock called "tuffa"
is perfect insulation material. It keeps the temperature between 17 - 20 degrees
Celsius throughout the year. All rooms at Uvercinka as well as at the
Village House are different from each other in their size, shape and qualities,
but they each have the signature curves, texture, cupboards, fireplaces, arches
and decorations characteristic of the village’s local civil architecture. All
rooms are traditionally decorated and the cotton covers, carpets, kilims, wooden
furniture, etc. are locally produced. However, each room also includes private
stone shower and w/c, some rooms even a jacuzzi, constant hot water, comforting
wooden floors, and a must for an international academic, internet
service. What is more, in Akköy, this summer myself and my young boys enjoyed
natural life and tasted the fresh organic food from our own garden and the
fields and wineyards laced around the village. In the kitchen, the food is
prepared fresh every day, entirely from locally grown ingredients and depending
on what is available in each season. The cooks are villagers themselves who
prepare standard regional favorites as well as special treats for
holidays. The village and its immediate environs allows for direct
participation in organic farming, as well as seasonal activities as the
villagers harvest the produce from the fields and orchards. The villagers are
also expert collectors of mountain produce, such as select mushrooms, herbs and
berries and the visitors in our hotel are most welcome to join in these communal
activities. The harvest is then processed for the year, as grapes are squeezed
into extract and dried to paste, wheat and other grains and processed through
traditional means to make pesah (dry/yeastless bread) for the winter months,
jams and preserves are boiled, and fruit and vegetables are lined up to be dried
under the sun. There are also activities for those who suffer from
specific ailments such as romatism and arthiritis that the villagers themselves
are accustomed to for many centuries. The best cure for any chronical pain
caused by rheumatism, arthritis, fybromyalgia, skin disorders, digestion
problems, respiratory disorders and more is the natural waters and hot-water
pools available in the area. The village itself imposes nothing on the
visitor or guests as there are NO shops to sell anything, or no merchants at
your doorsteps. The idea is for one to rest, enjoy the air, the sun, the quiet,
and the history and life style that comes with the village itself.
However, on the weekly market in the nearby town of Ürgüp, we also saw many
different kinds of merchants, farmers from the mountains who come to sell their
fresh fruit and vegetables, herbs, as well as unique samples of ironware and
textile. Since its restoration and opening in 2003, Akköy Evleri hosted
many unique guests from all corners of the world including archeologists, nature
lovers, architects, diplomats, engineers, doctors, students, teachers,
photographers, professional mountaineers, artists, and more. They arrive from
many different and unrelated locations, including Japan, Korea, many states in
Africa, all over Europe, Canada and the United States of America, as well as
Australia. In that, I take comfort and justify my rather unusual decision
to spend part of my life in a distant mountain village in Cappadocia, where I am
the only urban person and a non-local, while feeling truly at home in our new
home, Uvercinka.
BIOTOURISM CALENDAR OF
AKKÖY DECEMBER/ JANUARY / FEBRUARY /MARCH
These long months of the winter
come with plenty of sunshine and white snow to the valleys and hills surrounding
the village. For those who may be tempted, there is plenty of small game for
hunting in the environs of the village, as well as the possibility of nature
walks with special winter shoes used by the villagers. In the evenings, it is a
delight to gather around the wood stoves and fireplaces in your room and the
hotel’s central areas and restaurant, to eat barbecued potatoes and local
vegetables. The local village café is a welcoming spot for long evening chats,
drinking tea and coffee and sharpening your back-gammon and other Middle Eastern
game skills with the villagers. The nights are crisp and quiet, with an early
morning sunrise always welcoming you to the new day.
APRIL With the
arrival of spring, the outlook of the village changes entirely. The stone houses
and pavestone pathways are now laced with the spring bloom of apricot, plum and
almond trees. The fields are filled with the buds of narcissus, anomone and
other rare mountain bulbous flowers. The villagers engage in communal clearing
of the fields and pruning of the fruit orchards as well as tending of the
wineries. Our guests are welcome to work along the villagers, as well as enjoy
guided tours of the spring brooks, rare plants in the valleys and mountains, as
well as bird watching and other calm activities to enjoy the spring weather and
sunshine in full.
MAY The best
gift of the month of May is the early crop of fruits that nature gives us. Plum,
apricot and almond trees have special green fruits that the villagers,
especially the children, really enjoy. This is also the time for communal
mushroom picking activities in the mountains. This ancient habit equips the
villagers with a much appreciated delicacy for their local cooking practices.
Our guests are welcome to join us in learning the different kinds of edible
mushrooms growing in our mountain village as well as the myriad recipes used to
enjoy their rare taste to the fullest.
JUNE While the
work in the agricultural fields had slowed down in April and May, june is the
month when the bulk of the work for organic farming takes place in the village.
The fields need regular tending, watering and upkeep until the harvest time.
June is also a special month of festivities. At the third week of the month,
there is the annual Rice Festival of the village, whereby the whole community
goes upto the mountain tops, eats, dances and plays traditional instruments to
celebrate the summer and the upcoming harvest. Our guests are most welcome to
take part in these ancient festivities and enjoy first hand the beauty of
communal traditions of Asia Minor.
JULY In this
month, fruits and vegetables ripen and are ready for harvesting. Our guests are
welcome to join us in collecting the gifts of nature in the many fields we have
in the environs of our village, down in the valley, up on the mountains tops and
along the brooks running through the village itself.
AUGUST
/SEPTEMBER This is the Harvest Time, when all the hard work of the
year comes to fruition. The villagers are now in the fields, collecting the
goods and gifts of nature, working hard in teams, when entire families and
several generations work side by side. All the harvest then gets carried into
cave storages. Big wood fires are built to boil the fruits and grapes to produce
the precious extracts and to make yearly preserves and jams. Nuts such as
walnuts are harvested for yearly consumption, broken and stored in cotton bags.
The local delicacies of sun-dried apricots are bagged for winter months and
fruit and vegetable composts are prepared. This is practically the best season
to join the villagers in their agricultural activities as the autumn season
slowly sets in.
OCTOBER/NOVEMBER Preparations
for the long winter season starts. In the households, villagers make yeastless
bread and special baked goods for storage. Wood is collected from the valleys
for the long months ahead. Seeds are brought to the fields and the villagers
make the preparations for next year’s crop by tilling and turning the soil
before putting the seeds in. This is a wonderous time when the light turns
orange, and long nature tours and walks in the area allows the enjoyment of the
crisp mountain air and the changing colors of the local trees for our visitors.
Our visitors are also most welcome to join the villagers in their winter
preparation activities.
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