Snow! Overnight it has snowed! We could see a thin white blanket of
snow across the rooftops from our hotel window.
Having written our postcards yesterday, we were keen to post them
today, but we needed to find some stamps and a post box or a Post
Office.
We had been told that there was a post office near the Hagia Sophia,
so we headed back to the square to begin the search. We asked Police
Officers, Shop Keepers and even passers-by. Each time the directions we
were given, or rather the ones that we followed ended in failure, so we
continued with the rest of our plan. Visit the Grand Bazaar and then
catch a ferry across the Bosphorus to the Kadıköy area on the Asian
side.
The Grand Bazaar was quiet. It is Winter and very cold, but even
still, the merchants seem disinterested in the few shoppers wandering
around the maze of tiny shops.
We managed to reach the ferry port of Eminönü without buying a carpet
or a kilo of some unknown spice, but we were a little hungry and so
splashed out on a couple of Simits. Simits are circular bread encrusted
with sesame seeds. They were incredibly cheap and kept us going for the
rest of the day.
Walking towards the ferry terminals at Eminönü, we noticed a large
Post Office. Our excitement was short-lived as it was closed. Today was
Saturday, and the Post Office would be closed until Monday, by which
time we would have left Istanbul altogether.
The ferry to Kadıköy was a pleasant surprise. Large leather seats and
plenty of room. We sat next to the heater, a standard ‘house’ radiator
behind a wooden cover. Without fuss or ceremony, we had left Europe and
arrived in Asia.
The Asian side of Istanbul seemed a lot like the European side, only
a little slower and more relaxed. True to form, we found a small coffee
shop and decided to rest and consider our next move.
For some reason that escapes me now, we decided to walk five miles
uphill to the Çamlıca Mosque. The mosque is popular with tourists and
locals for the fantastic sunrise and sunset views, but today, there was
snow on the ground and snow clouds in the sky, so we knew that there
would not be any sunsets worthy of Instagram. Still, we walked.
It wasn’t long after we left the coffee shop that it started to snow,
and the further we went uphill, the harder it snowed.
The Küçük Çamlıca TV Radio Tower was an excellent navigational aid.
At 369 metres, you can see it from most of Istanbul, and our route to
the mosque took us right past the tower and the park that surrounded
it.
The Çamlıca Mosque is the largest in Turkey. It is not old; the
President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, inaugurated it in 2019, and
it has a capacity of sixty-three thousand people.
Knowing we had to walk from the Eminönü ferry port to the hotel, we
didn’t fancy walking the five miles back to Kadıköy. The temperature
dropped, and we got cold, so we opted for an Uber.
By the time we had reached our hotel, we had walked ten miles. We did
not venture far for dinner.
A dusting of snow!What a difference a day makes. The Haigia
Sophia in snowOne of the entrances to the Grand
BazaarMobile phones are more interesting than
shoppers!The restored ceiling in the Grand
BazaarFinding our way down to the Eminönü ferry
terminalBuying Simits for breakfastThe ferry to KadıköyThe Galata Tower from the
ferryIt took 100 years for this bronze Bull to
get here via France and GermanyUsing the Küçük Çamlıca TV Radio Tower
for navigationThe Küçük Çamlıca TV Radio Tower is 369
metres tallÇamlıca Mosque. The largest in
TurkeyInside the Çamlıca MosqueThe dome of Çamlıca Mosque