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Contact Phone
Phone:+90 252 284 5439
Mobil:+90 534 207
1789
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Our company is a
villa and apartment rental company. for information and
presentation on this page is written
The clear blue waters of the sunny
mediterranean are beckoning you to a dream holiday in a
turkish yacht…Turkish gulets were originaly built for use
by fishermen and sponge divers. Today they are luxuriosly
designed especialy for chartered holidays. Their large,
unclutered decks are ideal for sunbathing and dining.
These gracious and elegant motor sailers, built of wood in
traditional sytle,range from 18 to 26 meters in lenght and
can accommodate 88 to 20 persons in spacious twin-berthed
or double-berthed cabins. Quarters for the crew of three
are completely seperate with private facilities and
entrance at the fore.
Board your gulet at the port of Fethiye ,
you will cruise the fabulous turquoise seas to Butterfly
Valley and to the famous Ölüdeniz Beach. Sail west to
Ekincik Bay before arriving at Dalyan, and the Lycian rock
tombs of Caunos. A mud bath on the riverbanks will result
in some great photos and lots of laughs! Sail past a
sunken Roman bath and Shipyard Island, into the Göcek Gulf
for an overnight stay. Sail to Katranci Bay via a number
of islands before leisurely returning to the port of
Fethiye.
A delightful voyage of historical and
natural wonders.

EKINCIK
Harbor of Ekincik, located on the western
entry cape of the inlet of Ekincik and covered with green
pine forests, is a place of priority because it is very
near to the ruined remains of Caunos. The grassy plain is
in the middle and the village of Ekincik is at the back of
the inlet respectively. The cooperative of motorboats
incorporated by the villagers here, will take you from
your sailboat and carry to Caunos. You can drop anchor in
the part where there are motorboats and along the wide
sand beach, and also in the wonderful inlet amongst the
verdure exactly opposite the lighthouse. If you can find a
place for yourself in this inlet where the green and the
blue are intermingled with each other, it will be both
safe and pleasing to anchor there.

Sarsala Bay
Sixteen miles from Butterfly Valley,
Sarsalais yet another striking pine-surrounded bay in
which to swim and kayak. It is also a convenient starting
point for a ninety minute hike to ancient Lissa, notable
for inscribed walls dating from the 3rd century BC rule of
two of Cleopatra's Ptolemy forebears and for the majestic
positioning of its acropolis above a fresh-water lake .
The restaurant at Sarsala is above average

Tersane Island
One mile from
Tomb Bay. Perhaps once Telandria, a dues-paying member of
Athens' Delian League. Ancient evidence, however, is
limited to remains of what may be a watch tower now mostly
watching the Simavi estate
on Domuz Adasi, a substantial fortress-like
structure the lower courses of which are isometric, and
the remains of a handsome tomb in the Cadyanda order. the local restaurateur and full-time goat
herd/shepherd, serves a superior fare based on her
pastures.

Cleopatra’s Bay
(Manastir)
Three miles from Tersane. Another exquisite
setting with thick pine to the water's edge. Monastery
ruins half submerged testify to medieval presence of the
Greek church. Also called Ruin Bay, a 55-minute hike takes
the inquisitive to ancient Lydae. Off the beaten path and
rarely visited, Lydae features mausolea, agora
foundations, statue remnants, Corinthian column sections,
and inscribed pedestals from the Roman and Byzantine
periods. Cleopatra, by the way, was here twice, once in 46
BC and again in 32 BC honeymooning with Marc Antony. He,
Antony, was en route to Actium. She, Cleopatra, was
transporting the Egyptian treasury to fund his
misadventures. Recep, the restaurateur at Cleopatra's Bay,
bends any bendable ear while pouring cold beer or hot tea.

Tomb Bay (Taskaya)
Six miles from Gocek, Tomb Bay is
delightful for dining, swimming, or boat drive-by below
Carian and Lycian rock tombs (Ionic temple, house, and
pigeon-hole tombs). Originally Carian and latterly Lycian,
the ancient city of Crya is still evident among the olive
trees and oleander, while its Carian acropolis is a short
scramble above a seaside restaurant. Lycians, Herodotus
asserted, were Minoans driven from Crete by Minos of
Knossos. Carians, he believed, were native to Asia Minor.

Gemiler
(St. Nicholas) Island
The meaning of
the Turkish word gemiler is the ships, and
this island fifteen miles from Wall Bay is remarkable in
part because its north shore is lined with galliot and
other vessel parking slips. Once home to Lycian and
Byzantine pirates, the remains of an entire village are
there to be explored, from the aforementioned pirate-ship
parking to covered passage to basilica. A wonderful place
to swim and snorkel, and an equally wonderful place to
take in a hilltop sunset with a bottle of wine. This part
of Anatolia, it might be noted, has harbored pirates since
arrival of Lycians in the second millennium. Tablets found
at Tel-el-Amarna in Egypt mention Lycian sea raiders as
early as the fourteenth century BC

Gocek
The Club Marina
in Gocek is the scenic ultimate in yacht marinas and the
place the Charter Sailing Yacht T.G. Ellyson calls home.
It is situated up against pined slopes of a national
forest in the NW corner of the Gulf of Fethiye and may be
the site of ancient Hyparna, a fortified town defended by
mercenaries which fell to Alexander during the winter of
334/333 BC. By the first century before the Christian era
Gocek was called Callimache, a port the Roman Stadiasmus
places 50 stade (about 5 nautical miles) each from Rhodian
Daedala (Inlice) and Lycian Crya (Tomb Bay). Both the Club
Marina and Gocek Town are thirty-five minutes from Dalaman
International Airport. Today Gocek has an enviable charm
as an emerging tourist destination and yacht haven. It is
also the site of a rare temple tomb in the Doric order.
From Gocek we often accompany guests by car to ancient
Calynda, and from there up into nearby hills to inspect
temple tombs in the Ionic order at a site not yet
identified but which may be ancient Telandros. In Gocek
there are several good restaurants, among them Alternative
on the waterfront and Dursun's Palm Cafe set in an orange
grove adjacent to the town's municipal office building.


Map

Phone:+90 252 284 5439 |