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Here's the question. How can a gorge 20 km long and hundreds of feet deep that carries vast volumes of snow melt every year be virtually invisible until you're inside it? Here's the plan, you turn up at the right time of year (which varies depending where your attitude to 'activity holidays' lies on the scale between mellow and suicidal), pop on some shoes that you don't mind getting wet and start the ascent. Please don't be put off at this point if I'm making it sound scary. It isn't unless you try and battle ice cold torrents at neck height any time before April. I've 'done the gorge', or at least parts of the 4km that are available for walk, at several times of year and with varied groups of companions (some bits under some conditions are very difficult unless you're with the sort of friends who don't mind you standing on their heads). If you want a nice relaxing paddle with the odd high step then I'd go for late summer, after the water has warmed up enough to make falling over fun and while there's still enough of it left to fall over into. If you don't fancy the hike then the 150 metres of walkway you need to traverse to get to the gorge proper is fun for everybody and the clump of tea houses, some of which serve food, which have been craftily inserted there make a great place to chill out for a while. Particularly pleasant on a summer evening when the coach trippers have headed back to their hotel resorts and you can grab a beer that's been sitting in the running water all day. It's difficult to do this place justice with photos and descriptions. Much, much fun if you're up for it and very nice if you've had a heavy evening the night before and just want to sit around going 'wow'.
If you're on your own here's an idea of the location of stuff. A decent road map or guide book will help but this will do in an emergency. There's no accommodation at Saklikent, what you will find are a clump of basic restaurants inside the gorge itself. They'll serve you with a light lunch or supper at reasonable prices and provide a variety of beverages, all chilled in the waters of the river that runs under the platforms you'll want to eat on. I've always assumed that these places get washed away every winter and rebuilt, haven't quite worked it out yet. The car park area is a little scruffy but cold drinks are available. Little in the way of souvenir merchants or even postcard stalls most of the year. |
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