Uchisar is one of the first villages one encounters upon entering the Cappadocia region. The tiny township is located on a hilltop with a 360 degree view of the cave houses. This has got to be the highlight of our trip. A big thank you to my friend, L for the recommendation! Unlike the ridiculous car rental company we'd used in Greece, the agency in Turkey was professional, punctual and friendly. What a vast difference! We flew from Istanbul to Kayseri which is the closest airport to Uchisar. The car was ready for us outside the arrival terminal with a near full tank of petrol (bless them!). I used
Argeus Travel Agency who came very highly recommended by many. The drive was remarkably easy with clear signposts and wide roads. Thankfully, there were no crazy daredevils trying to overtake at blind corners.
Our accommodation, Kilim Pension was rustic and delightful. As for our hosts, I couldn't speak more highly of them. They were gracious and accommodating to the hilt. I wasn't keen on my room which was rather dark so they promptly reorganized things around and gave me another room upstairs with an incredible view.

Kilim Pension
Kilim Pension

Kilim Pension

The Pension is located right in front the Uchisar castle where one can see the hot air balloons just before sunrise.

Uchisar Castle

Most of the locals are small scale farmers or entrepreneurs. The cow and its calf were led to graze in the fields on the castle grounds.

If you disregard the pair of jeans, this shepherd (with his turban and staff) is a throwback from biblical time.

The view from Uchisar

Old fashion pitchers such as these are still in use today.

Turkish viagra anyone?
Little L and I noticed a group of soldiers shadowing our steps. Needless to say, the sight of uniformed men clutching their rifles made us very uneasily. It turned out that they were trying to drum up courage to ask if they could have a photo with Little L! We ended up having a nice long chat about life in Turkey. These soldiers were conscripted for 5 months as they were university graduates. Those who only finished high school must join the army for 1.5 years. I was told that Turkey has a young population but jobs are scarce so many try to join the immigration bandwagon.
Cappadocia was once an important Christian centre where references of the place were made in the bible (Act 2:9). This is evidenced by the ruins of dozens, if not hundreds of churches inside the rock formations. I was told that one of Jesus' disciples, John actually came to Cappadocia.
Icon inside one of the abandoned churches

Fairy chimneys inside the open air museum (which in fact is a large settlement)

An entire city with churches, mosques, houses, pigeon houses etc are all built inside these soft rocks.

Inside one of the cave houses

We saw a couple of tortoise and a prairie dog (seen here) who came up close to check us out including hundreds of bees buzzing around hard at work.
We stopped for a quick bite to eat. These Gözleme pancakes were tasty.
Whew! That was quite a climb!