Day 10: Part TwoAfter the mosque we set off southwards again. It would be another long drive (566k/350m); but this time we had already booked our hotel and knew where it was. We were heading for Çalis. It was where we had had our first three holidays in Turkey and we would laze about, visit old friends, and indulge in some nostalgia.
MAP OF DAY 10 (red route)

We travelled a pleasant road through wooded mountains towards Managvat until we arrived at the Mersin-Antalya road. I had driven this before so knew what to expect; a straight, flat, boring road congested with traffic.
BEYSEHIR TO MANAGVAT ROAD
OUR LITTLE CAR
If there was any scenery worth viewing on thir road, which there isn't, it would be obscured by thousands of huge hoardings. After some time we approached Antalya with some forebodings. When I had been there before we had gotten comprehensively lost. We weren't looking forward to replaying the experience. Here is the problem. Antalya doesn't believe in the usual signposting of Turkey. Instead of nice big clear signs indicating the next city it assaults the eye with dozens of nasty little yellow signs that might indicate cities, nearby villages, or even suburbs of the city. Antalya distains to mention Fethiye, beneath its contempt, and - as far as we could see - makes only one mention of Mugla. We figured out that we would have to travel north on the Burdur road before turning left to go via Korkuteli to Fethiye. After travelling to and fro in the traffic-jammed centre of Antalya we spotted a little yellow sign indicating the road to Burdur. It was only a little while later that we discovered the underlying meaning of this sign. Which was "This is the direction you should take for Burdur. If, that is, you want to travel by the most miserable, convoluted, roundabout, route through broken down suburbs, along roads that are mostly under construction (or deconstruction), without benefit of any further signposts, and where the local citizenry are outstandingly stupid and have no idea where the mythical Fethiye might be except that if you wanted to get there you should not be on this road in the first place, so it is all your fault". Now I realize that it would be difficult to fit all this onto a nasty little yellow sign, but it would be more honest if it was done. After much cursing, backtracking, stopping and asking, and hoping for the best we found ourselves travellihng westward - at least in the right general direction - along a tatty narrow road which inexplicably ("This is Turkey") converted into a brand new, empty, six lane highway for one kilometer until it ended its brief existence at the main Antalya-Burdur road that the local transport authorities had tried to hide from us. There were, of course, no signposts. Nevertheless we finally managed to discover the turnoff to Korketli and were able to continue our journey. It had taken an hour and a quarter to get from one side of the city to the other. Should you find in some market some tee-shirts saying "
I HATE ANTALYA " could you get a couple (one small, one large) and I'll buy them from you when I'm next in town.
Now we back on the right road we travelled over relatively low mountains, separated by plateaux, on another good route through forests. We found Korketeli to be a pleasant, surprisingly large, town (with excellent signposting!) and the bitter taste of Antalya had cleared from our mouths.
ANTALYA (Boo!!! Hiss!!!)
TO FETHIYE ROAD
It was late afternoon when we pulled off the main road and headed into Calis. We crossed the little canal, turned right, and parked behind the Nil Motel where we would stay for three nights. We had booked a large room at the front looking over the prom onto one of the best coastal views we have seen anywhere. Later, as we relaxed with a couple of Efes, I took the obligatory "Çalis Sunset" photograph. It never fails to please the soul.
Çalis SUNSET