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| aGallipoli &Troy Tour | Hi thanks for looking after us on the tour to canakkale. A experince I wıll never forget´.To live in this region must make you feel very proud and honoured As I was telling you that some friends of mine wıll be over in April so I will give them your travel co name.AHSLY Travel Today I fly to Rome for 4 days and will be back on Friday in Istanbul till Sunday when I fly back to Perth in Aust. thanks again Sent by Helen |
| aAbout Ahsly Travel | Thanx polly to arrange my lovely trip.I will recomend your company Ahsly Travel .It was great Arragments realy in every place coop. companies showed us how we special for them Thanx polly again Sent by Daniel |
| aAnzac House Youth Hostel | Arriving a few days before ANZAC day 2006 and having a distastrous booking problem at another hotel, I chose the Anzac House Youth Hostel at random from a website without any preconceptions. On arrival at the hotel, the staff secured the last available room for me. The service was the best I had encountered in Turkey to date and this continued during my four day stay. The management and staff provided me with information, Gallipoli trips and blankets for the cold night out (dawn service). Nothing seemed to be too much for the staff. By the time I left I felt like one of the family. Highly recommended. Sent by Peter |
| aGallipoli &Troy Tour | Ahsly travel is organised by Crowded House which is a hotel in Eceabat. This tour is very popular with independent travellers who want to combine a trip to Gallipoli with Troy. In summer tours can start from Istanbul (pick-up) or from Kusadasi/Selcukn (pick-up) but only the Istanbul option is available in winter. The tour price includes transfers from Istanbul/Kusadasi/Selcuk, tour of Gallipoli and Troy with guide, lunch at Gallipoli, ferry transfer and one night in Crowded House. Optional transfer back to Instabul or south to Selcuk/Kusadasi incurs additional costs. Breakfast is not included in the price and breakfast at Crowded House is generally inexpensive for such good breakfast. Troy tour is very good and was conducted by a true Troy buff and professor named Mustafa who speaks like an academic but with a sense of humour. He makes Troy come alive and explained very well the various periods of time in Troy and the difference between the Troy cities such as Troy I, Troy II, Troy V etc. Gallipoli tour was interesting but felt to be very long as it is about 5 hours. More significant if you are Australian/Kiwi or even British. Guide was quite good and explained about the history and significance of Troy not just to the Australians/Kiwis/Brits but also to the Turkish people who were also killed there. It was estimated that about 180,000 Allied soldiers and 220,000 Turkish soldiers died in Gallipoli over a 8 month campaign. Because of the large area of Gallipoli and the distance between the memorials, an independent travel would need to engage a tour or hire a car to view the important sites. The Gallipoli peninsula can be accessed from Eceabat or 5-hour drive from Istanbul to Eceabat Crowded house will be your meeting point you can exchange travel experience with others Sent by LINA |
| aGallipoli Tour | I just completed the day-time tour of the Gallipoli peninsula. The tour was excellent and well organised. Murat, the tour guide was well-informed and brought a level of emotion to his descriptions that made it extremey moving. We had just the right amount of time to see everything we needed to.
In addition to this, the staff at Anzac House and the gallipoli Tour have been brilliant.Thank you for the Allhotels booking service stuffs for arranging my trip I`ve arrived in off season whilst their hostel is being refurbished - they upgraded me to a different hotel at a cheap rate and have let me use their wireless for free, plus free cay (tea). In all areas, they`ve been very helpful.
Sent by Amanda |
| aGallipoli Tour tour | Thanks for a brilliant trip - Mike and I loved it, and Murat was a brilliant guide. I will definitely recommend you guys to my friends.
Sent by Rochelle |
| aGallipoli-Ephesus-Pamakkale-Boat cruise-Cappadocia tours | My wife and I recently returned from a backpacking holiday in Turkey,We felt to thank to Ahsly Travel (mr Obama huseein)who booked our Tours where we stayed in Eceabat, TJs Hostel and went on the Gallipoli tour with them. In all respects they were first rate.
TJ & B (as they are known) manage TJs Hostel and run TJs Travel agency. TJ, a Turkish born male is passionate about Gallipoli, knows his battle history exceptionally well and provides an excellent tour of the Anzac area. His wife, B; an Australian lady runs the Travel side of things and works long hours assisting holiday makers, and ensuring their time in Gallipoli is incident free and enjoyable.
The Hostel is clean, well equipped, centrally located in town, and has excellent staff assisting TJ & B with all the travel assistance we needed to get us down the Turkish coast. Their hospitality and professionalism was beyond reproach.
I really believe many Australians would welcome this sort of help to make their Gallipoli pilgrimage a time to remember.
Sent by Dean |
| aTurkey Tour | Hello. I am Takehiro Torii, from Japan.
I could have a good time on a trip (4 - 8 July Cappadocia, Pamukkale, and Marmaris) which you manage. Thank you.
Sent by Takehiro |
| aWisiting Gallipoli without Tours | for those who cant afford guided tours for gallipoli at 60 lira per person...
it is possible to visit gallipoli with public transport, and see quite a bit if you are up to a 15km walk on easy roads. this wont get you to helles pont, but will allow you to visit many sites around the anzac area. this is a description of the route that we took, but no doubt it could be improved on, and any other suggestions are welcome. it would be much quicker on a bicycle, but we couldnt find any, so walked.
TAKE PLENTY OF WATER AND SUN PROTECTION. there are very few places to get water along the way, and very little shade. we took 4.5 litres for two people and it was not enough. we started from eceabat at around 11:30, and arrived back in eceabat around 6:30, but it would probably be better to start early and try to visit before the tour buses- or alternatively you could walk a longer route and see more of the sites.
the first step is to get to eceabat. ferries leave canakkale at 7am and on the hour every hour afterward (until 1am, at which point they run every two hours). if you pass through canakkale it is worth picking up a canakkale (troy-assos-gallipoli) pamphlet from the tourist info office just outside the port gates. the pamphlet has a rough map of the gallipoli peninsula with monuments and cemeteries, and some information on them.
the ferry trip takes approximately 25 minutes and costs 2 lira per person. dolmuses wait on the corner where ferries arrive. there is a dolmus to kabatepe at 7am (you will probably want to stay overnight in eceabat to catch this one), 7:30am, and then hourly on the half hour until 20:30. the fare is 2.50 lira per person.
the dolmus arrives at the ferry terminal of kabatepe and pulls up outside a camping ground (we didn't stay here, but it might be worthwhile giving it a go to save money and time). from here, walk north on the roads which follow the coastline. if you ask your driver for anzac cove, or anzak koyu, he will point you in the right direction.
a 20min walk will get you to the information centre. there are toilets and taps here. continuing north along the coast another 25 minutes, you will pass a turn off for a dirt road to lone pine memorial and shell green cemetery. continue along the coastal road- you will come to the anzac memorial and cemetery, shrapnel valley cemetery, and then anzac cove. going further north, you will come to north beach, with the deeply moving ariburnu monument and cemetery. you could keep going north from here and come to the damakcibayiri monument, walkers ridge cemetery, the neck cemetery, embarkation pier new zealand cemetery, the 7th field ambulance cemetery and finally the hill 60 cemetery (this is approximately 7km from kabatepe). we turned back after the ariburnu cemetery however. backtrack to the lone pine turnoff and head up the dirt 4wd track, past the shell green cemetery, and finally to the lone pine monument and cemetery (1.5km from the turnoff).
when you exit lone pine, you come out onto a one way bitumen road. if you go to the right (downhill, against the traffic) you will be heading back to kabatepe. going uphill, to the left, a 5 min walk will bring you to some old WWI trenches. they will be easiest to spot if you walk along the road on the right hand side- you will see a tunnel dug into the ground beside the road, with sides formed by logs. this was one of the turkish tunnels. directly across the road (on the left hand side) are anzac trenches, and a little further up the road (still on the left) is an anzac tunnel. keep going up the road, past johntons jolly, courtney steets post cemetery and quinns post cemetery. you will then come to the 57th regiment cemetery and memorial, for the turkish soldiers of the 57th regiment. every member of the regiment was killed on landing day 25 april 1915. there are more toilets and taps here. we turned back here, but again you could continue further- to the conkbayiri-mehmetcik memorial, the baby 700 cemetery, the ariburnu cliffs, the conkbayiri-new zealand memorial and cemetery, the farm cemetery and the ataturk monument.
walk back down the road in the opposite direction to get back to kabatepe. this will take you past the monument to the turkish soldier, the yarbay huseyin avni cemetery and the yuzbasi mehmet cemetery. the road brings you back to the information centre. take the turn to the left to get back to kabatepe, again following the coast line. you could head to the museum on your way back, but it has been closed for seven months for renovations.
dolmuses leave kabatepe for eceabat at 08:30, 10:30, and then hourly on the half hour until 22:30. they meet the ferries which will take you back to canakkale.
lastly, it is possible to download an audio tour of the gallipoli area from www.anzacsite.gov.au but we didn't know this until later, so don't know what it's like. Sent by A traveller |
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