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Tarnished · 26-30, M
Istanbul is a very ancient city, and very important for a very long time. Also was the center of Orthodox Christianity.
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Elessar · 26-30, M
Byzantium* 😏
I can only remember one person whom talked about going there. When asked what he did, said all he can remember is being drunk the entire time as alcohol was so cheap and easy to get, they basically partied the entire night until places closed down and we're recovering to the evening the next day and repeat.
exexec · 61-69, C
My friends who have visited Turkey say that it is one of the most interesting places they have visited. They say it is similar to Rome in a lot of ways.
CrazyMusicLover · 31-35
I hopped through a few places in Turkey just minutes ago through Google view and wish I could teleport to see some of them. They have sea, mountains, woods, lakes, ancient ruins..Imagine a road trip there.
Jexie · 26-30, F
@CrazyMusicLover 😯 OMG
CrazyMusicLover · 31-35
Jexie · 26-30, F
@CrazyMusicLover Wow so amazing and unique
deadgerbil · 26-30
I know there's a lot of ancient ruins
Jexie · 26-30, F
@deadgerbil Interesting
Ducky · 31-35, F
For the city of Batman, of course.
Flenflyys · 31-35, F
Plastic surgeries
OnePatheticClown · 51-55, M
Cause Tombili of course
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tombili
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tombili
calicuz · 56-60, M
Because it's beautiful.
SW-User
Cheap, cultural, beaches, friendly people., not in EU.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@SW-User I have done that, for a very short trip as we didn't have all the specific stuff with us; and the border control offices had all obviously been closed and the barriers locked open for quite a long time. We were on holiday in the French Pyrenees; and some 20 years ago.
So perhaps those controls are something recently imposed by both countries, for their own reasons. We always needed a passport; but having left the EU, I don't know what Britons travelling to any continental EU country now also need.
I've also travelled as a passenger in a friend's car between EU-Sweden and non-EU Norway, both through the E6 trunk-road crossing and by a relatively minor, rural road much further North.
There was a customs post on the E6 for commercial traffic, but none for private travellers and like everyone else, we simply drove straight across without even slowing. I'm not sure they even stopped every lorry, either.
I don't recollect the rural border crossing having any more than a "Welcome" sign - otherwise we'd have known where we'd crossed it only by studying the map!
(We were not lost. These were intentional border crossings.)
So perhaps those controls are something recently imposed by both countries, for their own reasons. We always needed a passport; but having left the EU, I don't know what Britons travelling to any continental EU country now also need.
I've also travelled as a passenger in a friend's car between EU-Sweden and non-EU Norway, both through the E6 trunk-road crossing and by a relatively minor, rural road much further North.
There was a customs post on the E6 for commercial traffic, but none for private travellers and like everyone else, we simply drove straight across without even slowing. I'm not sure they even stopped every lorry, either.
I don't recollect the rural border crossing having any more than a "Welcome" sign - otherwise we'd have known where we'd crossed it only by studying the map!
(We were not lost. These were intentional border crossings.)
SW-User
@ArishMell Unfortunately we live partly in Spain.
You may as well forget taking dogs to Spain. You need rabies antibodies checks on specific days before you go. Then a certificate to travel. In Spain you register the animals as European so they get a pet passport, but we are unsure what happens at the English border on return.
Travel is limited to 90 days in a rolling 180. So if you go for 37 days in the autumn, you can have up to 53 from February. If you go over that time you get £1000 fine.
European Health certificates are no longer valid, there is limited cover, and must rely on your own insurance.
The £7 visa system is due next year, as is the fingerprint system.
So it’s a nightmare.
However , I understand if you cross the channel on a dinghy none of this applies. A bit risky though, as the seas are rough.
You may as well forget taking dogs to Spain. You need rabies antibodies checks on specific days before you go. Then a certificate to travel. In Spain you register the animals as European so they get a pet passport, but we are unsure what happens at the English border on return.
Travel is limited to 90 days in a rolling 180. So if you go for 37 days in the autumn, you can have up to 53 from February. If you go over that time you get £1000 fine.
European Health certificates are no longer valid, there is limited cover, and must rely on your own insurance.
The £7 visa system is due next year, as is the fingerprint system.
So it’s a nightmare.
However , I understand if you cross the channel on a dinghy none of this applies. A bit risky though, as the seas are rough.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@SW-User I'm not a pet owner but I think you can obtain travel documents for animals in the UK. I don't know if the EU pet passport is still recognised.
Have you examined the "gov.uk" web-site for advice? I have found the areas I have consulted for other matters do explain them very clearly.
I have had quite a number of holidays in France and Norway, and I think the earliest were before the UK "joined" the EEC. (We didn't join the "Common Market" - there was no such thing.) I don't recall it ever being difficult then but of course laws do change, and I think Spain always was one of the more bureaucratic countries.
Ah, but if you manage to cross the world's busiest shipping-lane in a jerry-built dinghy with a false power-rating plate on its under-powered engine, you then need disappear. You'd probably have had any passport etc. stolen by the traffickers, too.
Have you examined the "gov.uk" web-site for advice? I have found the areas I have consulted for other matters do explain them very clearly.
I have had quite a number of holidays in France and Norway, and I think the earliest were before the UK "joined" the EEC. (We didn't join the "Common Market" - there was no such thing.) I don't recall it ever being difficult then but of course laws do change, and I think Spain always was one of the more bureaucratic countries.
Ah, but if you manage to cross the world's busiest shipping-lane in a jerry-built dinghy with a false power-rating plate on its under-powered engine, you then need disappear. You'd probably have had any passport etc. stolen by the traffickers, too.
SinlessOnslaught · 26-30, M
Go back to school kid, we don't have the technology to get to Turkey yet, let alone Mars.
SatyrService · M
they are very funny Birds.
or did you mean Anatolia ?
or did you mean Anatolia ?
calicuz · 56-60, M
SatyrService · M
@calicuz ahhh the spelling fooled me,,
yes Türkiye
yes Türkiye
Sevendays · M
My sister went to a wedding there this summer and loved it.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
some images from a recent visit
Some
Some
Jexie · 26-30, F
@samueltyler2 Nice 👌
PhoenixPhail · M
Because it wouldn't be Thanksgiving without it? 🤭
basilfawlty89 · 31-35, M
There is a lot of culture and history.
Problem is that most of it wasn't built by the Turks, they appropriated it from Armenians, Kurds, Arabs, Persians, Assyrians and Greeks.
I refuse to visit Turkey or buy Turkish products until they treat their minorities better and recognise the 1915 Genocide of the Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians.
Problem is that most of it wasn't built by the Turks, they appropriated it from Armenians, Kurds, Arabs, Persians, Assyrians and Greeks.
I refuse to visit Turkey or buy Turkish products until they treat their minorities better and recognise the 1915 Genocide of the Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians.
Jexie · 26-30, F
@basilfawlty89 Damn
Beaches and it's cheap.