dimanche 9 février 2014

Last day in Istanbul

 Building a cabane in the apartment.
 The street of our apartment
 A cat house

 Getting Gozleme for breakfast

 We visited an obscure energy museum.










 In the afternoon we decided to take the ferry over to visit the Asian side of Istanbul








 Our final meal in Istanbul. A fellow tourist offered to take a picture of us all together. We were just laughing as by now we really looked like a Gypsy family.





 Creepy baby dolls
 Stocking up on the necessities on a final trip to the Spice Market
 Getting back to the Basel airport

 The kids were met by their Christmas gifts when we arrived home again.




This is the next day, but this is what happens when this baby girl dresses herself. It was nice to be home again after Turkey, but we sure had a great trip!

Topkapi Palace

We finally headed over to Topkapi Palace the next day. We weren't quite expecting the 1.5 hour line, but the kids had a good time playing in the courtyard.









We pretended that the boys were Ottoman sultans and they got to pick out their outfits, their rooms, etc. I think these sultans would have turned the place upside down however.


Next up the boys and I had a rendevouz at the Turkish bath (Evaëlle was too little to go unfortunately).

Getting ready to go. Jonas had suddenly turned into our own personal Miley Cyrus.
The kids absolutely loved the Hammam. We hung out in the hot steamy rooms on the marble. Actually, the boys spent most of the time hanging out by cold water basins using the metal bowls to pour freezing cold water on themselves to compensate for it being "too hot." After about 45 minutes we went and each had a full body massage on marble slabs. We then dried off and enjoyed some hot apple tea to complete our experience. 



After that we visited the King Suleyman  mosque.




We enjoyed a bean dinner in front of the mosque


Creepy doll heads
Stray cats. Kind of. These were the best cared-for stray cats I had ever seen. People left out food and even built little cat houses for them. The same thing for the dogs. Most of them had tags in their ears indicating that they had been vaccinated and were safe to pet. Apparently Turks feel like it is unhygienic to keep animals inside their homes, so the take care of the collectively outside. My kind of pet ownership. Jonas was especially excited to pet them and honed his cat-petting skills throughout our trip--the part after we stopped saying "Don't pet it; you'll get a disease!"

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