Istanbul: Day 1 Summary – Istiklal Caddesi

Side note on Turkish pronunciation: ş is like sh, ç is like ch, and ğ is silent (lengthens the preceding vowel). And a c is like a j. More on pronunciation later.
Thus Chicago is spelled Şikago (as I saw it on the baggage carousel at the airport, when my luggage didn’t arrive at first).

After a late start, I took a tram across the Golden Horn (river) to Beyoğlu, where I met Ahmet, a friend of a friend of a friend, for coffee in the middle of Istiklal Caddesi (Ave), the heart of the modern city. Thank you for the pointers, insights and pronunciation tips! (e.g. the name of a good leather jacket shop in the bazaar, local blue fish is in season, and a multi-day muslim holiday starts on Sunday – oops).

Istiklal is a busy, quasi pedestrian-only cobblestone avenue with shops and restaurants, with an old tiny streetcar (reminiscent of a cable car in San Francisco) running down the middle of it, with no safety zone around it of course (that would be so North American!)

Otherwise spent the day walking and snacking :-)

Most common street sights I’ve noticed:

  • Döner restaurants
  • Sweets stores
  • Fresh fruit juice, esp. oranges and pomegranates (they must be local and in season)
  • Roasted chestnut carts

More details than you probably care about:

I walked up and down Istiklal, had a nice veggie lunch, was finally able to buy an electronic transit card, the Istanbulkart, from the booth at the top of the Tünel funicular (no sign indicated that was possible, and the token machines don’t sell them either, though you can add value to cards via machines; thanks again Ahmet), walked a bit along the water in Karaköy where I ate a tasty fresh grilled fish sandwich (TL5/$3) from a streetside bbq-cart vendor and had the best baklava ever at a nearby recommended sweets shop.

I then took the funicular back up to Istiklal and meandered it at night. Tried to stop for a beer but was told “couples only” or “family only” (no single men) at two bars one block, where there was some live music (one guy on a guitar and singing) in no less than 4 bars. Sigh.

After taking the tram back to my hostel’s neighbourhood, Sultanahmet, I checked out the details at a nearby famous hamam (Turkish bath) for future reference, and I meandered through some side streets.

 

New resto in downtown Las Vegas – Heart Attack Grill

No, I did not eat here (esp. not after my vegan veggie burger at lunch)

The (buxom) waitresses are dressed in nurses outfits, and the patrons put on hospital gowns over their clothing.

Say no more!

Hollywood FL: some photos and thoughts

I liked the broadwalk (not boardwalk) area in Hollywood FL, more so than the one in Fort Lauderdale:

  • It’s wide, with a marked “wheels” lane (bicycles, rollerbladers, baby carriages etc. – just not skateboards)
  • Clean; lots of garbage cans (inside large clay pots) on the broadwalk and beach
  • Happy hour on the boardwalk with a view on the sand and water (with breezes)
  • Varying landscape; besides the broadwalk, the walking/cycling trail continues through parks, behind some houses (historical and otherwise), with frequent parking and beach access
  • Unfortunately, a fair number of empty storefronts

And yes, it was hot and humid even at the end of September!

San Francisco: a “rebuttal” to some of my Taiwan comments

It turns out San Francisco has some of the things I found “advanced” in Taipei:

  • Some dedicated motorcycle parking
  • Intelligent transit video screens with arrival times (also, many bus stops have an LED screen that shows the next bus arrival time)
  • Multi-lingual announcements on some transit systems (English, Mandarin and Spanish)

San Francisco: Otis Clay performing at Ameoba Records

This was a free 1 hour concert in Haight-Ashbury area of SF (next to Golden Gate park) on Sunday.
Effectively I was in the “front row” – fun to watch his facial expressions.
The movement of the 6 piece band (+ 2 backup singers) reminded my of the Blues Brothers.

Blues legend Otis Clay in free performance at Ameoba Records

Taipei: Random food photos

Here are some random food photos from around Taipei (some I ate, some I just saw):

More MRT signs (Taipei metro)

More signs in the Taipei metro:

Taipei: Night market food photos

Here are some photos taken at various night markets in Taipei: