Saturday, June 21, 2014

Back at it in Istanbul

Written by Charles June 18, 2014

On Sunday we left Puerto Rico for Istanbul.  We took a four-hour flight to New York and caught a plane to London.  In London we ran to our next plane, which went to Istanbul.  We caught the plane in the nick of time.  Then we flew for 4 hours over Europe to Istanbul.  When we landed in Istanbul we took a van to a marina and caught a boat on the Bosphorus River (one bank is touching Europe and the other is touching Asia) to our hotel.  From the boat we could see the Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque.  The sun was also setting, so it made for some cool photos.  We’re staying on the Bosphorus River (the second busiest strait in the entire world), so there are lots of cargo ships motoring outside of our hotel.



On Tuesday we took a helicopter tour around Istanbul.  We saw the Covered Bazaar (where in Skyfall, James Bond rode his motorcycle on the roofs), the Blue Mosque, the Hagia Sophia, and lots of the city.  I think that you can only understand the size of the city from the air.  It looked like a sea of red-tiled roofs.  Then we went to a museum, which was someone’s private collection of awesome things.  They had vintage cars, vintage motors, boats, ferries, planes, a tank, a WWII submarine, and even a shot down B-14.  I thought that the B-14 was one of the coolest things we saw next to the submarine.  It was an American built submarine that was built for attacking the Japanese.  Then it got outdated, so we gave it to the Turks.  Then they decided that it was too old too, so they gave it to the museum for touring. Inside it was cramped and claustrophobic.  There were pipes waiting to dent your head at each corner and wires ready to trip you.  It looked just like the movies that you see.  We saw the torpedo room, the dive room, the sleeping quarters, the engine room, and the command room.  I thought that it was really cool.  That night we went back to the hotel and ate a quiet dinner.  When we went to sleep, there also happened to be a party going on out our window, so we couldn’t sleep.  By midnight my dad said that it wouldn’t work, and so we changed rooms.

On Wednesday we visited the Hagia Sophia.  It was massive; it was so big that you couldn’t get a picture of it with an I-phone.  It was larger than the Taj-Mahal (minus the gardens and stuff). Inside half of the place was filled with scaffolding for repairs, but the other half was filled with beautiful mosaics that looked like they were made from gold.  The dome inside was so big that you could fit any of the houses that I’ve lived in inside it.  Then we went to one of the underground cisterns (water storages) left over from the Byzantine Empire.  There were rows of columns that marched along for what seemed like forever.  It looked just like a scene from a movie.  Two pillars had their bases as Medusa’s head.  One head was upside down, and the other was on its side.  



Lastly we visited the Blue Mosque.  It was like a miniature version of the Hagia Sophia, with all the domes and arches.  When we went inside we had to take off our shoes.  Our mom and Miss Jenn had to wear headscarves to cover their hair.  Inside it smelled like stinky feet because everyone had to take their shoes off.  There were no mosaics inside the Blue Mosque, but there were 22,000 blue tiles that made up the walls and ceiling.  We left pretty fast though because mom and Miss Jenn didn’t like the stink.  After the Blue Mosque we went outside to take pictures.  Then we went back to the hotel and did school work all afternoon.



On Thursday we did a lot.  We first went to Topkapi Palace, which 20 of the sultans from the Ottoman Empire lived in.  When we first arrived we had to walk in under medieval style walls.  We walked in the walls and went through a huge courtyard, which was the size of a normal city park.  Then we walked through a gate and into a modern day security-screening zone.  On the ceiling there were carvings with gold leaf trim.  That gate led to an equally large courtyard filled with trees and bushes.  On the side of the courtyard there was a room with all the sultans’ robes.  There were lots of the long overcoats and there were some pants.  There were even a baby sultan’s robes!

There was another room that had all the sultan’s thrones in it, but the line was too long to get in, so we skipped it.  The third through sixth rooms had all the sultans’ expensive jewelry and all their jeweled knickknacks.  I liked two of the objects in there: one was a glass box full of emeralds, and the other was a 64-karat diamond.  It looked like it could be the centerpiece for the Queen of England’s crown.  The funny thing was that the tour guide was telling us that the Ottomans were having financial problems!  After the jeweled rooms, we went to the armory and saw all the weapons that the sultans used.  There were fancy bows and arrows that were made out of teak, suits of armor made out of gold and silver, and there was even a sword that was eight feet long!  They wouldn’t allow photos in any of the rooms we went into, so we can’t show you photos.

After the palace we went to the Covered Bazaar.  It was basically a market with all the shops and cobbled streets, but there was a wooden roof over it all.  In all the stores you could bargain, so my mom and William had a go at it.  My mom bought a fur coat (in the middle of the summer), and she also got a few silk scarves.  William got a tile and a keychain.  I got the best deal out of everyone because I got a free keychain.  My parents almost bought a necklace for my mom, but it was a touch too expensive.  I thought that the craziest part was how all 3,500 shops had a roof over them.  I also thought that the jewelry shop windows had more gold in them than the domes on most state houses in the U.S.


That night, after battling through traffic, we picked up our friends and went to the Whirling Dervishes.  I thought that it was very boring, so I fell asleep twice.  They first played music for fifteen minutes.  William fell asleep in the first five of those minutes.  After that the dervishes came out and did a religious/ceremonial walk that included a lot of bowing.  It also took fifteen minutes, and I fell asleep for most of that.   Then for thirty minutes they spun around.  They had white dresses that billowed out when they spun.  They also raised their arms, and they just stood there and spun like tops.  I fell asleep again when they got out of sync.  I thought the most amazing part was that the five dancers never got dizzy.  Today we are leaving Istanbul and getting on the cruise ship that goes to lots of islands and eventually stops in Athens.


Written by William June 20, 2014

Hello again, it is me, awesome William. We were ski racing in Oregon and Austria for the past six months if you were wondering where we were.



On our flights we went from Puerto Rico (AKA home) to JFK New York, then we had a six hour flight from JFK to Heathrow London. We literally were running through the airport to catch the flight to Istanbul, but by the time we got to the gate it was an hour after the departure time. The board said Istanbul boarding in 20 minutes, and we caught the flight. We finally arrived in Istanbul Monday night. We took a boat ride from the airport to the hotel. I thought the Blue Mosque was the Hagia Sophia because it looked bigger and cooler. And then we got to our hotel, which is The Four Seasons next to the Bosphorous River.


We went on a helicopter ride, which only had two headsets. We flew over the Bosphorous River, and we saw a fake out palace because it actually was a high school; we also flew over the Prince Islands, then turned around and saw the Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque.



We went to a car and airplane museum, which also had a submarine that you could tour. All of the cars were someone’s private collection; there was the flying car from Harry Potter, a car from Top Gear that they split in half, and lot of other vintage cars. Plus we saw a wrecked B 14 bomber that got shot by an anti aircraft gun, a cool boat, and a tank made by Chrysler under a bomber. We went on a submarine tour, which had 6 torpedoes loaded, and I thought it was cool. The guy who was giving the tours worked on the boat for 25 years as the engineer. Then we came back to the hotel where they were setting up a full fledge party.

Today we went in the Hagia Sophia, which had a few cool mosaics, and I thought the architecture was really cool. A little history lesson now, ok? The Romans first built the Hagia Sophia, and they used it as a Catholic church. After Rome fell, it became the Byzantine Empire. Next the Ottomans came, and then there was a revolt against the Sultans. It was last used as a mosque, and today it is open like a museum.



We went inside the cistern underground. Inside the cistern, which they only found like 30 years ago, there were a lot of pillars with lights on them. There was really only one other thing to see in there, which was two Medusa heads in the corner, which actually was really cool.



The Blue Mosque was our last stop of the day. On the walls and ceiling there were all types of cool stone patterns that were all blue, which is my favorite color. The bad side of it was it was really stinky. What I still am wondering is why the carpet is red inside the Blue Mosque. That was the end of today, and I am looking forward to tomorrow.

We went to Topkapi Palace, which was giant; it even had 4 courtyards. There were guards everywhere at the entrance because it belonged to the military. Then we went into a few rooms, which had all types of cool patterns made out of stone; some were green, some were red, and some were blue. Then we went into a room that had some really cool pieces like a 64 kart diamond. The sultans had financial problems, but they didn’t use the diamond to help them. My brother saw a gold sword too! We went into a weapons room, which was really cool, and it had spears, 8-foot swords, some axes, and some really epic armor.

After the palace we went to the Grand Bazaar, which was bazaar. The Grand Bazaar is an oversized outdoor mall that has a covered roof over it. There were about 3,500 stores, and we walked past about 200 stores (to give you an idea on the percentage we saw). I bought tiles, which had a cool pattern as a souvenir, and who knows what my mom bought. I got to bargain for my souvenir. He asked for 150 Turkish liras, and I got him down to 120.

We went to see the whirling dervish last night. I would like to tell you how it was, but I fell asleep immediately; like in the first 5 minutes and slept through the entire show.

Today we are getting on a cruise ship, and we are stopping in six different places in Greece and Turkey.


Saturday, June 14, 2014

Safari in Botswana

Written by Charles (photos chosen by William)


The plane that we used to get from the Botswana border to the Okavanga Delta made all the other planes look like jumbo jets.  This was a twin-engine turbo prop that seated a maximum of 10 passengers.  When we landed at Mombo, our safari camp in the Okavango Delta, we saw elephants and giraffes from the plane.  We landed at the Mombo “International” Airport (a dirt runway with the terminal being three covered parking spaces for safari jeeps).  We rode in a safari jeep towards the camp, and 3 minutes from the airport we met giraffes.  That’s when the hunting started.



Well, hunting with cameras…suddenly the cameras went rapid-fire machine gun mode.  One giraffe crossed the road in front of us; eventually we moved on.  We got to the camp, and I saw that the camp was a series of boardwalks with huts and tents/log cabins about ten feet off the ground.  I also saw that there were no fences around the camp, keeping the animals out.

That afternoon we went out; within the first forty-five minutes we made National Geographic envious.  We first went to see a pride of lions just ten minutes outside of the camp.  They were eating a dead mama warthog.  It was cool because the lions let us get close because they thought that we were a big moving and talking rock. Then they started to fight; they were roaring and clawing each other.  After that one of the lions stood up and started walking towards something.  We drove to the lion, and then the chase began. 



The chase was on, baby warthog in front, lioness, four safari jeeps, and a pride of lions all on the warthog’s tail.  We trampled bushes to see where the lion went and finally, with the warthog in her mouth, she laid down to eat.  I won’t go into detail, but I’ll say that she was, in simple terms, putting her lipstick on.  Her mouth was bright red and… well, look at the pictures and you’ll figure it out.

After that we went to go visit the elephants.  We drove right up to them, and some of the larger ones didn’t care.  Some of the smaller elephants wanted their space though.  One was a teenager, and one was a 3 year old.  The teenager came up about 30 feet from the Land Rover and swung his trunk.  He also dipped his head and pretended to charge.  Everyone was scared, except the driver.  Then the baby elephant came up and did the same thing as his brother, and we all thought that it was funny.



After that we went to see a different pride of lions.  We saw jackals making a run for a bush.  We also saw a pack of hyenas; they were walking in a pack of about 11.  We went to the lions, who were feasting on a dead buffalo.  There were vultures waiting in the trees and on the ground.  All the cameras were out of batteries except mine, which I also had an extra battery charger for. 


Then, as we started to leave the buffalo/lion feast, the hyenas approached.  There were 2 lions looking at the 11 hyenas.  They stared at each other, and only my camera went click click.  The guide said that the hyenas would have fought the defending lions, if they hadn’t been two boys.  Actually, there was one boy and one girl, but the girl had a mane, so she looked like a boy. 

That night we went to bed with only screen doors and canvas walls to protect us from the lions, hyenas, and leopards. The next day at 6:00 a.m. (5:00 wake up) we went on a rhino hunt; although we didn’t see any rhinos, we did see a leopard.  It was hiding in the bushes, but we found it because a giraffe was staring at the bushes.  We went in, trampling small trees and plowing over bushes. In other words, we were being a stealth jeep, rock, or bulldozer. 


The leopard was drinking from a watering hole, and she let us get 10 feet away from her.  That day we also saw elephants, zebras, and buffalo in the same area.  The zebras and buffalos wouldn’t let us get that close though.  We tried to go close to the buffalo, but they would run, while the old boys would form a wall and stomp on the ground like bulls.



We also saw wild dogs playing.  They ran around in a watering hole and splashed each other.  A while down the road we saw hyenas playing in a different watering hole.   We also saw a hippo; he was like the ones we saw in Victoria Falls, who just floated in the water like logs.  That afternoon we took a nap to make up for the 5:00 am wake up.  Then we went out on the evening safari.  The coolest thing we saw was lions, who were just lounging and taking naps near the airport. 



The next morning, after another terrifying night and a five am wake up call, we went on a lion hunt.  We saw nothing unusual, except for some giraffes in the bushes away from us.  We also saw a hippo pretending to be a log again.  We ended the morning early for an open-door helicopter ride.  They took the doors off and flew us around hunting for animals.  We saw elephants, giraffes, zebras, wildebeests, crocodiles, hippos, warthogs, buffalo, impala, baboons, and of course, lots of birds. 



That evening we saw nothing, except some impalas and a jackal that was running into a bush.  When we came back from dinner, we saw a hippo next to our tent/hut.  It was eating, and it went “Gwahhaammp blumbplumb Gwahhaammp blumbplub.” It saw our flashlights and tried to walk away.  Instead it bumped into the support of the cabin and shook it.  William was inside it and yelled “Earthquake!!”




The next and last morning we saw lots of elephants and a hippo.  The elephants walked all around our truck and didn’t really care about us.  Then we drove around until we saw a leopard.  It gave us lots of photo opportunities.  It walked around, and we followed it until it looked like it was going to jump on top of the truck.  Then the driver (who was in the front seat) told us it was dangerous and we skedaddled.  That day was also my birthday, and I thought that it was one the best birthdays ever (up to the leaving part).  Then we took all the flights home with a total of 24 hours (give or take) till we got home.  I don’t think that I will forget that trip ever, and I want to go back to most of the places we went to.