Wednesday, August 15, 2012

One last ferry ride...

One of my favorite things about living in Istanbul was being able to take a ferry to so many places, to football, to Mini-a-turk, to the beach, or just as a guided tour.  It was fantastic to travel the merger of three bodies of water (the Bosporus Strait, the Golden Horn, and the Sea of Marmara).  So I decided on one last ferry boat ride back to my home near Kabatas from the beach at Heybeli Ada to write about my experience.  I've included photos taken throughout the year on my various rides--day and night--all over the area.  Enjoy.  And when you are Istanbul, ride the ferry.


The city goes on for hours, mosques and minarets, condos and towers.  It snakes along the coast like a ship fearing the open sea. 
It winds and rises, creeping along with infinite meters as if the city never ends and the whole world has become one long and continuous civilization.   
The sea is calm on the southern coast no sign of distant tankers and the rapid crossings of ferries, fishing boats.
The crash of waves against the prow, the rumble of an out-of-date engine, the subdued chatter of sun-streaked vacationers and the almost silent cocooning of the wind. All noises pass.  Only sound remains.  An endless hum.   Invigorating and calming.
The fog cloaks the eastern shore and the towers break through a mass of black gently rising from the  from the blue-green sea.
To the south a lone and tranquil sailboat rocks in the early evening waves 
and the tankers congregate in the distance: a queue of ocean freighters and fishing boats anchored between the seas.   
The masses of modern structures come into focus.  Their white facades interrupted intermittently by the blazing red of national pride, billowing waves of crimson against man-made white immobility and the sporadic green of trees too tired in years to succumb to these coastal breezes. 
The domes are clear now as the afternoon sun wanes, melting into the sea.  The water swells and rocks as it merges into the briny traffic dividing the continents. The silhouette of the old city stands, an ancient landmark in the heat-induced fog, a vista from a distance untouched for hundreds of years.  
The clear and close western coast parades modern hotels, cafes and signs of industry, 
but the shadows of the sun and the steam of the sea hangs on the curves and peaks of empires discernible in the distance.  
Now the western coast welcomes us with the turrets and bricks of the early-twentieth century train depot. A relic of bustling industry, a monument alluding to a romantic orientalist narrative.  
And the eastern shore begs the viewer to gaze into the sun.  It’s location in modernity belied only by the moles and freighters that stand and pass between. Pristine and captured in time immemorial it awaits an artist’s brush, a photographer’s eye.

 And while the iron works of sky-reaching cranes hug the west, all eyes remain transfixed to the east as the narrow oceanic lane widens once more giving view to the expanding history of the city.  Or perhaps a history of expansion. A cloister of minarets, each cluster rivaling its neighbors dispersing for bridges, for a stalwart tower, for the boxed roof tops of economic development…
and only then is the gaze broken as one last piece of history calls from the west.  A solitary tower, an island on the nautical highway. Blazing red pride at its peak. It is by no underestimation quaint.  Simple and being of some great story, a romance, a heroine, a forbidden love, but in its background brick and mortar residences, cement intrusions into the fairy tale, while picturesque and welcome wooden structures line the shore.

We turn. And the eastern coast is the poster child of modernism, westernization at its best and worst, the box factory style buildings housing the wealth of modern art, the red tiled roofs of the university, all spotted through the high-rises of the seas, cruise ships at port for the day.  
A final suspended vestige of connectivity, a symbol of east meeting west greets the viewer as we glide into the dock.  The vertical strings of lights begin to glow as the sun reflects off passing cars.  The sea is calm once more and my feet must meet the land.



The ferry ride at night...