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Getting older, but still a backpacker at heart? This is the holiday for you

By Rob McFarland

Hot-air balloons float over the fairy chimneys of Cappadocia.

Hot-air balloons float over the fairy chimneys of Cappadocia.Credit: iStock

It’s an auspicious start. After the customary meet and greet in the bar of our elegant four-star hotel in Istanbul, tour leader Orcun Korkmaz leads us to the rooftop terrace of an upmarket restaurant with one of the best views in the city. I find myself spinning like a whirling dervish, mesmerised by a sweeping vista of the Bosphorus Strait and the floodlit facades of the Blue Mosque and Hagia Sophia.

Dinner is an indulgent spread of traditional Turkish fare – kebabs, mezze and fresh seafood – that’s punctuated by the call to prayer, a haunting back and forth between the nearby mosques.

The many domes of Istanbul.

The many domes of Istanbul.

It’s one of the most atmospheric dinners I’ve had in years – the kind of experience you’d expect on an exclusive itinerary with a luxury operator. Yet, I’m on a tour with a company that made its name by offering budget trips to cash-strapped backpackers.

Started in 1990 by Canadian Bruce Poon Tip, G Adventures is the world’s largest small group adventure tour company with trips in more than 100 countries. In 2023, it realised that the travellers who’d booked tours 30 years ago were now looking for an elevated experience. They still craved active trips with like-minded people, but they wanted nicer accommodation, more cultural immersion and less 10-hour bus transfers. Enter Geluxe, a new tour style that purports to tick all these boxes while still giving back to local communities.

Ortakoy mosque on the shores of the Bosphorus, Istanbul.

Ortakoy mosque on the shores of the Bosphorus, Istanbul.Credit: Getty Images

This two-week itinerary is the concatenation of two shorter Geluxe trips: a seven-day jaunt from Istanbul to Sirince via Cappadocia and Ephesus, then an eight-day journey from Sirince to Gocek via Bodrum and Dalyan. It’s an ambitious itinerary that promises big-city buzz, desert escapades, historic ruins and seaside frolics.

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Having been on several regular G Adventures tours, I’m curious whether the world’s best-known budget tour operator can up its game for its increasingly discerning client base.

Mosques, mountains and Roman ruins

Our one full day in Istanbul is an action-packed romp through the city’s old town, a bewildering maze of snaking alleyways choked with people and seemingly suicidal scooters. We tick off many of the city’s big-ticket attractions, including the arresting six-minareted Blue Mosque, the subterranean Basilica Cistern (a spectacular Roman reservoir that’s now an immersive art installation) and the 4000-plus stores within the cavernous Grand Bazaar.

Korkmaz shows us lesser-known gems too, such as the intricate Iznik tiling in the diminutive Rustem Pasha Mosque and a network of elevated 17th-century passages lined with workshops known as a “han”. Along the way, we sample a variety of authentic street food, including doner kebabs, pistachio-studded Turkish delight and a popular tahini-filled pastry. In an atmospheric shisha cafe, we enjoy Turkish tea with cheese-filled bagels and learn the art of tasseography, where your fortune is told using the coffee grounds left after a syrupy slug of Turkish coffee.

Balloons above Cappadocia.

Balloons above Cappadocia.

From Istanbul, we fly, rather than drive, to Cappadocia and are plunged into its dramatic desert medley of soaring escarpments and basalt hoodoos.

Cappadocia is the location of our OMG Stay (an especially memorable hotel) and OMG Day (a choice between two immersive experiences) – two features on every Geluxe tour. Exedra Hotel certainly ticks the OMG box – the palatial property has been carved out of the volcanic terrain, creating an intriguing labyrinth of subterranean rooms linked by terraces and courtyards.

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The OMG Day options are a guided hike or e-bike tour in the Meskendir Valley, a buckling lunar landscape of striking rock formations called fairy chimneys. Both activities turn out to be more intrepid than most of us are anticipating. Cycling on narrow sandy tracks while dodging horse riders and high-speed ATVs certainly elicits plenty of OMGs, plus several much stronger expletives.

The Meskendir Valley, a buckling lunar landscape of striking rock formations called fairy chimneys.

The Meskendir Valley, a buckling lunar landscape of striking rock formations called fairy chimneys.

Cappadocia’s distinctive topography gets all the glory, but the region also has several impressive historic sites. Goreme Open Air Museum is a complex of UNESCO-listed medieval cave churches carved by Byzantine monks. Hidden among a scrum of towering outcrops, many still contain colourful frescoes of prophets and saints.

Even more astounding is Kaymakli Underground City, a vast underground network of chambers that once housed 3500 people. First constructed by the Phrygians in the 8th-century BC, it was expanded by Christians seeking shelter during the 400-year-long Arab-Byzantine wars.

After descending into the bowels of the eight-level complex via narrow staircases and cramped tunnels, we discover an incredible warren of storerooms, living quarters and churches.

Perched on an imposing 60-metre-high rocky outcrop, Uchisar Castle provides a refreshingly lofty contrast. The 200-step climb leaves us gasping but watching the desert landscape burnished in golden hues by the setting sun is a worthy reward.

Of course, these are just warm-up acts for the tour’s headline performer: Ephesus. Highlights include the Library of Celsus, a soaring marble facade decorated with statues of the four virtues; the Corinthian-style Temple of Hadrian with its impressive self-supporting main arch and the yawning Great Theatre, which could hold 25,000 people.

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The ruins of Ephesus … astonishing.

The ruins of Ephesus … astonishing.

Community interaction is a G Adventures staple, and we enjoy two delightful food-themed encounters – a fun gozleme cooking class with two sisters at a rustic village restaurant and dinner at a family home in the tiny Cappadocian hamlet of Zelve (population 45). After a delicious meal of lentil soup, stuffed eggplants and rice-filled sarma, host Mehmet brings out a five-litre flagon of homemade red wine. The rest is a bit of a blur.

Hikes, tombs and the Turquoise Coast

Of the 11 guests that started in Istanbul, only six of us are doing the full two-week trip, so we say farewell to the rest on the transition day, which is spent at Nisanyan Hotel, a delightful collection of villas nestled in the forested hills above the village of Sirince near Ephesus.

Street wares in the village of Sirince.

Street wares in the village of Sirince.

We soon learn that it’s practically impossible to go anywhere in Turkey without tripping over a ruin. We literally stumble across one during a coastal hike near the town of Ahmetbeyli, and then there are guided visits to the ancient Greek cities of Priene and Miletus, Bodrum Castle, the Temple of Apollo at Didyma and the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus. While each site is notable in its own right, it’s hard for anything to compete with Ephesus, and after several long, hot days of ruin scrambling, we’re all a bit templed out.

Fortunately, Dalyan provides the perfect antidote. A lively town strung along the banks of the Dalyan River, it’s known for its natural mud baths, Lycian rock tombs and sandy Aegean beach. During a relaxing river cruise, we experience all three, starting by slathering ourselves in mineral-rich mud (as Cleopatra did, allegedly), before soaking in a sulphur-infused thermal pool.

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After a lunch of grilled trout and a rosé in a riverside restaurant, we glide past dramatic escarpments studded with intricately carved 4th-century-BC Lycian tombs. Last stop is Iztuzu Beach, a popular swimming spot that’s also an important nesting site for loggerhead turtles.

Iztuzu Beach … also a nesting site for loggerhead turtles.

Iztuzu Beach … also a nesting site for loggerhead turtles.Credit: Getty Images

This trip’s OMG Stay is the boutique Hotel Arp Dalyan. Its riverfront restaurant provides a captivating view of the tombs, particularly at night when they’re illuminated by floodlights.

The following day we hike part of the Lycian Way, a 760-kilometre-long trail that skirts the mountainous coastline between Fethiye and Antalya. There’s a pitstop at the ruined ancient Lycian city of Pinara, followed by another home-cooked feast – this time a table-crowding platter of soups, dolma and tender baked chicken at the home of Mr and Mrs Hussain in the village of Minare.

The ruined ancient Lycian city of Pinara.

The ruined ancient Lycian city of Pinara.

This is the inaugural departure of this Geluxe tour, so, inevitably, there are teething problems, specifically a long airport transit, one unremarkable hotel and some minor logistical gremlins.

But overall, it’s still a significant upgrade from a regular G Adventures departure, with characterful accommodation, more inclusions and a good balance of active and cultural experiences.

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Like all the best trips, it finishes on a high – a private boat trip along Turkey’s Turquoise Coast, a superyacht-dotted succession of tranquil bays lapped by teal water. It’s a gruelling day of swims and strolls fuelled by barbecued sea bass, fresh salads and a secret chimichurri sauce made by the captain “with love”. If this is the Geluxe life, sign me up.

The details

Fly Thai Airways, Qatar Airways, Emirates and Singapore Airlines all fly to Istanbul. See thaiairways.com; qatarairways.com; emirates.com; singaporeair.com

Tour G Adventures’ 14-day Istanbul, Cappadocia & Walking the Turquoise Coast tour runs from April to October. Starting in Istanbul and finishing in Fethiye, the trip includes all accommodation, transfers, guided tours and some meals. From $8949, twin-share. See gadventures.com

More See goturkiye.com

The writer was a guest of G Adventures.

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/traveller/inspiration/getting-older-but-still-a-backpacker-at-heart-this-is-the-holiday-for-you-20250502-p5lw4g.html