Fethiye flotilla – Our recent experience

BlackwaterLad

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Along with my wife and 16yr old son I have just spent a week on a flotilla out of Fethiye, Turkey and would like to share our thoughts with the forum.

Our previous Med. Sailing experience was a week out of Skiathos, Greece so many of our comments are comparisons to that trip. Overall, we enjoyed both but there are differences that changed the nature of the holiday quite dramatically.

The Lycian coast is a harsh, rugged place. The quaint fishing villages that we knew from Greece do not seem to exist in this part of the world. Instead, there are isolated restaurants (often no road access) built in inlets and coves which were uninhabited before the days of desalination and diesel generators. Most nights were spent moored to rickety pontoons owned by such restaurants. The water is clean enough to swim from the boat but there is no community to explore and no choice where you eat unless you cook your own.

Our experience of food prices (based on typical veggie starter then kebab and chips type main courses) was that Fethiye was cheap even in nice places at around £10. Prices at overnight stops where around £15 but there is no mooring charge. Beer and wine are more expensive than the UK. Even though these place are little more than shacks on the sea shore we found they all took Visa.

Gocek and Fethiye are both nearby if your provisions run out or you need a night out clubbing but we managed without. We bought nothing other than bread, water and ice cream from the places we visited. On the subject of water I was amazed at how much we needed. Having decided that we would not drink the water from the boats tank we subsequently estimate that we bought a total of 60 litres (not including dinners). That is over 3 litres/person/day.

The very good bits
•Yildiz sailing.
Yildiz manage a fleet of privately owned boats which they maintain to a very high standard. Our 2008 Jeanneau 32i was pretty much immaculate. During the process of picking up and dropping of our boat we met about 4 of their staff all of whom were courteous and helpful.

•The Yacht Boutique Hotel - Fethiye
A nice hotel with a rooftop restaurant that overlooks the marina. They put an extra bed in a room for us, B&B for 3 people was 99 Euro.

•The lead crew.
It’s always tricky for the lead crew to be supportive enough without being too “in yer face” but the Welsh/Belgian couple employed by Yildiz got it right. Navigation briefings particularly, were excellent. A 6pm arrival time is later than most lead crews impose so plenty of sailing each day!

•The wind
Perhaps we just got lucky but it arrived on cue from the South West at 11am each day.

•Dalaman airport
Seems to have flights to/from everywhere all day every day. We flew Easyjet from Stansted.


The not so good bit
•My Marina – Ekincik
Where to start?
Well, it’s not a marina, just pontoons. We were lucky with the weather but in a blow you’d probably get better shelter at anchor on the other side of the bay.
The toilets and showers are closed between 9pm and 9am then again between 12pm and 3pm. When they are open they are guarded by a cleaner who expects a tip.
The showers are cold water only and there are just 4 for each gender in a “marina” that accommodate about 50 boats
The restaurant is the most expensive we found anywhere £30 for starter then kebab and chips – no written menu so you don’t know the prices until the bill arrives!
Mosquitoes. The only place we were plagued by them, it caught us by surprise. My son stopped counting his bites when he got to 50. There were probably as many again on his back!
For all of this we were charged £10 per night. Not bad by UK standards but I was left knowing that I had been ripped off.

We had a good week and would not hesitate to go back. It was different to Greece but most of the surprises were good ones.
 
I reckon you are about right in the comparison between that Area of Turkey vs. Greece, but the advantage of the Fethiye / Gocek area is the sailing is fairly flat if you have those who prefer it that way !


We got absolutely stung too at My Marina Restaurant ! You are not alone !
 
We've just spent 10 weeks in Turkey, revisiting places we last visited on various flotillas ten or more years ago (when Goçek was a village). See http://yachtvigdis.wordpress.com

On My Marina: yes it's not a marina, it's a posh restaurant with a posh quay. If you're careful what you order you can get a good meal there at at a reasonable price - the food is good IMO. There is a board with he prices displayed on it - we sat next to it. But the wine is particularly pricey.

And yes, the ablutions are risible - you could have mentioned the climb to get there, and stupid wooden shoes. Just ignore the guy at the door.

On our return journey we anchored off the beach. We noticed that yachts also anchored off My Marina itself - I doubt if they like that ;-)

Our most expensive meal was at Kapi Creek. The food was indifferent too.

We liked the restaurant quays in Turkey. Why doesn't Greece have more of these? Free mooring, free water, free electricity - just for having a meal. I can think of a few in Greece - Spartahori for example - but they're not common. Why not?

We found Turkey more yacht-friendly than Greece. (But that doesn't mean I prefer it.)
 
We love Turkey as the sailing is so good there. The winds are reliable, so you pretty much get a sail every day.

We love the rugged coastline and the anchorages, creeks and bays. We love the fact that you can find somewhere to drop the hook and have a bay all to yourselves. We loved the swimming and went skinny dipping.

We went into Ekincik, but decided to eat onboard. Yes, the mozzies are bad there. Plenty of mozzie spray required!

There are places where there are choices about what to eat, for example Ciftlik. I guess some of the flotillas have regular restaurants where they eat.

I suppose it all depends what you're after with a sailing holiday. We love Turkey because the sailing is so good. We like the Turkish people, who are very friendly. We like the magnificent coastline and the clear waters.
 
... I guess some of the flotillas have regular restaurants where they eat.

Keeping the locals sweet is an important part of the flotilla leaders' job! It would not be surprising if they get special treatment at recommended restaurants, but have to ensure that noses are not put out of joint.

This (flotillas) has been going on for a long time. For some superficial mentions of my experiences (and GPS logs of the last decade or so, most recently two weeks ago) see Yachting holiday trips; 1974 to present

Mike.
 
I sail that coast and have always avoided My Marina. If you do go into Ekincik, you can anchor in the bay close to the village, and go ashore to a restauant if you want. There is a village quay but it is has rocks off it which make it too shallow to bring a deep keeled yacht in stern to for fear of damaging the rudder. I did go there once, and kept the boat well off the jetty. A local man kindly positioned his shallow draft boat alongside us so that we could get ashore without having to use the dinghy.

Most times I just sail from one of the Gocek bays to either Ciftlik or Bozzukale bay and don't go to into Ekincik.

P.S. The rooftop restaurant at Yacht Boutique does good Indian food. The chef is from Bradford!
 
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