El Paso Travels is a full service travel agency in Marmaris Turkey specialising in yacht charters, Gulet Charters, Bareboat charters, Blue Voyage and Blue Cruise tours. Whether you want a luxury yacht charter or a bareboat charter, a day tour to a historic site, a diving tour, or want to find a cheap hotel, browse our website for your Turkish travel information.
         
 
     
 
 
 
 
Testimonials
 

          We are  giving  tourism and yachting services for about 25 years in Turkey, and  in Mediterranean region.. Some of our  super yachts  sailing  in Caribbean, Indian Ocean, Seychelles & Madagaskar  and  St.Vincent & Grenadines in different times of    winter  season ..
          Here are some of our clients reflects  for their blue cruise impressions  and their memorable events in our boats..
          We greatly appreciate our client’s comments  about our agency and hope that they will continue to  enjoy sailing with us and  make the best  enjoyable blue cruises in Turkish Turquoise Coasts..
          It is honor to us if there is a client satisfaction  during their stay in our country.. And  if there is a dissatisfaction it  will lead us  to improve our  services..
          We will continue our promises, and also keep the best services with reliance, sincerity, quality and  world famous Turkish Hospitality…

Thanks and Regards,     El Paso Team

Princess Zeynep / Charter details.. Re: Stewart Party Grenadines Tour March 10th-17th 2007

Just a short note to let you know what an absolutely wonderful  experience we had aboard the Princess Zeynep.  It truly was an exceptional experience for all aboard. Captain Metin and his crew were all very professional and attentive but also very warm and inviting as well. They added very personal touches with beautiful table and birthday party decorations and music. They played with the children, demonstrated nautical braiding and performed magic tricks all to our great pleasure.Clearly the Captain is well respected by his crew. His knowledge and experience of the sea provided us with safe and smooth sailing and to experience a good balance between both some of the less travelled and well know areas of the region.

And chef must be congratulated again and again as everyone raved about the food. We were all amazed at what elegant dishes he could produce in the kitchen aboard.

We certainly would be more than happy to recommend the Princess Zeynep to any future clients.

Thank you once again for a most memorable voyage.

Sincerely, 

Mr & Mrs Stewart, Canada, March 2007

We did have a wonderful trip aboard Princess Zeynep.  We were so impressed with Captain Metin and especially appreciated how much time he spent with their kids and how wonderful he was with them.  Thank you Metin, this was certainly an import ant aspect to our trip and you really made it a successful one!  We found him so personable and really enjoyed his good humor and efforts to make sure everyone was enjoying themselves...and all the watersports!! 

The food was outstanding!!!  So thank you to the chef!! 

All in all, we had a great time and I cannot thank Captain Metin and the Crew enough for all their hard work in making it a fantastic week for us! 

Mr & Mrs Beirne, USA, March 2007

We had a lovely time onboard. The boat very good.  The Captain very nice, speaks excellent English. Chef and the service of the rest of the crew was very good as well. They were also very lucky with the weather, so a big success all around.

 Mrs. Barrosso , Spain           Princess Esra, 02.08.2007

We have chartered many yachts around the world and often on this coast. This is by far our best experience. A wonderful yacht shown off to its best by a fantastic crew. Adam, a captain who recognizes the different preferences of passengers and tailors the cruise accordingly, always trying his outmost to give people the best time. Ali, such a great enthusiast for the Serenity company with great knowledge & energy and a desire to anticipate guests every need. And Mehmet, one of the finest chefs on the coast.
Mr. & Mrs. Cussins, UK - SERENITY 70 (2006)
This trip clearly exceeded our expectations. It has been one of our best vacations. The turquoise coast is stunning, beautiful sites and villages along the way, plenty of activities like kayaking, swimming, hiking and waterskiing, and wonderful coves and bays for overnight anchoring. The trip would not have been as good without the excellent crew and service, the delicious meals, and gorgeous gullet.
Denise Allen, USA - SERENITY 70 (2006)
Excellent and More!! The experience of a lifetime, surpassed all our expectations. Chef looked after John’s food allergies so well and provided everything he could have wanted, and more! The crew fashioned some more comfortable lower steps for our party to get in and out of the water. They couldn’t have done more. What else to say??! Just wonderful, relaxing, out of this world! Hang on to that crew, they’re good value! They didn’t miss a thing.
Mr/Mrs Wheeler & Mr/Mrs Knott - SERENITY 70 (2006)
We were welcomed on board and felt like a member of the family before we ever left port. Our captain, host and chef made a fantastic team. They clearly like and respect each other and this contributed to our overall experience which was outstanding. I would NOT hesitate to recommend this boat to anyone looking for a holiday filled with sunshine and warm Turkish hospitality with fantastic sights and food to boot!
The Donald Burton Family, USA - SERENITY 70 (2007)
Such a wonderful holiday we could not fault it. All thanks to the wonderful crew who made our stay so thoroughly enjoyable. The food was absolutely excellent so healthy and so many little surprises. It was the personal touches and the way the staff looked after us that made the holiday all the more special. Much thanks to Adam, Ali and Alpay for such a memorable week. It was so short and we would happily stay forever.
Michelle  Buckley, UK - SERENITY 70 (2007)

I am on a Blue Voyage. It's a mysterious term, one I'd never heard a month ago. But as I stand on deck with the cobalt Aegean beneath me and the azure sky above, I can't imagine what else you would call one of these languorous sailboat trips through the coves and inlets of Turkey's southwestern coast.
Blue Voyagesomehow the phrase itself feels romantic, peaceful, relaxed. On the other hand, as I glance around at this lovely boat that we're on, the Cassandra, it's very easy to imagine a more graceful word for her than gulet.
But if you're on a Blue Voyage, then you're most likely on a gulet. Gulets are traditional Turkish wooden sailboats—although these days they're often operated by tour companies, equipped with a variety of amenities such as stereos, air conditioners and cappuccino machines, and run by a crew that includes a private chef. They are gorgeous, exotic sailboats; they remind me of pirate ships or galleons. The Cassandra is 92 feet long and has three two-person cabins. Her three-man crew during my trip is Captain Ali; Bariş, the deckhand; and Gino, our energetic chef. The crew sometimes sleep on deck under the Turkish stars, and I decide that I will; the weather is too beautiful not to.
Lorrie Croze, who is also on board, is the key to all this: Her five-year-old travel company, Mediterranean Collection, was our source for the Cassandra. My friend Peter, who's lived in Istanbul for almost seven years, insisted I contact her. "I do a Blue Voyage at least once a year," he said. "Lorrie's gulets are elegant without being exorbitant, and she knows the best routes and the best cooks." She also, he said, knows more than anyone about great restaurants hidden along the coast—places you could spend months hunting for and never find on your own. gocek 12 islands-paradise near marmaris
 A typical Blue Voyage takes about a week. You follow  the coast, cruising for a few hours each day, then  swimming, snorkeling, eating and drinking the rest of  the time. These trips are utterly relaxing. There's no  pressure to do anything at all—how you spend your  time is entirely up to you.
 One thing that's clear from the moment we set sail is  that a Blue Voyage is as much about what you're  going to eat as about where you're going to go. No  more than a couple of hours out from Bodrum, we  drop anchor: time for lunch. Baris, who doubles as  our server, brings out plates of karniyarik, literally "split belly"—eggplant split and stuffed with chopped onions, green peppers, and minced lamb or beef sautéed in olive oil and mixed with tomatoes and parsley. It's rich but not heavy, impossible to resist. When I remark that Turkish cuisine doesn't seem particularly spicy, Peter corrects me. "Western Turkish," he says, and of course we are on the western coast. "Eastern Turkish uses tons of red chile peppers." world famous turkish cuisine
          Life at sea flows effortlessly. Each morning Gino makes our breakfast, everyone sitting on deck in bathing suits. Lunches and dinners feature Turkish home-style dishes, like manti, a small ravioli filled with minced lamb or beef, in a red-pepper and tomato sauce. Helping us navigate the nuances of Turkish cuisine is Eveline Zoutendijk, a friend of Peter's who has joined us for the trip and who offers classes in Turkish cooking at Istanbul's Sarniç Hotel, which she owns. (Eveline developed the recipes for this article.) We have lunch at 2, dinner at 8 or later. Cocktails whenever. In between we swim and lie on the deck, enjoying the light and the water. "Turkish time," says Lorrie.
It seems as though no time has passed before we reach Ekincik bay, though in fact it's our third day. Aboard a flat-bottomed taxi boat, we chug up the twisting emerald-green Dalyan River, surrounded by tall tan grass. Old men in tiny, baby-blue fishing boats ignore us as they pull small blue crabs from the reeds.
Our destination is a restaurant called Yakamoz, where we eat on a wooden deck that hangs over the river in the shade of a large pomegranate tree. Opposite us rises a cliff wall into which huge tombs were carved centuries ago. We start the meal with mezes, basically Turkish tapas: acili ezme salata, a salad of crushed chiles, tomatoes and onions; crisp börek, baked tubes of phyllo filled with spices and cheese; and haydari, a thick yogurt with mint and a little garlic (the Greeks call their thinner version tzatziki and add cucumber).
          caretta caretta turtles in dalyan-caunos 
And Turkish wines: After the mezes, for a massive tray of grilled lamb, beef and chicken on rice, we open a red from Kavaklidere winery, which is located in Ankara. Called Selection Kirmizi, it's a blend of two native Turkish grapes, Okuzgozu and Bogazkere. The wine is enticing, full of juicy red-currant flavors and spice notes, and its robust tannins are a good match for the grilled meats.

Our next stop, the aquamarine lagoon of Oludeniz, is stunning beneath towering, arid mountains, but the beach is uncomfortably rocky. Lorrie explains that most of the beaches in the area are rocky, and in fact the Turks generally prefer it that way, as they consider sand unclean. Soon she's showing me outfits for paragliding—today's activity. Is it safe? "Well, you won't get me up there!" she says cheerfully.
             A 45-minute truck ride later, I'm at the top of those towering mountains, strapped into a parachute with my pilot. When he says run, I run, terrified...and there's the Cassandra, directly below my sandals, with only 3,000 feet of air separating us. "Lucky!" cries the pilot. "We are seeing clouds only three times in summer!" He spins us into a cloud, and I'm astonished: Clouds are warm.
After I land back on the beach, exhilarated, Lorrie points to a long, long flight of stone stairs. "The White Dolphin's at the top," she says. The sun is brutal, and we're sweating by the time we reach the stairs, gasping halfway up. But the work is well worth it. We dine on delicious plates of denizotu, a sea plant that has an almost Japanese flavor; ahtapot, or octopus, coarsely cut and molded into a pâté with olive oil, black pepper, dill and lemon juice; and kebabs with swordfish chunks, lemon wedges, bay leaves and long hot green peppers. Brushed with olive oil and grilled, they're distinctly smoky. For dessert, we have baklava. I'm completely uninterested. Baklava bores me. But I love this. Lorrie explains that unlike Greeks, who use honey in their baklava, Turks use boiled sugar water. It's the best baklava I've ever had, light and not at all cloying.
Later on that day we arrive at Gemiler Island, also known as St. Nicholas' Island, which is the site of the remains of Christian churches dating back to the late fifth and early sixth centuries. We clamber up a series of steep, island-size stones to a landscape full of destroyed stone churches and houses. Standing under a ruined Byzantine church dome, we glimpse a not-quite-full moon rising over the crest of a hill.
Afterward, even though the water is darkening, we decide to swim to our gulet—it's only about 600 yards. We dive in, and the sea is warm and green around us. Below us are huge cakes of stone that were once parts of ancient walls. We swim. Peter frowns. "There's a current," he says, which is when a Turkish guy in a speedboat dragging three plastic doughnuts pulls up. "We're swimming to our boat," Lorrie explains brightly. He says, "It's illegal to swim across the channel." As if on cue, another speedboat—pulling a hotshot Swedish kid on water skis—screams past. "I'll tow you back," says the guy, smiling. "Don't worry, no charge."
Somehow it's our last day. Although Lorrie warned us, we're unprepared for the emptiness of Kaya Village, which the locals also call Kayaköy. Inhabited mostly by Greek Christians during the 1800s, it was emptied during the bitter exchanges of populations between Greece and Turkey after World War I.
We pass through the mesmerizing perfume of a fig tree (I pick some of the figs and eat them), walking by empty, crumbling homes and shops. Later, exploring the island, we come across a church that still bears traces of Greek Orthodox figures, halos of gold, Christ's nailed feet disappearing into the incense-stained stone of the vault. Outside, pomegranate and pear trees bear fruit for no one.
Then it's over—almost. We leave the Cassandra in Göcek, and it's strange ending an intense week so suddenly. But Lorrie has that covered: Before I fly back to Istanbul, she'll ease me back onto land. Soon we're driving up twisting roads into the hills, above us some of the most beautiful mountains I've ever seen. Then we arrive at Yakapark.
I've never seen anything like this, anywhere: In the middle of hot, dusty, rocky mountains is an oasis, part picnic area, part casual restaurant and part trout farm. Bubbling streams rush through wooden troughs under leafy plane trees, past elevated wooden platforms and tree houses, each furnished with low tables, cushions and rugs. We are the only foreigners.
We order grilled trout (of course) and bottles of Efes, the Turkish beer. The fresh fish, served with a tangy pomegranate sauce, is simple and lovely. We devour potatoes with spices and parsley, and ispanakli gozleme, an Anatolian flat bread filled with feta cheese and spinach. Below us there's a circular bar with a tiny stream carved inside it where you can pet the trout. We pour cold water on our feet from terra-cotta jugs. The sound of water lulls us. And the moon rises through the trees, completely full.
 Chandler Burr , New York-based writer, M/S Cassandra

 

   

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