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Y Beach Pinarcik Koyu
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Your best
bet
Ok, you've been warned now but still feel a visit to Y-Beach is just what you need. If you cannot be deterred, what follows is probably the best way to do it. Not exactly the itinerary you find in battlefield guides, but probably quite a bit less dangerous and certainly involving the minimum effort. Mind you : the trip remains (a bit) risky, it will take you 2 hours and you will be out of breath afterwards, but I'm afraid that cannot be helped. Here we go : |
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See to it a) that you have a map of the area, good shoes and a supply of
water and b) that you DON'T try this alone.
- Park your vehicle at the Turkish Nuri Yamut monument. Your starting point is situated at its entrance. |
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| - At
this spot you are close to Fuseliers Bluff, situated between the
monument and the sea. Start following the coastline heading south,
keeping to the edge of the wilderness with the cultivated fields at your
left.
- Try to count the gullies you pass. Although this is not indispen- sible (as Y-Ravine is bigger than the rest), it may help : you need the 6th big gully. Try using your map. - Do not be misled by Bruce's Ravine. It is pretty big too, but if you want to make the descent here, you will get stuck halfway down. And even if you roll down the cliffs, you will not land on Y-Beach either. Y-Ravine is just behind Bruce's Ravine and bigger, running further inland. |
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If you see this, turn back. Y-Ravine is behind the headland in the middle of this picture. |
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| - Once you have
found Y-ravine, find the little path going down to the sea in front of
the big gully. At some points it's steep, certainly the last part of it,
but if you are a bit careful, there are no insurmountable
problems.
- By the way :halfway down the path you get the best possible bird's- eye view of Gully Beach on the entire peninsula. Follow the path till you reach the beach. - On the beach, have a look at the entrance to Y-ravine and marvel at the fact that nothing much has changed here since April 1915. - Then start wondering how to get back, as the way you came would be a pretty stiff climb. There is a simpler alternative though : |
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This is it : Y-Beach. Careful now, it's steep. |
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Start following the coast to the north.
- The beach under the cliffs is only some 2-3 m wide and strewn with small boulders, but although the walking is a bit rough, you should be fine. - Proceed for about 1 km, till you come to a small semi-cercular pier, made by some local fishermen. If you look uphill, you will see a primitive hut on the flank of the hill, where they keep their gear. Climb the path to this hut. - A path runs uphill around the hut. Although it is a bit steep and becomes rougher as you proceed, it's easy to follow. After some time, you'll discover that you are walking in an old trench : this is the old British frontline trench running to the top of Fuseliers Bluff. Among the bushes you can still find their rusty bully-beef tins. - When you reach the summit, you'll discover you are back at Nuri Yamut, at the spot where you left your vehicle.
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