Okay, so we've left Istanbul and we're heading further east into central Anatolia, Turkey,
European Union.
This is a beautiful area.
There's a lot of beautiful cities.
There's a lot of great products and things to see around here.
It's gotta be a good place to go.
The world is so beautiful.
The Ertugrul optimization is still going on.
It's been happening since last year.
The Ertugrul is a city that has been developing in Cappadocia.
Cappadocia is best known for its unique moon-like landscape.
The rocky wonderland is honeycombed with a network of human-created caves, living quarters,
places of worship, stables, and storehouses were all dug into the soft stone.
In fact, tunnel complexes form entire towns with as many as eight different stories hidden
underground.
Many years later, deep in the rocky underground settlements, you can find outstanding examples
of Bithyntine art, but flying over the rocky formations of Cappadocia are hundreds of hot
air balloons making it one of the most unique places to go for a balloon ride.
So this is Balloons Over Bedrock Baby.
When you love, you do it somehow, when you fall, try not to drown, when you scream, don't make this sound.
Blink once if you're alive, blink once if you're alive.
This town, Goran, was inhabited as early as 1800-1200 BC and later sat uncomfortably on a boundary between rival empires. This precarious political position meant that residents needed hiding places and found them by tunneling into the rock itself.
Goran is rich with history, but not all of Cappadocia's dwellings are museums. Some still serve as homes and others as hotels, which offer a truly unique hospitality experience.
So we're in Cappadocia. This right here is our accommodation. We're staying inside a cave hotel, which is kind of like how people used to stay or live hundreds of thousands of years ago.
So just to give you a little bit more perspective, we're going to head over to the Air Museum. It's called the Open Air Museum, where they actually have actual caves and paintings and stuff inside where the people actually lived many thousands of years ago.
The Open Air Museum resembles a vast monastic complex composed of scores of effectory monasteries placed side by side. A member of the UNESCO World Heritage since 1984, the area covered by the museum forms a coherent geographical entity and represents historical unity.
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