Set in a restored 1,000-year-old Byzantine monastic retreat built into a cliff over a stream, the 25-room "troglodyte" hotel combines marble bathrooms and other modern facilities with what has been called "a spiritual feel."
Remains of frescoes hundreds of years old can be seen at a nearby dirt-floored church, and the Middle Anatolian area has hundreds of volcanic pillars from which people carved homes.
It's certainly photogenic - from the Gamisaru's terrace near sundown, a lone shepherdess may be seen leading her flock.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Gamisaru Cave Hotel, Ayvla Village, Cappadocia, Turkey
Set in a restored 1,000-year-old Byzantine monastic retreat built into a cliff over a stream, the 25-room "troglodyte" hotel combines marble bathrooms and other modern facilities with what has been called "a spiritual feel."
Remains of frescoes hundreds of years old can be seen at a nearby dirt-floored church, and the Middle Anatolian area has hundreds of volcanic pillars from which people carved homes.
It's certainly photogenic - from the Gamisaru's terrace near sundown, a lone shepherdess may be seen leading her flock.
Remains of frescoes hundreds of years old can be seen at a nearby dirt-floored church, and the Middle Anatolian area has hundreds of volcanic pillars from which people carved homes.
It's certainly photogenic - from the Gamisaru's terrace near sundown, a lone shepherdess may be seen leading her flock.