A vintage van with open doors reveals a rack of colorful clothes, parked on a cliff edge above the sea along the Lycian Coast

Admiring the Clifftops of the Lycian Coast

August 20, 2025

Turkey

There are places that don't ask for attention—they earn it in silence. The cliffs along the Lycian Coast are like that. Jagged, sun-soaked, and defiantly still. I came for the views, but stayed for the air—the kind that tastes like sea salt and eucalyptus.


The road twisted and rose without warning. One moment I was staring at scrubland, the next at a horizon that dropped into endless blue. I parked at a bend where the cliffs folded around a hidden cove and walked to the edge. The ocean was loud, but the land said nothing. That silence was its language.



Narrow cobblestone street lined with old houses and red flowers in bloom, with the white minaret of a mosque rising in the background under a hazy sky.



There was a van there. Its doors swung open to reveal a mobile wardrobe of color—dresses and scarves rustling in the wind like prayer flags. I didn’t buy anything, just stood near it, letting the fabric flicker in my periphery while the cliffs anchored everything in place.


The Lycian coast isn’t dramatic in the way of postcards. It’s dramatic in the way of memory—quietly bold, unmovable, and unexpectedly intimate.

Hand-drawn illustration of an airplane

End of the trail

Less rush.More wonder.

Home

Articles

About

Contact
Follow me on Instagram
View my Pinterest profile
Watch my YouTube videos
Follow me on Facebook
Follow me on X (formerly Twitter)

Copyright ©2025 · The Roam Report

A vintage van with open doors reveals a rack of colorful clothes, parked on a cliff edge above the sea along the Lycian Coast

Admiring the Clifftops of the Lycian Coast

August 20, 2025

Turkey

There are places that don't ask for attention—they earn it in silence. The cliffs along the Lycian Coast are like that. Jagged, sun-soaked, and defiantly still. I came for the views, but stayed for the air—the kind that tastes like sea salt and eucalyptus.


The road twisted and rose without warning. One moment I was staring at scrubland, the next at a horizon that dropped into endless blue. I parked at a bend where the cliffs folded around a hidden cove and walked to the edge. The ocean was loud, but the land said nothing. That silence was its language.



Narrow cobblestone street lined with old houses and red flowers in bloom, with the white minaret of a mosque rising in the background under a hazy sky.



There was a van there. Its doors swung open to reveal a mobile wardrobe of color—dresses and scarves rustling in the wind like prayer flags. I didn’t buy anything, just stood near it, letting the fabric flicker in my periphery while the cliffs anchored everything in place.


The Lycian coast isn’t dramatic in the way of postcards. It’s dramatic in the way of memory—quietly bold, unmovable, and unexpectedly intimate.

Hand-drawn illustration of an airplane

End of the trail

Less rush.More wonder.

Home

Articles

About

Contact
Follow me on Instagram
View my Pinterest profile
Watch my YouTube videos
Follow me on Facebook
Follow me on X (formerly Twitter)

Copyright ©2025 · The Roam Report

The Roam Report

Hand-drawn illustration of a train

Stories and photos of long walks,wrong turns, and everyday discoveries

Currently in

Dallol, Ethiopia

14.2417° N

40.3169° E

A vintage van with open doors reveals a rack of colorful clothes, parked on a cliff edge above the sea along the Lycian Coast

Admiring the Clifftops of the Lycian Coast

August 20, 2025

Turkey

There are places that don't ask for attention—they earn it in silence. The cliffs along the Lycian Coast are like that. Jagged, sun-soaked, and defiantly still. I came for the views, but stayed for the air—the kind that tastes like sea salt and eucalyptus.


The road twisted and rose without warning. One moment I was staring at scrubland, the next at a horizon that dropped into endless blue. I parked at a bend where the cliffs folded around a hidden cove and walked to the edge. The ocean was loud, but the land said nothing. That silence was its language.



Narrow cobblestone street lined with old houses and red flowers in bloom, with the white minaret of a mosque rising in the background under a hazy sky.



There was a van there. Its doors swung open to reveal a mobile wardrobe of color—dresses and scarves rustling in the wind like prayer flags. I didn’t buy anything, just stood near it, letting the fabric flicker in my periphery while the cliffs anchored everything in place.


The Lycian coast isn’t dramatic in the way of postcards. It’s dramatic in the way of memory—quietly bold, unmovable, and unexpectedly intimate.

Hand-drawn illustration of an airplane