I haven’t written in forever, and now I have so much to
say. Quality over quantity. One of life’s biggest lessons and one that eludes
most. So, I recently went away on holiday. It was for a mere 2.5 weeks, but
felt like a year. Maybe because I spent what I may have spent in a year were I
to have remained in Cape Town. Maybe because I discovered, learnt and had the
amount of revelations I would have had in a year were I to have remained at
home. Maybe because for 2.5 weeks solid, I felt alive and hopeful, anticipating
of tomorrow and thankful for the day. This is how one should live! Should
being the operative word. Most of our realities are not this way and we don’t
take life seriously enough to accept nothing less. We should.
I spent 5 days in Istanbul. I travelled there alone. My
best friend met me at the hotel and off we went for a 5 day shopping, discovering and learning experience...
Top 5 tips for travelers to Istanbul
- Do a cruise on the Bosphorus, but don’t opt for the sunset cruise. What they don’t tell you is that the boat stops at a random port for 2 hours. With nothing except a strip of restaurants to extort your cash, you will have to drop serious money on a mediocre meal and sour grape juice masquerading as wine, and come off feeling hard done by and stupid.
- Don’t venture into a leather store at the Grand Bazaar until you have done some practice rounds of your bartering skills on smaller, much cheaper items. This way you will understand how they work. Generally you can get away with offering 60% of their initial asking price as your initial offer, then up it to 70-75% if he entertains that.
Istanbul had the prettiest handpainted ceramics,
beautiful jewellery and stylish leather jackets. I had planned to buy 1 but
walked out with two. See what happens when you are not a confidently seasoned
barterer? Although Bestie assured me that our deal was good, my bargain-hunting
spirit is still of the belief that we could have paid at least 20% less.
Precious and semi-precious stones go for a song, so
dont be fooled by a price justification based on the stone featured in a piece.
Ask about the metal used so that you don’t pay a price fitting of a sterling
silver piece for some substandard metal.
Here are some photos of my Turkish treasures:
Coasters |
Ruby bracelet with cubic zirconias and marquise cut ruby in sterling silver centre. |
Rose gold plated sterling silver Hand of Fatima necklace |
Green and black onyx earrings |
Pretty Precious Stones |
I bought these stones on my last day there. Two labradorites, 2 green onyxes and a sapphire and ruby. Keep an eye
out for their final resting places; one of a kind rings by Jinn at www.jinntrend.com.
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