Turkey // The Black Sea coast

The Hemsin valleys

The most scenic and interesting of the foothill regions east of Trabzon are the valleys of the Fırtına Çayı and its tributaries, which tumble off the steepest slopes of the Pontic ranges, here known as the Kaçkar Dağları. Between the mountains and the sea lie a few hundred square kilometres of rugged, isolated territory known simply as Hemşin.

ÇAMLİHEMŞIN, 21km upstream from the mouth of the Fırtına Çayi, is still too low at 300m to give you a real feel for the Hemşin country, but offers a hint of what’s to come. It’s the last proper town before the mountains, utilitarian and busy, with a constant chaos of minibuses and shoppers clogging its single high street.

Above Şenyuva, along the main branch of the Fırtına Çayı, the road steadily worsens while the scenery just as relentlessly becomes more spectacular. Below, the water roils in chasms and whirlpools that are irresistible to the lunatic fringe of the rubber-rafting fraternity – as well as the central government which, in the face of local opposition, plans to divert most of the river’s flow into assorted hydroelectric projects. Some 12.5km from Çamlıhemşin, the single-towered castle of Zilkale, improbably sited by either the Byzantines or the Genoese to control a decidedly minor trade route, appears at a bend in the track. The tree-tufted ruin, more often than not garnished with wisps of mist, today dominates nothing more than one of the most evocative settings in the Pontus.

After another 16km of violent abuse to your vehicle’s suspension you’ll arrive at ÇAT, 1250m up. Despite the horrid road in, there is a fairly regular – at least daily – dolmuş service from Çamlıhemşin, but it’s more comfortable to use your own transport, whether mountain bike or 4WD. This is another classic base for rambles in the western Kaçkar, though there’s not much to the village beyond a few scattered buildings and a final, exquisite bridge leading upstream.

At Çat the upper reaches of the Fırtına divide. A road running parallel to the main fork heads 30km due south to Ortayayla or Başhemşin, passing Zilkale’s sister fort of Varoş (Kale-i-Bala) at Kaleköy, where yet another side road winds up to an alternative trailhead for the western Kaçkar mountains at Kale Yayla. Don’t try to walk any more of these tracks than you have to – between Kale Yayla and Çat, for example, you’ve a very boring three- to four-hour slog in either direction.

The other turning above Çat bears almost due east, still on a poor surface; minibuses ply the 7km up to ELEVIT (1800m), a surprisingly substantial place. This is as far as ordinary cars will prudently go. Only daily minibuses and 4WD vehicles continue east to Karunç, Tirovit and Palovit. Elevit, like its nearest neighbour Tirovit, an hour and a half’s walk east, is a Laz yayla, an enclave of sorts in Hemşin territory.

Read More
  • The Hemsinlis and yaylas