Kalkan tourist information
Kalkan is a town on the Turkish Mediterranean coast, and an important tourist destination. The area includes many historical sites (such as Tlos and Kekova) and many fine beaches (including Patara Beach & KaputaÅŸ Beach).
Kalkan is an old fishing town, and the only safe harbor between KaÅŸ and Fethiye; it is famous for its white-washed houses, descending to the sea, and its brightly colored bougainvilleas. It averages 300 days of sunshine a year.
Until the early 1920s, the majority of its inhabitants were Greeks. They left in 1923 because of the Exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey after the Greco-Turkish War and emigrated mainly to Attica, where they founded the new town of Kalamaki. Abandoned Greek houses can still be seen at
Kalkan.
Kalkan was an important harbour town until the 1970s as the only seaport for the environs. It declined after construction of Fethiye road but revived after the emergence of the tourism industry in the region.
Although part of the Antalya province administratively,
Kalkan is connected more closely to Fethiye economically and for transportation.
British newspaper The Independent listed
Kalkan among the best tourist destinations for 2007. The paper recommended
Kalkan especially for those seeking a romantic vacation and who do not want to travel far from their home country in Europe.
© This article about tourism in Kalkan is provided by a external resource
Phots of Kalkan