You Never Wanted to Sleep in a Cave, Until Now

A luxury cave? A modern 3,000-year old home? These are the paradoxes of the Museum Hotel that make it the only Relais & Châteaux property in all of Turkey and one of the most unique hotels in the world. Its home in Cappadocia is marked by volcanic eruptions and a blanket of thick ash that has been eroding over the millions of years into hoodoo-style towers, fairy chimneys, rainbow valleys and a landscape so surreal it rivals the moon. As if its geological beauty weren’t enough to captivate, these lava formations have been hand-carved into thousands of houses and inhabited by Hittites, Romans, Ottomans, and present-day Anatolians. The Museum Hotel took ten years to meticulously renovate a few dozen of Castle Hill’s ancient cave dwellings into a boutique hotel that transcends space and time.

02 Museum Hotel_HoneyTrek.com

The owner of the hotel, Ömer Tosun, is an avid antique and art collector and created the property as a living museum. His rare collection is displayed throughout the hotel and in a way that gives guests a sense of how 1000s of years history played out on these very grounds. Built to honor its 1st-century history and incredible landscape, the hotel is centered around Roman arches that look through to the Pigeon Valley, White Valley, Red Valley, and Göreme all with the splendid Mt. Erciyes stretching away in the distance.

03 Tekali Cave Suite_HoneyTrek.com

We followed the butler (one of 55 highly trained employees to serve the 30-room hotel) through a series of tunnels, descended down a flight of stairs which opened up to our very spacious Tekali Cave Suite. The space was designed to perfection but still embraced its rough-hewn setting and rich past. The headboard and shelves are etched into the wall, just as the Hittite’s would have done, and the sitting area is beside the original grape-stomping basin from the cave’s days as a winery. Each suite is different, some with pools, waterfalls, massage parlors, or free-flowing wine taps (yes, you heard us…a line that runs from the bar to your room. Left sipigot is red, right is white…and both are free. It’s the consolation prize for rooms without a view. Which would you choose?).

04 Museum Hotel_breakfast

We went to the breakfast buffet and couldn’t help but fill multiple plates with Mediterranean delights. Cheeses, fruits, nuts, filo pastries, farm-fresh eggs, home-harvested honey, and vegetables from their on-site garden. We sat on the patio to soak up the sun and the views and ordered Turkish coffee to have our fortune read for the day.

05 Matiana Travel

To maximize our time and understanding of the region, the Museum Hotel set us up with their private tour service, Matiana Travel. If it tells you a bit about the quality of their guides, National Geographic calls them when they come to town. Ali and his team created an incredible itinerary for us, taking us to not only to the top sites but hidden gems and local haunts.

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The first and absolute must-see stop we made was to the UNESCO-anointed Goreme Open Air Museum. It is a series of 4th-14th-century monasteries cut into the rocks, where as many as 10,000 monks once lived. We explored the caves marveling at the basic soup kitchens to the elaborate church frescoes.

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Onward to the Byzantine town of Çavuşin! Wandering the neighborhood was something closer to rock climbing but we balanced on ledges, squeezed through tunnels, and found incredible homes. Believe it or not, up until the 1960s (when many of the caves became protected areas) the majority of Cappadocia lived in caves and 20% still do. Even in the modern age, cave dwelling makes sense as a way to regulate temperature in the area’s extremely hot and cold climate; the interiors stays at around 50-60 degrees no matter the season.

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Unlike Cavusin which is out in the open rockface, there are series of cities that lay hidden underground. Ali took us to the Kaymakli City, an ancient subterranean world descending eight floors down with nearly 100 tunnels leading to the various work, living, and sacred spaces. Cappadocia’s arid landscape only yields one crop a year so granaries, wineries, and nearly all food storage was done underground to keep cool and deter thieves. Claustrophobics need not apply; history buffs welcome.

09 Museum Hotel Private Dinner_HoneyTrek.com

Back at the Museum Hotel, they have their fabulous Lil’a restaurant but for a extra romantic meals, they can arrange dinner in their panoramic spa. We went in for an incredible couples massages, freshened up, and returned to find a candlelit table for two. We started the meal with classic Turkish mezes of baba ganoush and dolmades, followed by a national favorite, Kuzu Tandir lamb, slowly baked in a clay pot until the meat falls off the bone.

10 kapadokya balloons

We woke up just bright and early to continue our Cappadocia exploration by hot-air balloon with Kapadokya Balloons. Getting the aerial perspective, looking down into the valleys, floating past ancient homes, weaving around fairy chimneys, is an unforgettable way to see the area. Whether you ascend or not, be sure to wake up at sunrise to catch the 100s of colorful balloons pepper the sky.

11 Love Valley Cappadocia_ HoneyTrek.com

Our Matiana Travel Mercedes van (did we tell you, it had a champagne bar?) came to pick us up and we were off to our next adventure…Hiking the Love Valley. We scrambled down the steep white walls but once inside, it was a slice of Eden with wild grapes, quince, and apples providing snacks for the day. Each bend in valley revealed a new marvel, from solid waves of lava flow to mushroom-tipped towers. If we’d known the area was THIS gorgeous, we would have stayed another week to trek!

12 Uçhisar Castle

We returned to the Museum Hotel in complete awe of our experience. Location, service, design, history, the Museum Hotel not only exceed our expectations of a cave hotel but a five-star hotel of any kind.

Anne and Mike Howard are creators of the around-the-world honeymoon blog HoneyTrek.com and Long Term Travel Coaches for anyone looking to travel the world safely, affordably and off the beaten path. You can follow @HoneyTrek on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

River Glamping Cabin Attracts Worldwide Attention

It’s a boyhood dream to build a tree house, to create a retreat from the everyday, a getaway perched high in some unforgettable setting with an amazing view, presumably difficult for adults to reach. This may be a common dream, but some who actually act on it often build them in uncommon places, and not always in trees.

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Behold the Drina River House, a structure born of that same imagination and inspiration. It was built during the summer of 1969, after a group of adventurous boys had expanded their sunbathing platform that they had built the previous year on a huge rock in the middle of the Drina River. Milija Mandic (who still owns the house) along with his friends built the structure that, despite being swept away by floods on occasion, has been returned to its perch where it has remained ever since. And just like the building of a tree house, where the difficulty of hauling the building materials to the site is half the adventure, the daunting task of building a cabin on a rock in the middle of a river was obviously part of the fun and challenge that motivated building it. They transported construction materials by boat and kayak and floated the bigger pieces downriver to the rock.

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Not only possessing incredible views, the river house is part of an incredible view as well. Hungarian photographer Irene Becker discovered the picturesque cabin near Tara Mountain on the eastern edge of the Tara National Park (bordering Bosnia), and her amazing photograph of it was featured as a Photo of the Day by National Geographic,  since attracting worldwide attention.

Those who wish to visit the house may not be able to stay there, but glamping options are available in the breathtakingly beautiful Tara Mountain Valley. Jasika Villa and Omorika Villa offer cozy A-frame cabins with stunning views of the valley. And even if you may not be able to stay at the Drina River House, its existence shows that sometimes the adventure of glamping is not always a place to find, but a place to build.