Today combines natural phenomenon with ancient ruins and mythology. We begin in Ulupinar village at 550 m (1,805 ft) elevation, walking among centuries-old plane trees near waterfalls, descending through traces of the ancient Lycian road between pine trees thick with oxygen. First we descend 150 m (490 ft), then climb 150 m and 200 m (655 ft) more to reach the Chimera (Yanartas in Turkish)—eternal flames that burn from vents in the mountainside, fed by natural gas seeping through fissures in the rock.
The flames have burned for millennia, bright enough to be visible from sea at night—ancient sailors used them as a navigation beacon. Greek mythology explained them as the breath of the Chimera, the fire-breathing monster with a lion's head, goat's body, and serpent's tail that terrorized Lycia until the hero Bellerophon, riding the winged horse Pegasus, killed it. Modern geology offers less dramatic explanations involving methane, but the flames burning from bare rock—some 30 separate vents scattered across the hillside—remain genuinely eerie, especially after dark. We listen to the mythological Chimera legend that has not been extinguished for thousands of years.
After a short walk, we meet our vehicle and transfer to Cirali Beach for rest and a sea break at this protected turtle nesting beach.
In the afternoon, we visit ancient Olympos, a Lycian and Roman city now largely overgrown in forest along a stream valley that empties into the sea. Ruins emerge from vegetation—theatre, baths, temple walls, a Byzantine church, sarcophagi scattered among pine trees. The site was never fully excavated and isn't restored—you encounter it as early explorers did, discovering walls and tombs half-buried in forest.
After our visit to Olympos, we depart for Antalya, Turkey's gateway to the Mediterranean coast and the endpoint of the Lycian Way. We check into our Antalya hotel and convene for our last meal together.
Walk Summary: 3.5 hours morning walk. 7 km/4.3 mi total, 450 m/1,475 ft total elevation gain (150 m descent, 150 m ascent, 200 m descent). Forest paths with oxygen-rich pine trees, mostly easy with 35% moderate sections.
Overnight in Antalya.
 
Included Meal(s): Breakfast and Dinner