| Clouds descended, cutting us off from the rest of the world in this temperate rain forest, where sky and earth were both coloured entirely in shades of green. We were near İkizdere in the Firtina river valley, deep in the craggy granite heights of the Eastern Black Sea Mountains that soar up from the shores of the Black Sea to over 3000 metres. Fed by the ice-cold water of glacier lakes and mountain streams, the river has carved a broad valley for itself through the mountains to the sea. The valley is one of two hundred ecological sites around the world which scientists have designated as a priority nature conservation area. Now a national park, the valley is a place of plunging hillsides, ancient natural forest and rich flora and fauna. There is rain 250 days of the year here, and total annual rainfall is 2400 cubic metres, the highest of any region in Turkey. Not surprisingly the valley is like a natural botanic garden, home to 2460 species of wild plants.
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