SHEPHERD Ibrahim Koc recalls his youth with fondness as he grazes cattle on a barren field that was once lush with vegetation on the edge of Turkey’s largest lake.
An occasional shrub marks the spots from where Lake Van has retreated over years of global heating and drought.
“The animals are thirsty,” the 65-year-old lamented.
“There is no water,” Koc said, echoing sentiments expressed by a growing number of Turks who have watched their mountains lose ice caps and their water reservoirs dry up.
A weather map of Turkey – an agricultural superpower stretching from Bulgaria in the west to Iran in the east – shows much of the country suffering from a prolonged drought.
Shrinking shorelines are exposing lakebeds that pollute the air with a salty dust. Scientists fear the problems could grow only worse.
“I think these are our good days,” said Faruk Alaeddinoglu, a professor at Van Yuzuncu Yil University.
“We will witness the lake continuing to shrink in the coming years.”
Lake Van covers approximately 3,700 sq km, reaching a maximum depth of 450m.
Its surface area has shrunk by around 1.5% in recent years, according to measurements Alaeddinoglu carried out last autumn.
“That is a terribly large amount of water for a 3,700 sq km area,” he said.
In the Celebibagi neighbourhood on the lake’s northern shore, the waters have receded by around 4km.
A long walk along the exposed lakebed is littered with bird bones, craggy bushes and dried dirt covered with sodium and other minerals.
“We are walking in an area which was once covered with the lake’s waters,” said Ali Kalcik, a local environmentalist.
“Now, it’s a barren land without a living thing.”
The sight of dazzling flamingos dancing in the air against the backdrop of mountains signals the spot where the lake finally begins.
Alaeddinoglu said the lake’s size had changed in the past because of rifts in tectonic plates that make Turkey into one of the most active earthquake zones in the world.
But he blamed the ongoing water loss on rising temperatures that result in “less precipitation and excessive evaporation”.
Almost three times as much of the lake’s water evaporates than comes back down in the form of rain, Alaeddinoglu said.
Lush gardens of newly-built summer cottages are also draining water from the region, where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has built a government retreat.
The problem has become so severe that officials are urging local farmers not to grow crops requiring too much water.
This means farmer Kinyas Gezer can no longer afford to grow sugar beets, which are a particularly thirsty vegetable.
“All my labour has been wasted,” the 56-year-old lamented, pointing to his shrivelled apricots.
“If it goes on like this, we will abandon farming. The business is dying.”
The water loss also exposes pollution, according to Orhan Deniz, a professor of Yuzuncu Yil University, whose campus sits on the lake’s shore.
“Large patches of slime mixed with mud give off a bad smell and make human pollution more evident,” he said.
“In the 1990s, we would swim during lunch break and then go back to university,” he said, gazing at the lake from his office.
“Now it’s not possible to step in the water, let alone swim in it,” he said.
The lake is still popular with tourists and some locals swim along its more scenic parts.
Van Governor Ozan Balci said his office has spent 80 million lira (RM13.92mil) cleaning up the lake.
“We are doing our best to protect the lake because of its cultural heritage and people’s common memory,” he said.
In the shoreline village of Adir, some locals swam and others picnicked under a tree.
But dead gulls lying not too far from the vacationers betrayed the ecological problems facing the lake.
Experts say pearl mullets that form the basis of the gulls’ diet migrated early this year because of the drought.
Deprived of food, the gulls simply starved to death.
“The remaining birds here have one more week. Then they will also die,” local villager Necmettin Nebioglu, 64, said. — AFP