Bodrum has a split personality and wears both well. By day it is a quiet Aegean town of whitewashed cube houses draped in purple bougainvillea, climbing the hillside above a harbor where fishing boats and mega-yachts share the same turquoise water. I arrived by bus from Izmir, dropped my bag at a pension in the backstreets, and walked down to the harbor at that hour when the fishermen are mending their nets and the restaurants are setting tables for the evening. The light was doing what Aegean light does — turning everything it touches into something worth photographing, even the cats asleep on the stone walls.
The Castle of St. Peter, built by crusading Knights Hospitaller from stones of the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus — one of the original Seven Wonders — now houses an excellent underwater archaeology museum. The collection of Bronze Age shipwrecks is among the finest in the world, and the castle itself offers views across the twin bays of Bodrum that explain, better than any guidebook, why every civilization that reached this coast decided to stay.

The Peninsula Villages
The Bodrum Peninsula extends into a string of quieter villages, each with its own character. Gumusluk is a fishing hamlet where you eat grilled sea bass with your feet in the water, looking across to a sunken ancient city — the remains of Myndos — visible beneath the surface on calm days. I had the best fish meal of my trip there, at a table six inches from the Aegean, with a carafe of raki and a sunset that lasted an hour. Turkbuku draws Istanbul’s fashionable set to its boutique hotels and beach clubs, though I preferred the quieter coves of Bitez, where the windsurfers gather and the pace is slower.
Inland, the hilltop ruins of Pedasa offer wildflower walks with views across the entire peninsula. The weekly market in Bodrum town is a riot of spices, textiles, leather, and local olive oil that rewards slow browsing and the willingness to bargain with a smile.

When to go: May to June for swimming weather without the yacht-party crowds. September for warm water, lower prices, and spectacular sunsets. Avoid July and August unless you enjoy the social scene — Bodrum in high summer is Turkey’s Saint-Tropez.