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How to Buy in Turkey
 
 
               
 
 
WE ARE SEEKING FOR AN INVESTMENT PARTNER , FOR A  FRUIT FARM PROJECT AT DE BLACK SEA AREA OF TURKEY.
 
Niksar (NeoCaesarae) Hatipli beldesi
 
Agriculture is 80 hectare large and empty. we want build it country to fruit grower to will plant.The idea is will plant.
                                        20 h grape
                                        10 h. Walloon notes
                                         20 h. cherries
                                         30 h. apples

 

a part of the plants becomes subsid by Turkish rich (minister of agriculture).  the project inc. farm  house and rise space will be cost estimated amount are approximately + - 150,000. euro.

 

Why invest in agriculture

 

Vegetable and fruit are life substance interest of people.  it is a large market such as EU, Russia, Midle East and Asia and rest of the World.

 

 

it  is large concerns set up a large company, gladly only react if you have knowledge and Capital.

 

                                                     

 

 

Geographic location

Niksar is approximately 9,555 km2 (3,689 sq mi). It is located at 40°35’ north latitude and 36°58’ east longitude. Its average altitude is 350 m above sea level. It is surrounded by Erbaa on the northwest, Tokat on the southwest, Almus on the south, Başçiftlik on the southeast and Akkuş on the north. It is one of the five largest counties of Tokat.

The Canik Mountains are to the north, Dönek Mountain to the south, and the Niksar Lowland is situated between these mountains. The Niksar Lowland, which has become more fertile through irrigation and alluvial soil, is one of the most important lowlands of the Black Sea Region. The Canik Mountains are covered with plateaus that lie parallel to the Black Sea. Çamiçi High Plateau is one of the most important high plateaus, not just of Niksar but also of Tokat.

Niksar lands are very rich in rivers, and have been irrigated by large and small tributaries of the Kelkit Stream.

Forests cover 53% of the plateau, and pasture 12%; 32% of the land is devoted to agriculture, and only 3% is unsuitable for farming.

Beech, pine, horn beech, and spruce trees can be found in the higher altitudes to the north of Niksar. In the lowlands there are poplar and willow trees, and fruit trees in the valleys.

Polecats, rabbits, wolves, foxes, lynxes, bears, and pigs are the main hunting animals that live in the mountains and forests. Partridges, quail and ducks are among the more important game birds found here.

Niksar has a transitional climate between the Middle Black Sea and Inner Anatolia. In general it is tepid and rainy in winter, hot in summer. The county averages an annual rainfall of 475.2 mm, and the annual heat average is 14.7 °C.

 

 

 

                                                                                                  

 
 
Niksar in history
 

Niksar was settled by the Hittite, Persian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Danishmend, Seljuk and Ottoman empires. It has always been an important place in Anatolia, because of its location, climate and productive lands.

It was known as Caberia in the Hellenistic period. In 72 BC a battle during the Third Mithridatic War took place at Niksar, and the city passed to the Romans. Niksar was called Diospolis', Sebaste, and Neocaesarea during the Roman period. "Niksar" is derived from Neocaesarea.

Niksar became part of the Eastern Roman Empire when the Roman Empire divided into two parts in AD 395. When the Turks raided Anatolia in 1067, it was conquered by Afşin Bey, one of the commanders of Alparslan. The Byzantines retook the area in 1068. Conquered by Artuk Bey after the Battle of Manzikert, Niksar once again returned to Byzantium in 1073.

Melik Gümüştekin Ahmet Gazi, founder of the Danishmend state and better known as Danishmend Gazi, was the real conqueror of Niksar. After the conquest the Gazi made it his capital city, and Niksar became a center of science and culture. The mausoleum of Danishmend Gazi stands in a large cemetery just outside the town.

By 1175, during the reign of Kılıç Arslan II, Niksar was dependent on the Seljuks of Rum. After the Mongol invasion of the 13th century, Niksar was governed by the Eretna beylik and then the Tacettinoğulları beylik and became the center of the latter principality.

After Kadı Burhanettin, who conquered Niksar in 1387, was killed in battle, the people of Niksar sought aid from the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I. The Sultan's son, Süleyman Çelebi, took Niksar for the Ottomans. In the later Ottoman period, Niksar became part of Tokat Province. Fatih Mehmet launched a raid on Trabzon from Niksar, and Yavuz Sultan Selim and Suleiman the Magnificent raided the east from there.

 

 

                  

 

 

Cuisine of Niksar

The most unusual and important feature of traditional Tokat-Niksar houses is the kitchen. Called “Aşevi” or “Aşgana” in the local dialect, the kitchen is usually the largest room of the house and serves as a sort of lounge for the family.

The typical kitchen has a fireplace on one side used for cooking or washing and a storeroom on the other in which dried foods, preserves, sauces, cheese and grape leaves are kept. Beside the storeroom is a wooden granary with partitions for storing cereals and legumes.

In Turkey, it is common to eat meals around a low table. A typical meal might consist of some of the following dishes:

[edit] Soups

Tarhana, bacaklı soup, hele soup, Gengirme toygası, Maize toygası, katıklı wedding soup, Zoğallı soup and Erikli soup, village toyga soup.

[edit] Meals

Tokat kebab, Yaprak sarması, cevizli bat, baklalı yaprak dolması, kabak kabuğu kavurması, madımak, beet, pehli.

[edit] Pastries

Çökelekli, katmer, cızlak, yufka pie, cevizli bun, bişi, stork giliği, muhacir pie, çarşaf pie.

[edit] Pilafs

Bulgur pilaf with lentil and bean, keşkek.

[edit] Desserts

Yufka dessert, kuşburnu jam, kalburabastı, mulberry molasses, rice puding, baklava, revani, semolina dessert, lokma dessert.

[edit] Local attractions