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Turkey’s Bodrum peninsula is different. The tourist boom in this part of
the world{{U}} (1) {{/U}}turned some small villages into resorts yet
left neighbouring beaches undisturbed, making it quite{{U}} (2)
{{/U}}southern France or the Spanish Coasts where few stretches of coastline
are undevelopeD.
The{{U}} (3) {{/U}}for this happy set
of circumstances is simple. For thousands of years, travel here{{U}} (4)
{{/U}}easier by boat than by lanD.So when mass tourism arrived in the{{U}}
(5) {{/U}}1980s, there was no coast road for ribbon development to
follow. So the peninsula, just{{U}} (6) {{/U}}hour from Bodrum airport,
has not become one long littoral of resort.
The building{{U}}
(7) {{/U}}new hotels has mainly been confined to places easily reached
by then relatively{{U}} (8) {{/U}}roads. Such ease of access has made
Gumbet, near Bodrum, a busy resort, while the little fishing village of
Gumusluk, 12 miles further west and only