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Kafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus

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Photo ofKafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus Photo ofKafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus Photo ofKafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus

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Trail stats

Distance
6.47 mi
Elevation gain
1,585 ft
Technical difficulty
Moderate
Elevation loss
1,234 ft
Max elevation
1,043 ft
TrailRank 
69 5
Min elevation
604 ft
Trail type
One Way
Moving time
one hour 47 minutes
Time
4 hours 4 minutes
Coordinates
1581
Uploaded
January 1, 2020
Recorded
January 2020
  • Rating

  •   5 1 review

near Aplíki, Eparchía Lefkosías (Cyprus)

Viewed 6456 times, downloaded 100 times

Trail photos

Photo ofKafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus Photo ofKafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus Photo ofKafizidon Dam Kafizides Reservoir Cyprus

Itinerary description

One of the most beautiful area on the Island. Road is not very well maintained forestry road even marked with No Entry sign at beginning, but .. just awesome. Rocky road no mud , you need to worry about only rock falling , You can get out from this road at two places one of them signed direction to Voulla. At the dam you can go to top of the mountain, don't it is drive able or not. Downhill road at the dam goes to the river no idea you can get out later from river bed or not. Some place on the track is dangerously narrow.
This dam is close to Green line, don't go to opposite direction :)

The United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus is a demilitarized zone, patrolled by the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP), that was established in 1964 and extended in 1974 after the ceasefire of 16 August 1974, following the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, and the de facto partition of the island into the area controlled by the Republic of Cyprus (excluding the Sovereign Base Areas) and the unofficial Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus in the North. The zone, also known as the Green Line (Greek: Πράσινη Γραμμή, Prasini Grammi; Turkish: Yeşil Hat), stretches for 180 kilometres (112 miles) from Paralimni in the east to Kato Pyrgos in the west, where a separate section surrounds Kokkina.

The dividing line is also referred to as the Attila Line,[1] named after the Turkish code-name for the 1974 military intervention: Operation Atilla. The Turkish army has built a barrier on the zone's northern side, consisting mainly of barbed-wire fencing, concrete wall segments, watchtowers, anti-tank ditches, and minefields. The zone cuts through the centre of Nicosia, separating the city into southern and northern sections. In total, it spans an area of 346 square kilometres (134 sq mi), varying in width from less than 20 metres (66 ft) to more than 7 kilometres (4.3 mi).[2][3][4] Because of this, 30 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Nicosia remains the last divided capital in Europe.[5][6][7][8] Some 10,000 people live in several villages and work on farms located within the zone; the village of Pyla is famous for being one of the few remaining villages in Cyprus where Greek and Turkish Cypriots still live side by side. Other villages are Deneia, Athienou and Troulloi. Some areas are untouched by human interference and have remained a safe haven for flora and fauna.[3]


History

View from the Turkish side to the Greek Cypriot side at Uray sk, next to the Turkish Public Market
A buffer zone in Cyprus was first established in the last days of 1963, when Major-General Peter Young was the commander of the British Joint Force (later known as the Truce Force and a predecessor of the present UN force). This Force was set up in the wake of the inter-communal violence of Christmas 1963. On the 30th December 1963, following a ‘high powered’ twelve hour meeting chaired by Duncan Sandys (British Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations), General Young drew the agreed cease-fire line on a map with a green chinagraph pencil, which was to become known as the "Green Line".[9] This map was then passed to General Young’s Intelligence Officer who was waiting in a nearby building and told to, “Get on with it.” Intelligence Corps NCOs then copied the map for distribution to the Truce Force units. Further copies of the map would then have been produced ‘in house’ for use by Truce Force patrols. [10]

The Green Line became impassable following the July 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus during which Turkey captured approximately 37% of Cypriot territory, in response to a short-lived Greek Cypriot coup. A "security zone" was established after the Tripartite Conference of Geneva in July 1974. Pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 353 of 1974,[11] the foreign ministers of Greece, Turkey, and the United Kingdom convened in Geneva on 25 July 1974. According to UNFICYP, the text of the joint declaration transmitted to the Secretary-General of the United Nations was as follows:

A security zone of a size to be determined by representatives of Greece, Turkey, and the United Kingdom, in consultation with UNFICYP, was to be established at the limit of the areas occupied by the Turkish armed forces. This zone was to be entered by no forces other than those of UNFICYP, which was to supervise the prohibition of entry. Pending the determination of the size and character of the security zone, the existing area between the two forces was not to be breached by any forces.

— Tripartite Conference & Geneva Declaration, [12]
The UN Security Council then adopted the above declaration with Resolution 355. When the coup dissolved, the Turkish Armed Forces advanced to capture approximately 37% of the island and met the "Green Line". The meandering Buffer Zone marks the southernmost points that the Turkish troops occupied during the Turkish Invasion of Cyprus in August 1974, running between the ceasefire lines of the Cypriot National Guard and Turkish army that de facto divides Cyprus into two, cutting through the capital of Nicosia. With the self-proclamation of the internationally unrecognized "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus", the Buffer Zone became its de facto southern border.[citation needed]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Buffer_Zone_in_Cyprus

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Waypoints

PictographRiver Altitude 604 ft
Photo ofStart/End Point Photo ofStart/End Point Photo ofStart/End Point

Start/End Point

If you want to go on foot, I do recommend it you can left your car at intersection to the dam.

PictographPhoto Altitude 616 ft
Photo ofLocality Kafizides Photo ofLocality Kafizides Photo ofLocality Kafizides

Locality Kafizides

PictographIntersection Altitude 663 ft
Photo ofKafizidon Dam sign post Photo ofKafizidon Dam sign post Photo ofKafizidon Dam sign post

Kafizidon Dam sign post

PictographPanorama Altitude 747 ft
Photo ofBeauty starts here Photo ofBeauty starts here Photo ofBeauty starts here

Beauty starts here

PictographPhoto Altitude 767 ft
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Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 816 ft
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Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 802 ft
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Photo

PictographIntersection Altitude 838 ft
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Go straight

PictographPhoto Altitude 956 ft
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Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 913 ft
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Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 1,030 ft
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Photo

PictographLake Altitude 997 ft
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Dam

PictographLake Altitude 970 ft
Photo ofReservoir Photo ofReservoir Photo ofReservoir

Reservoir

PictographPhoto Altitude 974 ft
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Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 978 ft
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Photo

PictographRiver Altitude 931 ft
Photo ofXeros Potamos enter to reservoir Photo ofXeros Potamos enter to reservoir Photo ofXeros Potamos enter to reservoir

Xeros Potamos enter to reservoir

PictographPhoto Altitude 939 ft
Photo ofRoad to river bed Photo ofRoad to river bed Photo ofRoad to river bed

Road to river bed

PictographPhoto Altitude 946 ft
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Photo

PictographPhoto Altitude 751 ft
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Photo

Comments  (2)

  • Photo of The Mountain Goat
    The Mountain Goat Jan 3, 2020

    I have followed this trail  View more

    Polla oreo topos, ego piga pou ton agio epifanio, polla oreo monopati. To kalokeri kolimpisame sto frakti

  • Photo of HikingFun
    HikingFun Jan 3, 2020

    Thank you!

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