A gray-blue morning unfurls over Cappadocia and the minivan hums away from Göreme, the group shuffling jackets and cameras as the landscape opens into a raw, sculpted country. Fairy chimneys rise from the valleys like teeth of the earth; sunlight slides over their weathered faces and the guide—safe, steady—points out where monks once hollowed rooms into the tufa. In a single day the Red Tour stitches together the signature sites that make Cappadocia so cinematic: Uçhisar’s panoramic ridge, the ecclesiastical ruins of Zelve, the triple-capped chimneys of Paşabağ, the fanciful shapes of Devrent, the riverside workshops of Avanos, and the soft-formed amphitheater of Love Valley.