I hope I'm not floodding the board with badge requests

A few weeks ago we drove about 500km (that makes 310 miles, my non-metric friends) and arrived in a very calm, quite and touristically very underdeveloped sea-side village in Assos. The place is in Çanakkale, Turkey, users from Down Under probably heard about this city, Gallipoli is in Çanakkale. Here's a Google Maps link:
https://www.google.com.tr/maps/place/Assos,+17860+Behram%2FAyvac%C4%B1k%2F%C3%87anakkale/@39.490561,26.3329479,12.75z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x14b07eda08ffb863:0x86455936e4be7770!8m2!3d39.487778!4d26.336944From our camping site we could see the Greek island Mitilini, which reminded me of kkokkolis

Well, here's the camping equipment I used. It didn't occur to me to take photos of my sleeping bag and my mat

The tent is actually a gift from a friend, it's a 16-year-old tent. Which actually could not withstand the very windy Çanakkale weather and was torn here and there. When I came back I had to fix it (WHICH EARNED ME A DUCT TAPE BADGE, WOOHOO!), here are the shots:
http://forum.multitool.org/index.php/topic,68318.0/topicseen.html. It's a 2-pole, 2-layer, 2-entry, no-name tent suitable for 2 persons but 3 can also fit in easily.
The cooking equipment is an MSR Whisperlite and an aluminum Primus set with 2 pots, 1 pan and a universal holder. As fuel I use white gas, which is pricey but burns very clean, almost zero soot. For priming I used asetone, which is dead cheap and -again- burns sootless.
I also have an ancient Hobo knife, which I
stole took from my grandma's closet when I was a kid. It's horribly bulky and the knife, the cork-screw and can opener are a pain to open up but for some reason I kept it for years. My first choice is my spork, though, I was a moron and used it on the pan when it was hot, so tips of the fork melted down a bit. Had to sharpen them afterwards.
As plates I have been using two Orikaso products: An orange place and a blue cup. I definitely recommend these! They're incredibly useful! They weigh nothing, are almost paper thin, yet tough enough for you to use them as cutting boards. Easy to clean, too. Why are they not in the pics? That is something I'm asking myself now...

The orange one can be seen on the night shot below, though, but it's not a very clear shot

At least let me give you a link:
https://www.rei.com/product/739247/flatworld-orikaso-solo-set I do not have the mug, because it's locking mechanism has a metal snap fastener

which I thought could rust easily.