Saturday, 7 November 2015
Thursday, 29 October 2015
Monday
26 October
Heading
north through the Rif mountains to our penultimate destination of
Chefchaouen perhaps one of Morocco's most charismatic towns with its
blue houses combined with the fabled lawlessness of the Rif region
made for an interesting diversion from the scheduled route.
Hoodie violin gang
and hot gossip
streets
and alleyways
Sunday
25 October
A
strange silly day in Meknes, involved a Moroccan guide who could only
speak german which subsequently had to be translated into english by
our Dutch tour guide, something got seriously lost in translation in
what can only be described as the dullest ditchwater blurb ever
heard, so to avoid death by useless information we entertained
ourselves with Monty Pythonesque humour including silly walks.
The
later part of the day was taken up by a visit to Volubilis the
largest Roman archaeological site in Morocco.
Volubilis
archaeological site
with some French reconstruction
Monday, 26 October 2015
Wednesday
21 October
Moving
on, we continued our northerly track to Midelt across the Middle
Atlas mountain range via the cedar forests of Azrou, for those who
like macaque monkeys Azrou is where they hang out by the road side.
Saw no monkeys, just camels on a cliff
and the vanishing Kasbahs
A
planned 4x4 excursion to the Cirque de Jaffar and lunch in a Berber
home morphed into a gruelling trip in an ancient mercedes minibus
that was totally inadequate for the task. So to cut a long story
short it was an ordeal of the first order. The only saving grace of the day was a beautiful walk around Cirque de Jaffar.
The Cirque de Jaffar
Walking in the Cirque
Nomad woman in the Cirque
Dying cedars due to 7 year drought
Friday, 23 October 2015
Tuesday
20 October
On
perhaps the wildest ride of our lives, we took an off road 4x4, 300km round trip from the Todra valley to the Dades valley and
gorge, an eight hour dirt road trip through the high atlas mountains
as featured in:
We
spent most of the day grinning at the wow factor of the ever changing
landscape taking more photos than a Japanese tourist as we tried to
illustrate this vast vista.
Our
circuit started out from Baddou campsite in Tamtatouchte and our
guide was Ahmed the campsite owner. From there we headed north in his
4x4.
Our route highlighted in green
Ahmed and his trusty 4x4
The
asphalt ends at Agoudal the most northerly point of our circuit, a
fertile valley farming village.
Todra
valley at Agoudal
Berber farmers hard at work
Nomads on the move
Berber nomad
This
is the time of year that nomads move down the mountains for the
winter as this area will become impassable due to snow cover.
Nomad summer mountain dwelling
Our intrepid crew
Mountain views from 3000m
More of the rolling landscape
Dades Valley
Trouble ahead
Back
on the asphalt at Dades Gorge
and
a Berber 4x4 fully loaded
Wednesday, 21 October 2015
Monday
19 October
A
salt mine visit via a river bed walk, now we think we know why some
Moroccan tap water tastes of salt, the ground water flows through
seams of salt in the Atlas Mountains, turn on the tap and hey presto
salt water.
A mountain oozing salt
Rivers of salt
Linda at the salt mine entrance
Mule train salt transport
Tuesday, 20 October 2015
Saturday
17 October
The
start of our long trek north, re-tracing our route for part of the
way towards Ouarzazate through the Drรขa
valley, braking our journey with an overnight stop at Agdz. Our
campsite was in the grounds of a Kasbah surrounded by date palms. By
good fortune we arrived at the time of date harvest and the owner
subsequently gave us an informative tour of the palmeraie and her
Kasbah. Amazing.
Agdz, date palm campsite
with Kasbah
We
met a couple of Aussies on site from Western Australia who
were in the process of travelling around the world in their Nissan
4x4. Their 60,000km journey so far included shipping their camper to
Vladivostock and driving across Asia, mainly through Russian held
territories including Mongolia.
Justin and Jen with their camper
Their journey so far
Saturday, 17 October 2015
Thursday
15 October
A
pre-dawn start took us by 4x4 into the Sahara desert, after an hour
or so the bitumen road disappeared at a town called M'Hamid el
Ghizlane not far from the Algerian border, once a garrison town for
the French Foreign Legion camel corp. Thereafter for the next 3 hours
there is no road, only tyre marks, sand rocks and more rocks and
sand. Our destination for the day is Erg Chigagga a spectacular vista
of sand dunes stretching some 40km across the desert, the only way to
get there is by 4x4 or camel.
It's
a 50 day camel ride to Timbuctou from here
getting
there is half the fun
and not so much fun
A camel filling station
Camel-cam big vista
Taureg
blue men with tablet
Desert lunch stop
Cooling down waiting for lunch
The
bread oven in action
The
end product, desert damper
with an 'eat my dust' finish
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