Leaving the rain in Spain, we flew to Morocco for the second part of our Christmas holidays. Of course it was beautiful and sunny the morning we left Spain.
We flew into Marrakesh, grabbed our transfer to the medina, and were promptly faced with tackling the maze.
We flew into Marrakesh, grabbed our transfer to the medina, and were promptly faced with tackling the maze.



Kelly above the craziness of Djemaa el Fna, the main square in the medina. An amazing spectacle of snake-charmers, acrobats, story-tellers and dancers. In the right background you can see them setting up the food stalls for dinner.
Seriously! The street vendors were a great place to eat. Their skewers were delicious, you could see all of the ingredients layed out in front of you, and you know that it would be fully cooked, and it was cheap!


Our Riad (traditional Moroccan house with internal garden) was in the medina, a maze of streets, lanes, and tiny pathways brought us to a true sanctuary away from the chaos.


Our rooftop terrace where we could unwind with a glass of wine after wandering the bazaars. It was always a little bit of relief to find the riad at the end of the day. 


We spent an afternoon at a fairly posh hammam. We both got mudded, scrubbed, cleaned, and massaged. Very nice indeed!
We also spent some quality time with the carpet sellers. We found an antique Berber carpet that we bartered very successfully for! (Not one of the ones in the photo)After a few days we left Marrakech to head to the mountains with intentions to ski for a few days.

Which made me quite sour.Riding the chairlift (in running shoes and capris) all Kelly and I wanted was a few hundred meters of snow that we could do some laps on.




Since there was no snow, we were the only people in town, our crappy little hotel was extremely expensive and the owner treated us like garbage we decided to move on after a night (2 days earlier than planned). In the morning we quickly packed up the car, paid our bill (to the second in charge) and got out of town before we had to face the witch owner.
We headed to another town that was considered the hub for trekkers heading into the Atlas mountains. The drive through rural Morocco was really nice!



When we arrived our town of Asni we found a great guesthouse about 800m from town, up a steep hill. They were so friendly and even offered to take our bags up.

We had the house (and it's enormous terrace) all to ourselves. It was great for enjoying the sunshine, wine and views. The guesthouse had a great hammam that we could have a soak and scrub it. 

Here we had the opportunity to get out for some hiking. We took the trail up towards the highest mountain in Morocco, Jebel Toubkal (4167m). The conditions were too icy for us to consider an ascent, full ice climbing gear would have been necessary.

The infrastructure for trekking in Morocco is quite extensive; lots of trails, refuges, and guides available to explore the Atlas Range.

From Asni, the road across the high passes to southern Morocco was pretty hairy. Tons of elevation gain/loss with no shoulder, just drop offs.But on the other side of the pass we saw "GOATS IN TREES!!!!" (as Kelly screamed)





They were using rocks to smash the shell and putting the snails in a bucket to rinse off. I bent down to try my hand at it; when I had gotten the snail out the woman popped it into her mouth and ate it. She then shelled one for me...not very delicious...(Kelly had just warned me about eating shellfish in Morocco and that was racing through my head but couldn't turn her offer down) It was pretty gross.
































1 comment:
all I can say is: holy shit - there were goats in those trees.
And the rest was pretty cool too. Miss you Kell!
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