Last year when Chris and I described our plans to sell most of our possessions and travel for a year, the most common reaction we received was “You’re so brave!”. We didn’t feel that we needed extra bravery for our venture, but after our first day of wandering around Marrakech, Morocco on our own, I definitely felt like we had been brave. So much was unfamiliar – not just the language, the currency and the clothing, but the mix of animals and people on the street, the sounds of calls to prayer, the unfamiliar products and the endless narrow, winding alleys and streets. We felt like we had accomplished a heroic feat when we arrived back at our family run riad hotel at the end of the day.
Eighteen days and 10 Moroccan locations later, Chris and I had
thoroughly experienced the flavors, aromas,
colors, sounds and textures of this Arab/African/European/Berber nation. We
prepared tagine, the national dish, in a home in a small town in the Atlas
Mountains; we rode camels in the Agafay desert; in the industrial city of
Casablanca we visited one of the world’s largest mosques and the only one in
the nation open to non-Muslims; and we visited the remains of a Roman city that
wowed us, even though we thought we were finished seeing amazing Roman ruins since
we’ve encountered them in nearly every country we’ve visited. We quickly became
comfortable with the norms and can say that, after a short time, any visitor
with even minimal courage could travel there easily.
We traveled with eight other Americans, Brits, Canadians and
Irish (Chris was the only male) on a trip organized by EVA Travel (Ethical
Travel Adventures). EVA offers small group tours for those who want to see the
world and give back a little in the process. https://www.evatravel.uk.
Our “give back” activities included helping to restore a
classroom and playground in a preschool in the mountain town of Imlil that was damaged
by a 2023 earthquake, speaking with a group of teens and adults who meet at
night under streetlights to improve their English and collecting trash in a city
park in the beach town of Essaouira. (Garbage collection is not provided to
homes in Essaouira, but residents can take their trash to neighborhood bins. However, when the bins are full, trash can be left to collect in the park entrance.) We
also visited a facility where abandoned boys, often born to single women, are
cared for so we could learn about its operations and needs and determine
whether a future EVA group could contribute.
English Street Class is a free English language program for people of all ages started in 2017. Volunteers lead classes and practice groups for all speaking levels with donated materials and chairs in the evening beneath street lights on side streets of the medina market in Essaouria.
The program was started by local teacher Mouchine Camel. You can learn about the program on their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/englishstreetclass/
or Workaway listing: https://www.workaway.info/en/host/182428712963
Morocco is a vibrant country, with mountains, coastlines,
desert and farmland. It is a developing nation with a high-speed intercity
train system, but where donkeys are regularly used in small towns, the
countryside and even big cities. Its healthcare system lacks enough doctors and
hospitals, but pharmacists who can offer advice and medication are readily
available in urban areas. It has expanded its desalination facilities to
address a water shortage, but it is unclear whether the tap water is safe to
drink, so we, and many residents, relied on bottled water, which, of course,
adds to the trash problem. The government, which is a constitutional monarchy
with a king, as well as a parliament, has provided stability, reforms and
increased women’s rights, but is also accused of corruption and media control.
And every form of dress can be seen – women in everything from midriffs to
hajibs to burkas and men in suits, as well as traditional leather slippers.
We felt completely safe everywhere - at night, in crowded
tourist areas, in markets and on the roads. It is a friendly country where
English is quickly replacing French as a second or third language for many. We
were welcomed and greeted by strangers and shopkeepers at every stop. A
traveling businessman shared his large table with our group when no other space
was available in a crowded restaurant. He bought a round of drinks and
diligently tried to communicate despite a severe language barrier. A man sitting
nearby noticed the communication problem, volunteered to translate and shared
insights into the local culture. On another day, a passerby ran to help one of our group who slipped and fell. Mothers of the
students at the preschool where we volunteered brought us cakes. And no one
pushed or jostled no matter how crowded the medina got.
If you can only visit one location in Morocco, my advice is
to make it Fez. It’s the country’s second largest city and the site of the
world’s largest medina/market, where we surely would have been lost without our
guide, Zach, who led us all day through the maze of winding, narrow alleys – it
takes at least an hour to walk from one end to the other on the main “street” or zanka.
It is where we tasted cactus fruit, dates stuffed with walnuts, fava bean soup
and one of the many Moroccan pastries, which are usually some variation of
dough, nuts and sugary syrup. We also tasted dried beef preserved in fat
(thumbs down) but never made it to the camel hump vendor.
In Fez, you can view the exterior and grounds of one of the
country’s many royal palaces, see what may be the world’s oldest university,
which was established in the year 859, watch craftsmen at a ceramic factory,
observe small shopkeepers pounding brass into platters or weaving scarfs with
thread made from agave plants. The most famous industry there is the tanneries,
where barefoot men transfer goat, cow, sheep and camel skins among various
ceramic vats filled with solutions of limestone, pigeon droppings, cow urine
and dyes.
But you can also venture to Marrakech, which has the Behia Palace, a two-acre compound of elaborate buildings and courtyards built by a ruler, supposedly for his favorite wife. Or the Atlas Mountains for mountain biking, skiing and trails. We only took a one-hour hike to a popular waterfall in that area, but guides, mules and a base camp are available for support if you’d like to climb 14,000 foot Mt. Toubkal. The young woman, Bousra, who accompanied our group around the country is normally a mountain guide and has climbed Mt. Toubkal 23 times.
You’ve probably seen photos of Chefchouen, a small northern city where the blue-washed buildings in the old city produce striking and Instagrammable photos. The area is indeed picturesque, and the people are often dressed in traditional clothes, including the jebli hat (think a sombrero with colorful pom poms around the brim) and the djellaba (think an Obi Wan Kenobi robe with a hood).
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Go to Morocco for the sights and the people. But don’t go
for the restaurant service. At a group farewell dinner in an upscale restaurant,
we made a bet about whether all six people would receive their correct orders.
It was so close! Only one drink and one dessert were forgotten. That was a
better outcome than many meals during our trip where we encountered servers who
took the orders of most, but not all, diners
in our group; servers who delivered the wrong dish, returned to the kitchen for
a correction and came back with a new serving of the same, incorrect dish; breakfast
buffets where coffee didn’t appear until the end of the meal, and never would a
restaurant amend a bill so we could be charged for what we actually received,
rather than what was written on the order.
And don’t go for the food. We didn’t go hungry, but day
after day of the traditional meal of stewed meat and vegetables cooked in
earthenware tagines and endless supplies of rather tasteless khoubz bread were
not enticing. What was enticing, however, was spicy, grilled chicken skewers,
carrot salad flavored with orange water, sweet mint and herbal tea, and
pistachio yogurt. I will be searching for that in supermarkets from now on!


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Wow!!! What wonderful experiences you two are having on your adventures! I always look forward to reading where you have gone and what your “favorites” were. I’m glad you have t gotten sick or had in negative encounters. Looking forward to your next post!! Safe travels, Annie B
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