Magic of Morocco
|
NEW: A group tour is scheduled for Friday, October 3rd - Monday, October 13th |
Magic of Morocco - 10 day version, 4* hotels |
ITCTAM01CP - This Private Programme operates for a minimum of 4 adults.
Day 1 CASABLANCA.
You will be met on arrival Casablanca airport and transferred to your hotel. After checking in, and depending on your time of arrival, you have the remainder of the day free in this bustling commercial capital of the Kingdom of Morocco before returning to your hotel for dinner.
After breakfast we visit the Hassan II Mosque, the largest Mosque outside of Mecca.
On for 1½ hours alongside the Atlantic Ocean to Rabat, here to visit the main monuments, including the Hassan Tower and the Mohamed V Mausoleum where Hassan II is also buried alongside his father; the Kasbah of the Oudayas and the Oudaya Gate. We stop for a light lunch at Le Restaurant Saadi before setting out on our 3 hours’ drive eastwards across the plains to Fes.
We make for the impressive Dar el Makhzen and a 15 minute stop at the Royal Palace with its magnificent seven bronze gates. From here we walk to and through the Mellah with its intense atmosphere and fine examples of Mauro-Hispanic architecture. We drive to the Borj Sud, here to take in the panoramic view of the Medina. Off now down to start our Walking Tour of the labyrinth of the ancient Fes Medina (a UNESCO World Heritage Site); of the colourful es-Sebbaghine with its Street of the Dyers; of the brass workers at es-Seffarine , of the aromas of the Souq el-Atterine area of spices and groceries; of the impressive al-Quarawiyyin Mosque and University, the el-Atterine Medersa; the Kissaria and the Draz, where you’ll see materials being woven the traditional way on really old-fashioned looms; the renowned Tanneries on the bank of the Oued Fes and the delightful el-Nejjarine Square with its fountain and caravanserai and thence on to the potteries, perfumes and beauty products at the Souq el-Henna. Leaving the Medina from the Bab Boujloud, we arrive back at our hotel after a day full of contrasting culture and journey into some 1,200 years of history.
Day 3
After breakfast we have a full day in Fes to explore this, the best living example of a medieval Arab city and the religious capital of the Kingdom of Morocco. Our day’s excursion to 2,000 years in the past starts at 9 o’clock from your hotel when we drive across the Saiss Plain to the wonderful Roman ruins at Volubilis, the Volubilis of really ancient olive presses, mansions, incredible mosaics, monumental arches and Corinthian columns where you’ll have a real sense of Roman lifestyle and of that of a subsequent medieval Berber town. The site contains the Mansion containing the mosaic of the Labours of Hercules, the Baths of Gallienus and Baths of Forum with their fragmentary mosaics; the House of Orpheus and its Dolphin mosaic and Orpheus Myth; the Cortege of Venus many of whose mosaics we may only see from the outside yet will get to see the medallions of Bacchus, Diana and the Abduction of Hylas; the Gordian Palace with its bath house and pooled courtyards; the House of the Wild Beast, the House of Nymphs, the House of the Seasons, the House of Flavius Germanus, the Knights House with an incomplete mosaic of Dionysus Discovering Ariadne Asleep, the Triumphal Arch, the Capitol and the House of Ephebus with its pictorial mosaics, especially that of Bacchus Being drawn in a Chariot by Panthers.
We leave Volubilis behind to drive alongside the dark, outlaying ridges of the Zerhoun Hills to stop for a visit of the town of Moulay Idriss , the holiest Islamic town in the kingdom of Morocco, where thousands of Moroccan faithful come on pilgrimage (moussem) every August to pray at the tomb of this descendant of the Prophet Mohammed. Arriving at the elongated square we see above us the green-tiled pyramids of the Zaouia with its two conical quarters on either side and stroll amidst the labyrinth of alleyways before leaving for the Imperial City rebuilt by Moulay Ismail.
On, now, to the Imperial City of Meknes (a UNESCO World Heritage Site). Here we shall visit the easily most beautiful Bab, or gateway, in all of the Maghreb -the Bab Mansour . From here to the El Heri es-Souani - the granary of huge vaulted structures and stables built by Moulay Ismail’s soldiers next to a pool fed by underground channels that brought fresh water all the way from the distant Middle Atlas Mountains; the Moulay Ismail Mausoleum and the Place el-Hedim to see the famous State-owned stallion stables of Haras where these Arabo-Berber horses are bred. Time for lunch at the Belle Vue Restaurant before leaving Meknes around 5:30 in the evening, arriving in our hotel at Fes at around a quarter to seven, the drama, scope and beauty of our visit forever indelibly imprinted in our memory.
Day 4 FES - AZROU - MIDELT - ZIZ GORGES - ER-RACHIDIA – ERFOUD - MERZOUGA.
After breakfast we now set off south to the Sahara. This will be all of a 6½ hour drive, with “comfort stops” and many photo opportunities. After some 30 minutes, we arrive at the small 1920s French-built hill station of Immouzèr du Kandar (1220m). Here we may pause for ten minutes by the kasbah for a look at the little Medina and take in the pleasant Saiss Plateau and now-distant Fes, continuing on to the squeaky-clean Moroccan pseudo-Swiss town of Ifrane (1650m), with its slanted, russet-tiled roofs hidden amidst a forest of cedar, which cannot grow below 1600m. Ifrane is mainly a winter ski resort – and a summer hideaway for rich Moroccans wishing to escape the hustle and heat of the large cities.
We now drive through to the first real town in the Middle Atlas - Azrou - which in the local Tamazight (Berber) dialect means “rock,” for next to the mosque is the massive outcrop from which this town takes its name - was for a long time a strategic settlement established to effect some form of control of the independent mountain Berber peoples. We continue on now through the forests to emerge at the Oued Gigou Valley and on through the High Atlas Mountains via the Tizi n’Zad (2178m). Down now through a bleak plain of scrub and desert to the Berber mountain town of Midelt , where we’ll stop for a light lunch at the El Ayachi Restaurant, the massive Jbel Ayachi (3722m) rising sheer and stark before us. Midelt is so far inland that its microclimate is one of extremes: bitterly cold in winter and oh-so-hot in summer.
Our route takes us on through striking countryside, marking the change from mountains to desert. This region was once notorious for raids on caravans by the nomadic Aït Haddidou tribe, who were not pacified, with great difficulty, by the French until the mid-1930s. Now through a lower Pass (Tizi) of the High Atlas - the Pass of the She-Camel - Tizi n’Talrehmt (1907m), on across a deserted plain through the town of Aït Messaoud, passing a French Foreign Legion fort with all the reminders of Beau Geste and then to the first southern ksar of Aït Kherrou, a river palmeraie (oasis) at the entrance to a small gorge. From here on in, ksour start to dot the countryside as we carry on down alongside the River Ziz (the Berber name meaning Gazelle).
On now through the town of Rich, once an important fort during the era of the French Protectorate, on and through the Tunnel Du Légionnaire, built by the French to have ease of rapid access to the rebellious southern tribe of the Aït Atta, to have appear before us a scenic highlight of the really dramatic and majestic canyon of the Ziz Gorges, massive erosions of rock carving a passage through the mountains dominating startlingly green oases and ochre-coloured ksours. We emerge from the Gorges close to the Barrage (Dam) Hassan Addakhil to continue on to the French-built garrison town of Er-Rachidya (previously known as Ksar es’ Souq, after their Foreign Legion fort). This pleasant garrison town, alive in the evening with students from the University and Lycée, is still maintained after independence to forestall any further territorial claims from Algeria. Onwards still through the small palm grove at Meski, watered by a natural spring - the famous picture postcard image of La Source Bleue - and the final sector of the Oued Ziz. We cross an arid reddish belt of desert to drop, suddenly, into the valley and the Tizimi Palmeraie and the French-built town of Erfoud which will give you your first impression of the over-powering proximity of the Sahara.
Our final stretch is to Merzouga where we stop for a welcome shower, dinner and overnight accommodation in the Auberge Du Sud amid the sands and surrounding date palm trees and an awesome sunset.
Day 5 MERZOUGA - ERFOUD-ERG CHEBBI MEHAREE AND BIVOUAC.
Up at the crack of dawn (or not, as the case may be!) to witness the incredible sunrise over the ever-changing colours of the magnificent dunes, we take our breakfast before setting off at around 9 o’clock on our dromedaries, one person per beast, for some 3 hours across a sea of golden dunes. This is the only ‘true’ desert area of the kingdom of Morocco and an area where meteorites continue to be found, as were crocodile teeth, shark, pterosaur and spinosaurus fossils.
We arrive at our carpeted Berber Nomadic camp in a small oasis seemingly in the middle of nowhere to have our light lunch under canvas, away from the midday sun. Around 3 in the afternoon we set off again on a circle trip of the mighty dunes to return to the camp to witness Nature’s incredible light show of sunset over ever-changing colours of dunes. Our tagine dinner is prepared and, after dessert, tea or coffee, we clap and dance along to a Desert Berber folklore group and to sing and chat to our heart’s content under the star-filled heavens.
Day 6 ERG CHEBBI - MERZOUGA - ERFOUD - TINERHRIR.
Our last brilliant sunrise, equal almost to last night’s unforgettable sunset, our Bedouin breakfast of tea, ‘sand’ bread, jam and cheese tucked away, our dromedaries having been saddled up for the return stage, we set off back across the plain around 8:30 for our final Meharée of some 2½ hours to the Auberge Du Sud, where we’ll take a shower before boarding our vehicle which now takes us back up to Erfoud, then westwards to the oasis town of Tinejdad and the start of the Route of 1000 Kasbahs in the Dadès Valley.
We check in to our tastefully-decorated hotel in the small town of Tinerhrir, located at the mouth of the fabulous Todra Gorges and overlooked by a Glaoui Kasbah. Now we set out up the Oued Todra for some 15km into to the deepest, narrowest and most spectacular part of these further wonders of Mother Nature. A light lunch in the Restaurant Les Roches, tucked tightly up against the sheer cliff face and more exploring of this remarkable canyon before returning for our evening meal and a good night’s sleep.
Day 7 TINERHRIR - BOUMALNE DU DADES - DADES GORGE - Q’LAAT DES M’GOUNA - SKOURA - OUARZAZATE.
Bright and early after breakfast we set off today towards the west further along the Route of 1000 Kasbahs to the small town of Boumalne du Dadès situated at the mouth of the Dadès Gorge. Here we venture up between the wide, high limestone cliffs with their strangely-shaped erosions and green vegetation, ksours, kasbahs and pisé houses ranging in colours from dark red to greenish black and startling lime-white, passing the Glaoui kasbah at Aït Youl as far as a group of ksours at Aït Arbi built against a volcanic twist in the rocks.
We return to the mouth of the Gorge and the Kasbah Tizzarouine for a light lunch before continuing westwards via Qlâa’t Des M’gouna (Citadel of the M’gouna Tribe) where thousands of small, pink roses, first planted by French settlers, are grown to make the rose oil essence - “Eau de Rose” - so beloved of the Berber people, on through to the Kasbahs at Skoura and Amerhidl before carrying on, after a total of around 170km., to the new (1920s) once-garrison town of the French Protectorate - Ouarzazate - for our dinner and overnight accommodation.
The late afternoon is free for you to roam at will around the town which was, in the late 1980s, a bit of a tourist boom town; perhaps, if you have not had your fill of kasbahs, you could pay a visit tp the Kasbah of Taourirt, or probably to the Atlas Film Studios (where, everyone will tell you, Lawrence of Arabia, Gladiator, The Jewel of The Nile and many other Hollywood films were shot.)
Day 8 OUARZAZATE – AÏT BEN HADDOU – MARRAKECH.
Refreshed, breakfasted and raring to go, we now set forth towards the north alongside the Oued Ouarzazate via the Assif Ounila Valley to the magnificently exotic kasbah and ksour of Aït Ben Haddou, declared, and rightly so, a World Heritage Site. Here we alight from our vehicle to visit these various kasbahs, so closely-knit that they appear to be but one complete building, backed up against the looming mountain in a stretch of unforgiving hammada. The thick, high, sheer, elaborately decorated pisé walls, stepped-up housing, turreted, crenellated ramparts, and balustrades and arched ‘babs’ are a sight not to be missed. One of the more spectacular sights in the Atlas ranges, set upon a rock above a reed-strewn assif, commanding the area for miles around, this kasbah controlled the route to Marrakech until the French blasted a road through the Tizi n’Tichka in the late 1920s.
From here set off up into the High Atlas Mountains and the exhilarating hairpin bends to alight at the top of the Tizi n’Tichka (2260m) where we stop for a light lunch with a vista dominated by peaks of some 2500+m. Onwards, now, via Aït Ourir Taddert (1650m) and down across the Glaoua Plains to our hotel in Marrakech.
Later in the afternoon after check-in, we shall visit the famous Djmaa El Fna Square with its myriad of street performers - soothsayers, story tellers, tooth pullers, snake-charmers and many, many more, returning to our hotel, tired after yet another exciting day, for our evening meal and soft bed.
Day 9 MARRAKECH.
This morning, after breakfast, we shall take a ride in a calèche around the magnificent ramparts of this Imperial City , quite the best introduction to this Garden City, to stop for a light lunch at the Hotel Islane. Now, with the touch of a journey back into time and, we shall visit the dramatic Almohad Koutoubia Minaret and the lavishly-decorated 16th century Saadien Tombs - some dating from the middle 1550s; the 14th century Ben Youssef Medersa - one of the most beautiful buildings in Marrakech, the 12 th century Menara Gardens and thence through the labyrinth of narrow alleyways making up the renowned cool, colourful and aromatic Souqs of Marrakech - the Dyers’ Souq being the last to be visited - finishing our guided visit in the Djmaa El Fna Square (the ‘Assembly of the Dead’), where, until the 19th century, were traditionally displayed the severed heads of criminals.

Now we see again stalls of goods, from fruit to alarm clocks; snake charmers and water sellers; fortune tellers and public scribes; tumblers and nakkachat - women with syringes full of henna - soothsayers and gnaoua musicians.
Evening free ** and overnight at our Marrakech hotel.
As an excellent finale to any stay in Marrakech, an (optional) visit to ** Chez Ali is truly a 1001 Nights’ experience. The journey this evening would take you out of the heat of the city on a road to palm groves, where twinkling lights beckon us out of the darkness to a magnificent spectacle. Reclining on fat cushions in one of the Chieftain’s tents, or in the kasbah, As the evening progresses, various folklore groups pass through the nomad tents singing and dancing to their throbbing music.
The highlight comes at the end of your meal, accompanied by performances of Moroccan dances and songs, when you are invited to witness charging robed warriors on horseback in a display of their old tribal power as, standing in their stirrups, they shout and fire off their muskets and muzzle-loaders, bringing their horses to a sudden halt before you. Above you, in the night sky, Scheherazade and her Prince fly to the heavens on their magic carpet ride whilst fireworks light the sky as your evening of magical splendour comes to an end.
Day 10 MARRAKECH - ESSAOUIRA.
Checking out after breakfast, we now set out at around 8:30 for a 2½ hour drive west to the Atlantic coast and the ancient Phoenician town of Mogador – a corruption of the Berber word Amegdul, meaning ‘well-protected’ – and now, since Independence, called Essaouira - ‘Little Picture.’
Abandoned by the Portuguese in 1541, it was not until 1765 that the Alaouite Sultan Sidi Mohammad Ibn Abdullah transformed Mogador into a fortified city. The ramparts were never that effective in keeping out the marauding tribesmen but now, a charming artists’ town with its old port and cannons overlooking the fishing fleet, Essaouira invites you to wander through the narrow alleyways which make up the Medina to witness artisans at work making their wooden tables, boxes and sundry items in lemon or briar wood inlaid with mother of pearl – the purple dyes produced by the crushed shellfish were exported from the offshore Purple Islands by the conquering Romans to colour the togas of the rich back home.
We shall check in to our hotel and then leave for a walk around this enchanting city to enjoy a lunch (not included) of Essouaira’s famed seafood, either on the quayside or in one of the several quaint cafés that decorate this charming historical town. Perhaps a dip in the waters of the ocean? A camel ride along the beach? A visit to Jimi Hendrik’s sand castle? You’ll be pleasantly surprised to find what this artist-colony town has to offer.
Day 11 ESSAOUIRA - SAFI - EL JADIDA - CASABLANCA.After breakfast today, we set off up north along the Atlantic coastline to stop first at Safi. Safi boasts of having the first Moslem Mosque in the kingdom, as well as Portuguese buildings dating back more than five centuries. The world-renowned Safi pottery pieces elaborately trimmed with tooled silver overlay are beautifully displayed with their rich designs, styles, and colours, each piece having been wheel thrown and hand finished by skilled artisans.
On now to El Jadida , formerly called Mazagan by the Portuguese who seized the town in 1502 and, after 1541, was the only place to be held by Portugal in Morocco. Repeatedly besieged by the Moroccans, it was finally captured by us in 1769. We shall stop for a light lunch and a visit of the ancient underground cisterns before continuing on our final 4 hour drive to the commercial capital of the Kingdom of Morocco - Casablanca , for our overnight accommodation. This evening is free for you to stroll around the city centre and choose, perhaps, from any of the myriad Moroccan and International restaurants this businessman’s city has to offer.
Day 12 CASABLANCA – HOME.
After breakfast and in accordance with your flight schedule home (check-out from your hotel is at 12:00) you will be transferred to Casablanca’s Mohammed V International airport in time for you flight home, taking with you some certainly incredible memories of our land so full of remarkable contrasts and very friendly people.
NEW: A group tour is scheduled for Friday, October 3rd - Monday, October 13th |
Magic of Morocco - 10 day version, 4* hotels |
ITCTAM01CP - This Private Programme operates only from a minimum of 4 adults.
Arabic is the official language but it is not uncommon to meet older people in small villages who have little contact with the outside world and who speak only Berber. Most educated Moroccans speak French, but now many teenagers prefer to learn English. In the main touristy centres it is not rare to meet somebody who speaks French, Spanish, English, Berber and Arabic, with a bit if Italian and German thrown in. At the very least they will know enough of these languages to take you to a friend's shop or, of course, to sell you a carpet! But that is only to be expected.
COSTS FOR THIS TOUR:
3*Hotels |
4* Hotels |
|
|---|---|---|
minimum 4 persons |
£ 1155 |
£ 1375 |
6 persons |
£ 985 |
£ 1175 |
8 persons |
£ 875 |
£ 1035 |
10 persons |
£ 795 |
£ 995 |
PRICE INCLUDES:
Accommodation at specified or similar hotels. Porterage on 1 piece of luggage per person. 11 breakfasts, 9 lunches and 9 dinners (not including alcoholic drinks). Private circle trip transportation in an air-conditioned minibus - according to group size - from Casablanca to Casablanca. Sightseeing tours and all related entrance fees as listed in the itinerary. An English-speaking Licenced National Guide throughout the tour.
CITY |
3* HOTEL |
4* HOTEL |
|---|---|---|
CASABLANCA |
SUISSE |
ALMOHADES |
FES |
TGHAT |
ROYAL MIRAGE (ex. Sheraton) |
MERZOUGA |
BIVOUAC / Auberge du Sud |
BIVOUAC / Auberge du Sud |
TINEGHIR |
KENZI BOUGAFER |
|
OUARZAZATE |
KARAM PALACE |
KENZI AZGHOR |
MARRAKECH |
AMINE |
TICHKA SALAM |
ESSAOUIRA |
RIAD AL MADINA |
SOFITEL THALASSA |
PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE:
Medical or accident insurance outside of the vehicle. Gratuities to guide and driver. Any expenditure of a personal nature. Bottled or gaseous water en-route, nor anything not specifically mentioned in the itinerary.
IT IS RECOMMENDED YOU BRING:
Good footwear; pullover; day pack; hygienic ‘wipes;’ camera and ziplock bags for your sensitive lenses; sunglasses, sunscreen
Prices for the above tour are dependent on numbers travelling, generally a minimum four persons although tours can be arranged for two people at a supplement. Morocco Rediscovered reserves the right to amend the itineraries should it be necessary following any changes in the physical or political landscape of the areas concerned.
Holiday Prices
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