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Showing posts with label morocco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morocco. Show all posts

November 5, 2010

150 days…..3 borders, 2 repairs to Dassie & 1 traffic fine



Countries visited – Morocco including Western Sahara, Mauritania, Senegal & Mali
Miles travelled – 3436 miles
Longest day on the road – 18 hours……this was the day we crossed the border at Rosso from Mauritania to Senegal
Craziest driving – Bamako, Mali
Sunny days – 29
Coldest night – 16’C on the Tizi ‘n Test Pass in Morocco
Warmest day – 42’C in Sidi Ifni, Morocco
Highest mountain pass travelled – 6829 ft, Tizi ‘n Test Pass in the Atlas Mountains
Cheapest fuel – £0.40 in the Western Sahara
Slip slop repairs – 2 (one on Marrakesh and one in Bamako)
Best food tasted – the garden fresh food that the little restaurant on the summit of the Tizi ‘n Test Pass served……they grow all their own veg & the freshly caught fish we bought from a fisherman in the Western Sahara
Best wild camp – although extremely windy, in the desert in Western Sahara….we had the sky as our spectacle for the night, the highlight seeing the 4 moons of Jupiter with bino's
Most useful thing – the addictive and indispensible “African air-conditioner” (a fan) that I bought in Bamako
Least useful things – the ant colony that took up residence in Dassie


LOWLIGHT…..

1) Probably the biggest lowlight in the whole of the trip so far was our crossing from Mauritania to Senegal via the Rosso border crossing. Unfortunately our efforts to get to the Diama crossing were crushed as they had late heavy rains, which meant the roads were still impassable to Diama. To add to the misery of this, we were chased by a threatening border hustler by the name of ‘Muhammad Ali’ for over three hours in our efforts to see if there was any other way to Diama. We did find a very obliging local gentleman who was happy to show us a track, which was passable to Diama. As we were about to set off with the local gentleman, ‘Muhammad Ali’ and his cronies appeared on the roadside and started to aggressively threaten the local gentleman. We decided it was safest for all involved to set off back to the last checkpoint and speak to the police and decide on what to do. We could either drive back to Nouakchott (a very long drive), camp at the police checkpoint and start the next day fresh and possibly go back to the gentleman who could show us the track to Diama OR cross the border at Rosso.
Rosso was decided and we entered the blue gates that meant there was no going back!! Aside from all the hustlers, scammers, pick pockets and chaos we managed to get the last ferry over the river where we were basically held ransom till after dark. The authorities seem to turn a blind eye to the goings on and they leave the border post at 6pm. We were then held by the scammers& hustlers and told we had to pay for ‘parking’ at the border post and then were not allowed out the border gates till we paid a ‘community’ tax!!!!! In the madness and negotiations to reduce these fees and taxes with an ever increasing crowd around us, Dean had his hat stolen from his bike, Ruth and Ian had an imposter trying to steal from their vehicle and Nick had a hand go into his pocket, luckily the little thief only acquired our ferry receipt. It was now dark and well after 8pm and we still had 120 km to drive before reaching the Zebra Bar. We succumbed and paid fees to get out and started our long journey breaking the BIG RULE of not driving at night.
The road was atrociously pot holed and took over three hours to get to St Louis. Once entering St Louis we got stuck in a traffic jam due to an accident and a sewerage cesspool in the street. We eventually turned around and went another way. Relieved that we were very near to the Zebra Bar we headed out of St Louis with the bikes going ahead. This was short lived as the bikes were stopped at a checkpoint and initially they were told they were speeding and then it changed to an ‘illegal’ overtaking of a moped. We finally got to the Zebra Bar at 1am after negotiating the fine….we were all exhausted and very pleased that we were welcomed at this hour with cold beers.  We had survived Rosso……!!

 HIGHLIGHTS….

1) Meeting fellow overlanders in Marrakesh for our transit through Mauritania. We did this transit with 3 vehicles and two motorbikes. The ‘team’ consisted of ‘The Italians” Fabio & Elenora, “The Boys/Bikers” Erich & Dean, “The Africans” Ian & Ruth and ourselves. We thoroughly enjoyed all the time that we were together and we hope that everybody has a fab journey onwards.
2) Having Happy Birthday sung to me in Arabic by a lovely Moroccan gentleman where we stayed on the Tizi ‘n Test Pass.
3) Seeing goats in trees!!!
4) Being given tomatoes for free when we stopped to buy some on the roadside of a very rural village. Later that day we were given some oranges by another local where we were wild camping. We have had such amazing experiences from people who have such a little, it really leaves you with a lump in your throat.
5) Helping to fix a bicycle for some children and seeing how appreciative they were.
6) Getting our Carnet stamped in Rosso – GET IN!!
7) Surviving Rosso crossing and having revenge fantasies involving gun boats,  automatic weapons and people in high places (up yours Muhammad Ali)
8) Visiting the Bandia Wildlife Reserve in Senegal.
8) Exchanging travel tales with our fellow travellers……we have all laughed till our bellies have ached on some of the things that have happened to us.....  most of which seem to be toilet related ;-)


 RANDOM FACTS….

1) I braved it and went to buy a fresh whole chicken to cook everybody a curry whilst in Western Sahara. After seeing chickens being ‘dispatched’ to order in most medina’s, I was a bit worried that I would have to watch the fate of the chicken…….luckily they had been ‘dispatched’ a little earlier in the day but the chicken butcher did laugh when I asked him to remove the chicken’s feet!
2) We had to replace Dassie’s clutch slave cylinder on the roadside….big thank you to Dean and Erich who were so keen to help us on our two slave cylinder episodes, you are legends!!! Again, sorry that Nick spilt clutch fluid on you Dean.
3) Our diesel fuel injector sprung a leak, luckily we were able to find a specialist in Dakhla who was able to replace a seal which has worked a gem since.
4) We got one traffic fine in Morocco for not stopping at a stop sign….always listen to the wife Nick !
5) We got our wheel clamped for parking in the ‘wrong’ place in St Louis, Senegal….again Nick should listen to his wife more.


Nick & Vicki
Stonehenge to Cape Town 2010/11
www.langebaan-sunset.com


We use the Michelin Map Series for Africa

Michelin Map Africa North & West 741 (w/cover)  Michelin Map Africa Central South and Madagascar 746 (w/cover)  Michelin Map Africa Northeast & Arabia 745 (w/cover) (Michelin Maps)  Map 0742 Morocco/Maroc (Michelin National Maps)


October 17, 2010

120 days, Goodbye Europe, Hello Africa - New adventures on a new continent……


Countries visited – Spain & Morocco
Miles travelled – 2365
Sunny days – 26
Coldest night – 13’C at the start of the High Atlas Mountains
Warmest days – 44’C on the desert piste on the edge of the Sahara / Algeria
Highest mountain pass travelled – 9479 ft on a mountain track in the High Atlas Mountains
Cheapest fuel – £0.58/l in Morocco
Best food tasted – the syrupy pastries we tasted in the Chefchaouen medina for breaking the fast
Worst meal – Meal at restaurant in Fez medina……subsequently made all in the group ill
Best wild camp – in the desert….amazingly quiet and even better star gazing
Most useful things – a small spray bottle to spray our faces in the desert for some cool relief, sarongs (multi-use as a skirt, towel, ‘blanket’, sunshade etc.) and our hammocks which double as a 3rd or 4th seat around the camp fire
Least useful things – the ignorant/selfish teenage Spanish boys that kept us awake till 5am in Tarifa



LOWLIGHTS…
1) Visiting Gibraltar to do some admin/banking. A very bizarre place stuck in a 1983 time warp. The thing that is saddening is that it is next to a very poor Spanish town that has crumbling roads and a lot of visible poverty.
2) The legacy of plastic pollution in Morocco as well as the smell of burning refuse. Added to this was seeing the devastation that erosion and flash flooding have on people struggling to make ends meet.
3) Seeing the direct impact of the wrong type of tourism….the type of tourism where people have clearly driven through villages and given handouts like masses of pens, stickers, paper, clothes, toiletries etc. It does leave a bit of a sour taste when you get mobbed by people who just want things from you.



HIGHLIGHTS…
1) Visiting the Alhambra in Granada. This is one fine place to spend a day with hundreds of years of history, art, gardens, architecture, monarchy and religion to marvel over.
2) ‘Hotboxing’ aka one of us sitting in the back of the Landy whilst having our friend Chad travelling with us for a few days….really fab having had Chad spend this time with us….we miss you!!
3) Throwing ourselves into Moroccan life whilst staying in Chefchaouen during part of Ramadan. This little town has an amazing little Medina with most walls painted in amazing blue hues. The buzziest part of the day started about an hour before fast broke and it was fab seeing everybody getting ready by collecting food from the communal bake house, collecting water, buying fruit and all the hustle and bustle around this.
4) Spending 3 days in the desert. Hot and dusty but wow!! All the different landscapes were amazing.
5) Having children run up to us merely to say hello, smile (the biggest smiles ever) and wave. It was an absolute pleasure seeing this in very rural areas. More heartening was when we had whole families greeting us and welcoming us to their village.
6) We slept in our first proper bed since Holland!!! We stayed in a little hotel on day 114 and it was quite strange being in a room instead of the roof tent.
7) Visiting the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. We would recommend this to everybody!!! Really interesting  and it’s one of the few mosque’s that non-Muslims may visit and it’s the third largest one in the world (St Peters in Rome easily fits inside)


RANDOM FACTS…
1) Nick and I got ‘remarried’ with our new €1 wooden wedding rings in Tarifa, Spain
2) I got seasick for the very first time ever on the ferry over to Africa!!
3) We have got better at not being too messy whilst doing oil changes on Dassie. Finding a cardboard box can do wonders at being tidy.
4) Wherever we stopped to wild camp in Morocco regardless of how far away you think you are from villagers we always had two boys come to see us. Some arrived on foot, by donkey or by motorbike. They usually have something to sell too like some goats milk, the strangest thing we were offered was a lizard on a leash!

Nick & Vicki
Stonehenge to Cape Town 2010/11
www.langebaan-sunset.com

Just some of the books we found useful on the trip

Africa Adventure Atlas  Lonely Planet Africa on a Shoestring  Lonely Planet Healthy Travel Africa (Lonely Planet Healthy Travel Guides)  Lonely Planet Europe Phrasebook  Africa: Lonely Planet Phrasebook