The Big Trip #5

practical-guide
Updated Aug 4, 2006

The Big Trip Morocco Week 9: Cycling the Route des Kasbahs Route: Ouarzazate – Gorge du Dades – Gorge due Todra – Goulmima – Merzouga 345 kilometers From Ouarzazate, we headed out into the desert, a vast, empty, rocky landscape. In the distance, we could see the hazy outline of the High Atlas mountains. We

The Big Trip

Morocco

Week 9: Cycling the Route des Kasbahs


Route: Ouarzazate – Gorge du Dades – Gorge due Todra – Goulmima – Merzouga


345 kilometers

From Ouarzazate, we headed out into the desert, a vast, empty, rocky

landscape. In the distance, we could see the hazy outline of the High Atlas

mountains. We rode past crumbing Kasbahs (old fortresses) and through

occasional palm-filled oasises.


For the first time in Morocco, we rode for long stretches without seeing any

people, and despite the heat and the headwind, I could finally relax a bit.

But as soon as we rode into a small town, I had to go on the defensive

again, constantly looking out for threats. Never has my body language been

so important in the way I dealt with people – my personal safety depended on

it. Whether a group of kids decided to use their slingshots to fire rocks at

me or not depended on my posture, facial expressions, and the choice of

Arabic, French and English words I used.


We couldn’t have done this ride out in the desert without the restaurants

that appeared in the middle of nowhere and served cold drinks. I don’t drink

soda at home, but nothing has ever tasted so good as a cold Coke after a few

hours of cycling in the desert. I don’t know the official temperature, but

it was hot enough to melt a patch off of one of my inner tubes.


On our way to the Dades Gorge, we met up with an Australian cyclist, and

spent the next week riding with Neil. It was nice having some company, and I

felt having another person around made things a bit safer for all of us. The

road out to the Dades Gorge was a series of potholes and bumps where

potholes had been filled in, making for very slow going. But it was well

worth it, because halfway in, the road improved and we had a fantastic ride

along the dramatic red cliffs of the gorge.


In the dusty town of Goulmima, I went for a run to get rid of some of the

frustration and stress from traveling that had been building up for the past

few weeks. It was the first time I had gone running since the Paris marathon

on the beginning of our trip. I ran past old men sitting outside their

shops, women carrying heavy plastic jugs of water, boys playing soccer,

donkeys grazing in fields of stone. People watched me run past with approval

instead of hostility. No one wanted anything from me, except to know if I

was having a good run. “Ca va bien?” they’d ask warmly.


I decided to turn around when it became so dusty even the sky turned brown,

and I was surprised to see Bob walking out to meet me with a bottle of

water. I still don’t know how he was able to find me in the maze of streets.

He gave me a birthday card and proposed. I, of course, said yes. To the

delight of a group of 12-year-old girls watching nearby and giggling, Bob

gave me a brief hug (there is rarely physical contact between men and women

in this Muslim country) and we walked side-by-side back to our tent.


On our way to the Todra Gorge, we had an exhilirating ride on flat road with

a tailwind – I topped out at 40 kilometers per hour, and just let the wind

push me along the road. We arrived in a town just as a storm rolled in, and

from a cafe we watched as the desert turned into a series of shallow lakes

and flash floods. In a few hours, nearly all of the water had disappeared.


We spent a day hiking up the Todra Gorge, and then rode out to the end of

the paved road at Erfoud. From there, we hired a Land Rover and driver, and

went out to the dunes at Merzouga. That night, we watched the dunes change

colors from warm tones of orange and pink as the sun set. The next day, we

rode took a tour through the surrounding desert near the Algerian border and

then headed back out.

Week 10: Let’s go to the beach


Route: Merzouga – Essaouira – Tarifa, Spain


137 kilometers

After Merzouga, we said goodbye to Neil and took a series of buses to

Essaouira on the coast. We stayed in a clean hotel for a few days, walked on

the beach, ate seafood and did some shopping. Although we had some wonderful

experiences in Morocco, we were both ready to head back to Europe, so we

took a series of buses to Tangier, and after a short ferry ride we were

back in Spain.


That night, we celebrated with sangria and tapas (little Spanish snacks) in

a bar by our hotel. The next day, we rode along a beautiful coastal road to

the popular windsurfing spot at Tarifa. I could finally breath a sigh of

relief, because here I was just another person.


Next up: Bullfights in Seville and beaches in Portugal.