I have had a good long time here with good company and plenty of walks and bike rides. Its very dry and sometimes dusty when the wind whips up. Last night it rained for about 3 minutes, all that really did was cover the van with sand. Here's a few more pictures from my days here.
Monday, 17 February 2014
Thursday, 6 February 2014
Great mountain bike country
It takes a long while to get anywhere here, at least you don't have to worry about the traffic.
There are so many off piste tracks to explore, but it's hot so I go in the morning and carry plenty of water. I usually manage 20-30 miles each day.
Strangely enough I rarely meet anyone else
but this is one of the camels I saw the other day.
It's so dry and barren but then you can go over a hill and come across palms growing next to a dry river bed.
It hardly ever rains here and is hot even in February but there are always things growing. There are water channels that can be directed to water what looks like bare soil and suddenly make the desert green.
My camping place for the last week
Sunday, 2 February 2014
Hot at last
Oooh that wonderful smell & taste after 2 months of tasteless colds fizz. Great thing is I still have 2 more bottles.
I listened to Burnley v Brighton with Kev a big Burnley
fan. We both had our own teams biased commentaries streaming on our
laptops.
First half his was 2minutes ahead of mine, second
half mine was ahead. As the result was even I was happier than him as
we have already beaten them this season, and at least we are still
talking.
The forecast along the
coast and a bit inland was for wind & rain for a few days, not
what I came to Morocco for. Heading inland eastwards it was looking
much better as it is a much more arid region. I decided to head
towards Tata where it rarely rains and there are now some good new
campsites. Peter & Mary were heading that way so we left and got
to a very good new place in the middle of nowhere called borj
biramane at Icht. Its a large hotel, restaurant & campsite with
good facilities and interesting looking hills & tracks to
explore.
Unfortunately we were on the edge of a sandstorm so there
was no sitting outside and the vans were rocking all night. There was
a big four wheel drive rally due in with 140 vehicles but in the end
only about 50 of them made it through for the night.
The next day dawned
sunny & Blue skies and the wind was easing as we headed further
East on the single lane paved road. There was very little traffic,
mostly stragglers from the rally coming towards us and a couple of
mad loaded up touring cyclists having to cycle into the wind.
Fantastic scenery mostly rocky escarpments arid plains and small
oasis palmeries. Seen a few camels today and some interesting birds,
don't know what they live on.
At last there is a
decent site at Tata, the municipal site in town is horrible, crowded,
surrounded by big walls and very run down facilities. We stayed once
a few years ago, last time we passed we opted to wild camp about 20
miles out of town rather than stay at that site again. The new place
is about 3km West of town, its an Hotel with about 20 camping places
with palms and surrounded by small vegetable plots, rosemary &
basil plants to help yourself to, very friendly owners and good
facilities.
There are some good off piste trails, perfect for
mountain biking, yesterday on my ride 3 camels crossed just in front
of me closely followed by their owner who was running trying to keep
up with them. There are 4 British vans here so plenty of company and
yesterday we all had a very good couscous lunch in the courtyard. The
temperature is in the mid 20's everyday with barely a cloud and its
very dry heat which dries out the skin but its not sweaty. At night
as there a few lights the stars are so bright. I will stay here a
while as its such a nice climate and there's good company and more
people we know due next week. Fresh peas today, bought in the weekly
souk.
Monday, 27 January 2014
Finally moving on away from the coast
So I finally moved on
to Sidi Ifni a bit further South down the coast and had a good drive
on the newly resurfaced coast. As it was Saturday I wanted to be sure
to get the internet football commentary so I parked up on the rough
parking next to the site of the weekly souk and got a good strong
signal. I listened to the match and nipped out of the van to stock up
with fruit & veg at half time. The Seagulls won 3-1 and now progress to the next round of the FA Cup, next match Hull.
I could have stayed on
the parking overnight but its quite busy with traffic arriving all
evening to set up for the big market. I went and looked down at the
beach side camping from the top of the cliffs and saw there were
spaces so decided to drive down there and stay the night. Walking
through the town it was noticeable how the attractive Art Deco style
buildings had been restored and smartened up. Also I remember we found
quite a good bun shop there so I stocked up with a good supply for
the next few days.
The camping was much
more interesting than where I have spent the last 2 weeks, many more
different nationalities, surfers and different looking vans. I only
stayed the one night as I was heading a bit further South to meet up
with Kevan & Barbara & Peter & Mary and 3 other vans with
them at an inland site South East of Guelmim.
I was looking forward
to having a few folk to sit around and chat with and the odd bike
ride with some company but when I arrived they were nearly all sick,
I was almost tempted not to stop in case I caught something. It
turned out they had all had a meal with the campsite owner and got
sick from the sardines or possibly salad they had eaten. Fortunately
it seems to have been a 24 hours bug and they are much better today.
There was quite a lot of rain
here about a week ago and things are starting to turn a bit greener
which I'm sure the donkeys, goats and sheep are happier about.
Thursday, 23 January 2014
Aglou Plage life
Kevan and Barbara
emailed and said they were at Sidi Wassay about a 30 mile drive back
up towards Agadir. I decided to have a change of scenery and visit
them there for a few hours. They are travelling with 2 other vans who
are also on their first visit to Morocco, so I got to meet them all.
Whilst looking out the front of their van I recognized a German
number plate of the van belonging to Karl & Helga, an older
German couple that we have met on various sites around Morocco and we
spent our last day of our last Morocco trip with them in Martil on
the Med coast. Obviously their first question was where is Gill, so
I had to explain what had happened as I will have to do to a few
others whom I no doubt will meet later on.
The site here is now
completely full, unfortunately everyone who turns up is French and I
have no one to talk to. I have been out on my bike though doing 20
mile rides in 3 directions, the other is the sea. Time to move on
soon, I have made use of the washing machine today once I finally
managed to get one. Another reason to leave is the paint fumes.
French drivers must be bad as so many of them are getting the
paintwork resprayed, mostly their colour matching bumpers. The
problem is the man comes to their pitch with his compressor and does
the job there, so if its nearby you get all the noise and the paint
fumes. One van opposite had it done for 5 days in a row, luckily the
wind was blowing away from me. Now today my neighbour is having some
done and it is blowing my way. They're not all bad though, tonight one
French man at the washing up sinks told me, and showed me, that I
could get Hot water from the disabled toilet as the washing up sinks
only have cold. Actually more of a surprise is that even have
disabled toilets.
Tuesday, 21 January 2014
Internet connecting and a new gadget
Trying to find a signal
to get an internet I took my Nexus tablet near to the reception and
saw a hotspot for Peter Smith. As everyone else here has a name like
Freddy French I figured it must be Peter & Mary,whom I knew were
heading here. I put on my Wi-Fi analyser App and followed the
strengthening signal to their van, well I assumed at it was their van
as it had GB plates. As it was late they were all closed up for the
night. In the morning their van had gone, luckily the empty pitch
still had their chairs & mats left behind so I knew they had gone
out for the day and we met up later in the day.
I took along some of
the Essaouria buns in Gill's memory. Peter & Mary like their
gadgets and I found the answer to my internet problems, a TP-Link
Portable 3g wireless router. With this I could connect my laptop,
tablet & phone through my own personal router, all at once if
want to! Being in Morocco at the front of the campsite there are
various tradesmen, Solar panels, re-sprays & repairs, satellite
dishes, windscreen covers, outdoor carpets and anything a motorhome
may need. Within a couple of hours the wi-fi man was at my pitch
setting me up with my own portable router and at last I could get
back in contact & even share my connection with others if I want
to.
I have been testing my
solar panel to see how long it will keep my leisure batteries powered
without having to connect to the the electric supply and without
driving which will recharge them. After 6 nights everything was
functioning, despite the poor, wet & overcast weather, so I was
very pleased and with sunnier days forecast I should be able to stay
off grid for plenty of days when I want to.
Steve & Jan decided
to head off back North slowly exploring places on their way. They
were very glad to have me show them the ropes and I was glad of their
company for the first few days and also giving me a look back to how
it feels and and the new experiences and encounters that happen when
you go somewhere new and a bit different. After 4 days of following
the back of my van I am sure they will enjoy seeing a different view
but they will have to spot the endless Police checkpoints and the
dodgy road surfaces without my braking warnings.
Sunday, 19 January 2014
First few days in Morocco
Well I am finally in
contact from Morocco where I have already been for a week.
I met up with Steve &
Jan at Lidl in Algeciras and we bought our ferry tickets from Carlos
and got the usual gift of a cake & bottle of cider. My ticket
(190 Euros) was 10 Euro cheaper than theirs as I was only one
passenger.
Next morning at the
ferry terminal we found we had been given tickets for different ferry
lines and mine was due to sail an hour later, so much for being on
hand to help them on their first entry to Morocco. In the end both
ferries were late and I arrived at the customs about 5 vehicles
behind them at Tanger Med port and I was processed about 30 minutes
after them.
We drove on to Asilah
and arrived mid afternoon so had plenty of time time amble around the
easy going town and have a meal and experience Moroccan life. Parking
is on waste land next to the harbour with no facilities but the
parking guardian wanted 50Dh,(5 Euros) or some items like alcohol or
clothes to exchange, many campsites are cheaper!
We then headed to El
Jadida on the motorway getting experience of mad Moroccan driving and
unfortunately it started raining, many cars didn't have lights, some
didn't even have windows that closed and they were weaving all over
the road, luckily as the Motorways are toll road there isn't too much
traffic but it's very tiring driving and checking the mirrors
constantly is essential.
There was a very
helpful man in the Maroc Telecom shop who spoke English and got our
3g dongles sorted out to connect to the internet and even set them up
on our laptops. The only problem was the next time I turned my laptop
on and connected Windows Vista came up with the Blue screen of death,
showing a startup driver problem. I tried every trick I know, safe
mode, restore from last successful connection point, but still no
success. (Pacer.sys) seems to be the problem if anyone knows how to
sort it out) I also have Linux operating system installed on the
laptop and I could see all my data on the hard drive was still there.
Unfortunately Linux could not see the 3g dongle as the install
programme is written for Windows. As my Nexus android tablet is
rooted I could connect the dongle and this worked ok for an evening
but after that I couldn't get a connection. I had three frustrating
days trying to get connected in different locations but no success.
El Jadida campsite is
just the same, a good tree shaded site but poor basic facilities,
squat toilets, open drain for toilet emptying and general neglect,
but for 4 euros better value than parking at Asilah and the option to
also pay extra for electric hookup if required.
We then headed to
Essaouria on the inland road which was quite hectic for the first
couple of hours mainly with buses & taxis trying to overtake
everyone usually at the most dangerous point. There is often a solid
white line down the centre of the road but it's mostly ignored.
Whenever we passed through a town it was the usual chaos, pedestrians
just cross without looking, carts, bikes, motorbikes all over the
place but we survived intact.
Essaouria is always
windy but when we arrived it was awful, sand blowing everywhere and
stinging our eyes. Sadly the convenient campsite next to the
lighthouse at the end of the promenade has been reduced in size as
part of the land is having apartments being built on. We battled the
wind walking into the town and had a quick look around the main
attractions but it wasn't very comfortable, but I did stock up with
'the best buns in Morocco' from Gill's favourite cake shop.
Unfortunately the good Italian restaurant we had found on our last
visit hadn't opened but we found a good Moroccan place near the
ramparts. Due to the weather we decided to continue on further South
and headed towards Agadir on the coast road.
Aglou Plage camping has
been my main first location to get settled for a week or two and we
found a wonderful new dual carriageway from the South of Agadir
almost all the way to Tiznit where we headed West to the coast. The
site surprisingly wasn't full, though it is almost now.
The weather for the last 4 days has been very unsettled, stormy with heavy rain but very mild. Not like my dream of sitting basking in the sun and unwinding after the long drive down Morocco. I had a wind out awning fitted to the van in Seville but its not safe to leave it out unattended with the erratic weather.
The weather for the last 4 days has been very unsettled, stormy with heavy rain but very mild. Not like my dream of sitting basking in the sun and unwinding after the long drive down Morocco. I had a wind out awning fitted to the van in Seville but its not safe to leave it out unattended with the erratic weather.
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