Forewarned about the attention we could get travelling as women on our own in Morocco, we arranged for a local guide to meet us in the foyer of our hotel. His name was Sahmi, an enthusiastic 65-year old ex-primary school teacher who asked us what we wanted to see.
Still slightly clueless despite frantic googling the night before and rather jet-lagged, we arranged for a half day walking tour to include the Yves St Laurent cactus garden, the labyrinthine souk and Sahmi's favourite spots. We also asked to see the tanneries to Sahmi's slight discomfort - they're not a very ladylike place to show guests.
The Old Town of Marrakech nestles behind high walls of weather-beaten earth punctuated with square slits to let the dusty Arabic winds whistle through and keep the city breathing. Homes dripping with exotic dessert plants drape the outskirts of the sprawling souk, and somewhere at the centre lies a tourist enticing gem.
We dodged through the selfie taking tourists (selfie sticks abounded) and admired the striking studio, painted in “Majorelle blue, an ultramarine, cobalt blue, 'evoking Africa'. Strong, deep, intense, it accentuates the green of the leaves and makes them sing." With the intense cost of garden upkeep, it looked likely to be sold and bulldozed for a hotel before being discovered by Yves St Laurent and his partner Pierre BergĂ©. It inspired the fashion of Yves St Laurent for many years before his death in 2008, at which point a very classical memorial was built in the garden.
We left the garden to begin tracing our guides steps through the ochre walls of the Souk, a fantastical collection of winding street heaped with everything you could imagine. Stalls festooned with silk scarves, hand carved wooden everythings (included polished life size football ornaments!?), tables laden with teeth suckingly sweet slices flavoured with rose, spice, orange and cardamon.
Walls lined with jars of Berber health cures as old as the dessert itself, the odd set of coloured fake spice cones surrounded by agog tourists, bewitching door frames hung with lamps in every metal and glass hue and tagine pots heaped in groaning piles, every size shape and colour. The smell was a riot of fragrance: fresh lemon wood carving, ylang-ylang, wafts of food from small cafes, winter orange blossom heavy on the trees, mint tea and just the hustle and bustle of people.
What struck me the most were the eyes of the shop owners. Most were trained outwards to watch their passing trade as we wandered around corners hung with metal work and down teeny alleyways. We trotted along behind our guide, popping into suggested shops (usually his friends I guess?) and Rebecca and I just soaked it all in.
We did make it through the tanneries - our sweet guide stopping off at a local market to buy handfuls of Mint for us to hold to our noses against the, er, earthy smells.
The Morocco tanneries were almost primal; small rooms of men hand scraping the hides off animals, a field of men stood hip deep in pits full of natural dyes and storerooms of feathers, straw, mopeds speeding around corners and donkeys pulling carts of goods (who then enjoyed a sweet treat of our mint).
We then were taken to the mosaic encrusted Bahia Palace.
It was an experience like no other.
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Incredible photos and words, Emma - I really felt as though I was there! And you're brave to visit the tanneries, though I suppose I would have wanted to see them too! I'm curious to know (in case I make a trip soon myself!): how did you find your guide?
ReplyDeleteThis is just so beautifully written and atmospheric. To echo what Jaime said below I really felt like I was there. Marrakesh is such a wonderful city.
ReplyDeleteLots of love,
Angie
SilverSpoon London
Everything about this is amazing! x
ReplyDeleteI really want to go to Marrakesh and your post has made it sound so wonderful! Definitely moving up my list of places to visit. X
ReplyDeleteI would love to go to Marrakesh, and I think your post has just given me a stern reminder to get my act together. It looks like you got to see some hidden gems too x
ReplyDeleteI'm still insanely jealous. And I bloody love how you manage to sneak a cat photo into everything. You shall be Cat God and I shall worship you.
ReplyDeleteWow, talk about an assault on the senses! So well written I felt like I was right there with you.
ReplyDeleteV
Life+1
haha, I just scrolled down and realized that several other people said the same thing! Obviously you're an incredibly good writer!
ReplyDeleteHonestly, I thought my description was a little overblown - but it just fits the experience we had! Thank you :D
ReplyDeleteCats, cats, cats! There were so many of them - the Morrocan people love them as they keep the mice down. You know we both squealed finding them :D
ReplyDeleteI hope you can make it over - it is just something else!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to go back for a longer trip as well, and explore more cities - check out Chefchaouen!
ReplyDeleteIt was another world Amanda!
ReplyDeleteI'm quite gobsmacked by everyone's kind responses - I thought it was too high-faluting, but I guess not? There really was no other way to describe it though!
ReplyDeleteWe were lucky to visit in Spring whilst it's not too hot - in summer, not a chance! We just asked our hotel concierge who found Sahmi for us - he's worked with them for years.
ReplyDeleteAwww little Moroccan kitty :) Brilliant descriptions in this post - I feel like I'm back there again! I wasn't brave enough to visit the tanneries though, would have definitely needed a fistful of mint!
ReplyDeleteLoved this, felt like I was there too.
ReplyDeleteLove the way you told this story, feels like i was walking along with you... But, yano, without the erm... 'earthy' smells! xo
ReplyDeleteI can't decide if that's a better or worse way to experience it :)
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed it!
ReplyDeleteI also think we were lucky that it was a cool morning - I couldn't imagine it mid-summer (well, growing up on a farm I probably can actually...!)
ReplyDeleteWow looks incredible! Loved all the senses you evoked. And that beyond gorgeous blue!
ReplyDeleteGreat article and I also love the pictures, it's like I also went with the experience. I remember my arabic teacher on skype at http://preply.com/en/arabic-by-skype, she also loved to travel.
ReplyDeleteI'm loving reading your adventures, I've always wanted to go and I feel like loads of bloggers I follow have gone this year! Making me lust for travels.
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