Atlas and Sahara loop from Marrakech

Day 7

Day 7 Petrol and mint tea

We had crepes for breakfast which were a welcome change from the usual bread and jam. Coffee I never get tired of.

I felt much, much better than the previous day: it helps not waking up feeling sticky and it wasn't that long before we were back on the road with the intention of spending it on piste. As we checked out I was half tempted, however, to book another night here at the Kasbah Baha Baha just to ensure we came back but that didn’t fit with today’s plans.

Our morning fuel stop was conveniently located at the point where our day's piste met the main road on the edge of town and so we were soon back on the unmade roads. This time we were heading north over the rocky range of the Jebel Sarhro. The guidebook said that this piste involved stone steps which we would be attempting to climb and so I was a little bit wary but the early stages of the trail were relatively unchallenging as we crossed the wide, shallow but rather bleak valley between N'kob and the rising ground of Jebel Sarhro.

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A modest amount of climbing later and we were trundling along a low ridge when we passed a man stood by his moped frantically pointing at the fuel tank filler cap. Next to him were a couple of lads on mountain bikes. I guessed he was out of fuel and took pity on him and stopped, not envying the long, tedious push up the other side of the valley along the path we'd just come. He was, indeed out of fuel and so out came the multi tool and I decanted a half litre from the nearly full tank of my bike into a recently emptied water bottle. As soon as the fuel was in his tank he gave a wave and shot off along the piste in the direction of N'kob leaving us with the two lads on the mountain bikes. It seemed that these were probably his sons who, after a couple of refusals on our part for form, eventually invited us back to their house for tea.

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Phil was wondering quietly how their dad would get on given that our bikes were four stroke using neat petrol where as the mopeds that we had seen so far all seemed to be a very definite and often very smoky two stroke and thus likely to need oil to be added to the petrol. We never found out. We followed the lads along the ridge and down into the next valley to pull-up outside a small compound of three or four low blocky houses rendered in mud and straw just above the road with some rather half heartedly cultivated small fields filled with something that looked like broccoli on the other side of the road. The inside of the building that we were invited into was a rather plain, low rectangular room with a large brightly coloured rug covering some of the concrete floor. Lounging on the floor against the wall at one end was, I assume, was the sister of the two lads. We kicked off, or in Phil’s case wrestled off, our dirty boots and sat on the floor propped on bolsters while mum, a slight, rather wrinkly woman in a head scarf got a brew on using a gas burner screwed directly into and eight inch high gas cylinder with the kettle supported on a brightly coloured ceramic pot stand sitting on the shoulder of the gas cylinder.

The teapot was washed in an elaborate fashion and stuffed with mint sprigs followed by what looked like pounds of sugar hacked from a single large lump with a screwdriver-like tool. Flat bread was produced. While we were waiting our hands were washed by pouring water over them from another teapot-like vessel and into a battered aluminium bowl below, for which I was really quite grateful as my hands still smelt of petrol. With stocky glasses of scalding tea in hand we made as much conversation as our mutual second language French would allow, of which a major topic, rather predictably was our travels and the bikes.

Another member of the family was weaving something in the courtyard outside under the shelter of a bamboo awning. It turned out that this was the manufacture of a traditional hooded robe from local wool. One of our hosts produced one to show us and I did, rather uncharitably, wonder for a minute whether he was about to make a sales pitch but, to his credit, he didn't. Once we'd just about exhausted all sensible avenues of conversation we Phil and I made our excuses, distributed a round of thank yous and were escorted back to the bikes by the lads who were obviously deeply interested in them. One hopped on mine and asked if he could have a go and, being someone who finds it hard to say no to a politely put request I nodded and swallowed hard.

I had assumed that since the family transport was a two-wheeler the lads would be expert at bikes but this guy clearly wasn't used to gears. Come to think of it these 250s were pretty much the biggest domestically registered bikes we'd seen so far and it dawned on me that the mopeds were probably automatics to boot. He got it going and bounced off down the piste the way we had just come. I was worried now, thinking mainly of the glass-fragile clutch lever and all the other bits that stick out from a bike and could snap off or bend. He was out of sight for a short while before we heard the engine revving loudly and then silence. I was even more worried. Phil hopped on his bike and set off. I was hiding my worry so, helmet in hand, the other brother and I strolled along the piste towards the corner hiding my bike from view. A short while later a relieved looking Phil puttered back: 'It's OK. He was just having problems with the clutch and gears'. I exhaled. Phil continued: 'and then he dropped it'. The bike came round the corner and the brothers changed over with the second taking the bike back to the house where I re-took possession.

I was very relieved to be moving again although a half a mile later a toddler erupted from the bushes with an only slightly older sister giving chase behind heading doggedly for my front wheel. There was no real drama but I reflected that no amount of good petrol karma would make up for mowing down the local infants.

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We got to the rock steps which were nowhere near as bad as I had imagined and I quite enjoyed the slightly challenging nature of this piste as we climbed steadily into the light rain that was now falling. A couple of rather crinkled men on mopeds came bouncing down the piste, engines off to save fuel and grinning toothlessly and we passed an equally crinkled woman selling Berber knives opposite a forlorn café

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The piste suddenly levelled off and the countryside changed from a craggy desert rock to a smoother , rounder landscape and we began to descend slightly. Passing through a small hamlet of a three or four houses, whose occupants had emerged to attempt to sell us brass banded tankards made from a fragrant wood, I spotted a couple of large capacity BMW GS dual sport bikes with touring luggage parked outside one of the houses. A quick look at the registration plates confirmed that they were UK bikes and so we stopped. There was a reasonable chance that I knew these guys from UKGSer as we were in Morocco at the same time as a forum organised open invite trip which I had very nearly joined (I had even bought knobbly tyres for my own BMW 800GS in anticipation).

As I slithered from my seat we were hailed in English. 'Hi, are you the two guys from the BMW club who are flying and renting?' We were. 'C'mon in then'. Ewan and Steve were, indeed, with the trip that I had thought they might be although the larger group had temporarily split in order to each achieve their own goals. These two were being entertained in one of the rooms off a courtyard by several village women, a few of the local lads and a whole host of children. As we entered, everyone squeezed-up and we sat down on the floor. More mint tea was pressed into our hands and almonds, biscuits and bread were offered round. We had a very pleasant hour of chatting, comparing notes with the other motorcyclists and trying to make small talk with the locals. Steve threw in a magic trick or two and a bit of low key business was done with Phil ending up buying a small copper bracelet for his niece.

Eventually the party broke up and we headed back to the bikes meeting the man of the house en route. We chatted at the bikes with the usual round of bike related questions and it turned out that the head of the family heartily approved of our choice of transport, 'good, very good machines', but was deeply dismissive of Steve and Ewan's larger capacity machines:' no good, too big'. We all parted in good spirits with Steve and Ewan heading off in the direction that we'd just come. In a very few minutes we reached tarmac, took a left turn and rolled down across a shallow valley into the town of Boumaine des Dades.

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We selected another auberge from the guide book and after a quick look around booked in. Following a quick trip into town for supplies the bikes booked in too, spending the night in the lobby underneath a mural of the Anti and High Atlas.

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Day 8

Day 8: Caving in the Dades Gorge

Following recent tradition the first order of service was to fuel the bikes and then we were to take on one of the poster children of the Moroccan tourist brochure: the Dades gorge. It was a matter of roll down through Boumaine des Dades which was busy setting up for market day with the market square just off the main road slowly filling up with Berber traders as they emerged from the surrounding mountains. The market was still very much in the set-up phase as we went though so we didn't stop but went straight through to the bottom of town and turned right.

Climbing once again out of town along the gorge was a treat of geology and the erosive power of water as almost instantly we began to see the twisted strata that make up the steep sided gorge walls which twist through the rising countryside. It was back to uphill steep bends and hair pins as we climbed past a series of improbably perched kasbahs.

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The early part of the gorge was a bit spoiled for us because we were playing leapfrog with a disturbingly smoky heavy truck which also lifted seemingly every grain of dust and sand lying on the road of verge into the air as it passed. We'd go through the fraught business of overtaking it as it was travelling so slowly only to have it overtake us when we stopped for photos. Eventually we gave up and just stopped for a chat and a look at the view to let the truck get on a bit. While we waited we watched a few large capacity European registered bikes hammer past, their exhaust note reverberating up the gorge.


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Carrying on, we passed through the bit of the gorge that appears in posters and guide books: where the walls come together to tower over a small concrete road separated from a deep, fast flowing part of the river by a vertical wall with its edge demarcated by a row of low concrete pedestals. A few photos and we pressed on further up the gorge and climbed and then climbed some more.

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Just above the upper end of the really touristy bit the road left the gorge proper and climbed the walls to cross the spurs between the meanders of the valley below. The views opened up too, allowing a good look down into the gorge along its full height. The very steep to vertical walls were a barren beige reddish-brown, heavily stratified and without a trace of topsoil whereas the dead flat gorge floor was an intensively cultivated bright green.

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A few meanders further up the gorge and the landscape flattened out allowing a few more typical scruffy spaced out villages and the tarmac stopped just past a large walled gendarmarie.

According to our intelligence this should have been the start of the piste section but it was clear that this section had been recently graded probably in preparation for sealing. It was a grey hard packed but lightly gravelled surface with speed bumps every couple of hundred metres and it wound its way through what was essentially a series of rather half hearted strip developments.

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In between a couple of these we were brought to a halt by a mini traffic jam as a couple of local cars that we'd caught up with squeezed past a German overlanding truck – essentially an all terrain very capable camper van – that was stopped in the road. We had a chat with the driver as he wondered over smoking a roll-up. The reason for his immobility was that he has air in his diesel line, a problem that didn't obviously concern him as he'd spent the last two days negotiating the section of piste that we were proposing as out afternoon's entertainment. He assured us, though, that we'd be fine on the bikes.

Up some more and the graded road gave out to piste proper and we re-entered the valley floor, passing some steep valley walls that had obviously had to deal with huge volumes of water at some point.

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A few more tight turns and the piste straightened and began a steady climb up the walls of the gorge. The high point of this pass was to be a shade under three thousand metres.

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The vegetation up here was pretty sparse and seemed to consist of endless numbers of small resilient part spherical plants that were made-up, as far as I could tell, entirely of thorns.

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Oddly enough it was up here that we started to pick up traffic. Most of it was donkey or mule traffic although there was the occasional antique Bedford truck heavily loaded with goods and passengers protruding from the top. The mules were loaded with vast heaps of cut stems of some woody plant with green leaves and supervised by cheery, sometimes cheeky women dressed in brightly coloured clothes. Some just smiled, some asked questions and some begged bonbons or a few dhirams. It was surprisingly busy up there as we passed several flocks of sheep or goats eking out an existence among the thorny plants. I guess that they're all working up flavour for our tajines on our next visit to Morocco.

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Eventually we reached the pass and the piste levelled off and the land opened out slightly and began to descend.

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The character of the environment changed as did the surface under wheel. It moved from loose stony to a packed mud. We stopped to accept advice from a mattock carrying passer-by who warned us to be careful of washed out sections a bit lower down and then pressed on past odd isolated patched of grass that were grazed by countless sheep to a putting green finish. Onwards and gently downwards we went following the piste through a shallow valley until we stopped at a junction to a minor trail and a sign that we could not make much sense of but seemed to be promising untold pleasures and an auberge somewhere further down the way.

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Spotting our hesitation a local mounted upon a donkey and having no obvious reason to be there asked us if we'd come to see 'les grottes'. These caves were new to us as we had no idea that there were any around. The local indicated the lesser track and assured us that they were worth a trip. Obviously we had to have a look and so we shot off down the minor trail down a spur valley and kept going past some obstacles that requires a bit of commitment and focus on where we wanted the bike to go for fear of concentrating on where we didn't want it to end up.....and ending up there.

Phil, who was leading on this section, eventually pulled up and dismounted. 'It is ridable,' he said, 'but not by me and not today'. As soon as our helmets came off we heard a whistle and looked up to see someone waving from the ridge of the rocky wall bordering the path. The shepherd came bounding down what seemed to be a sheer cliff and offered to take us to the caves. There was no realistic way of stopping him and so we followed as he strode off down what was rapidly becoming another gorge. Again, I was suffering slightly for not really having eaten all that much as generally in the heat I'd not had much of an appetite and so scrambling amongst the rocks in bike boots and a bike jacket following a shepherd who virtually lived there, I was really starting to flag. Up, down and around a few rocks following a loose trail we climbed some mortared in built steps, the only constructed thing we'd seen in ages and miles from any possible mechanical assistance and I started to wonder if we'd dropped in to the valley of King Solomon's Mines and would discover a whole new civilisation lurking at the bottom of this rapidly narrowing valley.

The caves themselves were reached through a huge stone arch formed when the roof of a larger cave had fallen in. Our guide seemed to think that this had happened within living memory and that a number of people had been in the cave at the time.

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I've no idea whether this is true. Phil, in his wisdom, had left his torch in his bike luggage but I had my Petzl head torch in my daypack. It was the only torch between the three of us as we tentatively entered the cave proper.

Just out of sight of the entrance there was a narrow rock bridge that it would not have been good to fall from and which lead down a passage to a steel stair set into the rocks. We went up and in as far as we dared given our limited caving equipment and took some photos with the flash providing the entirety of the illumination.

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Back outside and down by the bikes we paid off our good humoured and very eager guide with a few dhirams as he had been genuinely useful in finding the cave and rather entertaining to boot. We also sent him on his way with the remains of a tube of eczema cream to treat a nasty looking rash on the back of his neck. This was after he'd taken an unexpected and experimental suck on the drinking tube of Phil's hydration pack. Phil was not best impressed.

Back on the main path we passed through a scruffy village under the eyes of slightly resentful looking locals and out of the Dades gorge, into the Todra gorge and back onto recently top-dressed tarmac. Even though this road was obviously brand new there was a surprising quantity of debris strewn across the many concrete sections that acted as occasional fords as the road crossed the many oueds and flow channels down from the mountains. This debris was enough to make us slow right down and sometimes stand back up on the pegs. It was a miracle that the mountains we still standing given the amount of material washed down in even light late summer conditions. These roads could well be a real challenge in the spring with mountain melt water hammering down the oueds.

We were now about ready to stop for the day and on the lookout for an auberge but took time to stop to talk to a group of three riders of UK registered gigantic BMW R series GS Adventure bikes each loaded with a full set of aluminium panniers, tankbags, a huge dry bag across each pillion seat and pretty much every gadget that you can imagine. These juggernauts dwarfed our slender lightly loaded machines and I've no idea what they found to put in all that luggage and quite what they thought they needed it all for.

Their intention was to ride down the gorge that we'd just come up and so Phil gave them a full briefing of what to expect and mentioned that we'd dedicated the day to the route. It was now past 5pm. We wished them luck and parted.

Their full story is at

http://www.ukgser.com/forums/showthread.php?t=244253

There's even a photo of us at post #13.

Half an hour further down the valley we found an auberge that we liked the look of in the small quaint town of Tamtattouchte, attracted by a brightly coloured tent covering an outdoor eating area. It was a good place to stop and didn't disappoint. The rooms were good, and the food good too. There was even live Berber music played on a lute and drums laid on in the dining room after food.

It rained hard that night and we were glad that we weren't heading up the pass like the three we'd met earlier.

The story of their adventure that night is at

http://www.ukgser.com/forums/showthread.php?t=244253 posts ##13 and 27.
 
Day 9

Day Nine The Todra gorge and the road to Ouarzazate

Going down the Todra gorge was rather mundane after the Dades gorge. Admittedly we were going down rather than up which is always slightly different but this gorge seemed to lack the magnificence of the Dades except at its narrowest point. Here the gap between the rocks was narrower and the towering inward leaning walls higher than its more westerly cousin. The main point of interest for me was that there were roadworks at this narrow point which necessitated leaving the road and taking to the bed of the oued and splashing through the narrowest point standing on the foot pegs and trying to time the passage so as to avoid coming too close behind the couple of trucks immediately ahead so that I wouldn't have to stop and so put a foot down in the water. There was no real challenge to this section though as a couple of minutes later we watched a vintage Aston Martin attached to a British vintage rally go splashing up the gorge the way we’d just come.

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We refuelled in Tinerhir in a petrol station with one of the steepest access ramps I've ever seen in a fuel station but other than to pick up some water and some cash from an ATM we didn't linger in this ordinary town but pressed on westwards following the main road back to Boumaine des Dades.

It was on the exit to Boumaine that I caught sight of a pair of large capacity bikes, one of which with a familiar gold and blue colour scheme and so we turned around to investigate.

It was a UK registered twin headlight XTZ 660 Tenéré a later model version of the iconic overlanding motorbike named for the North African Tenéré desert. I'd wanted one of these bikes for years and thought that there was a possibility that one of the guys that I was originally coming out to Morocco with may have been using an even later version, the Super Tenéré that had the same colour scheme as this machine which had attracted my attention. We introduced ourselves to Alan, the motorcyclist lounging quietly in the shade against the wall of the shop outside which he was parked. The Tenéré was his and, being a venerable machine of many moons it had been giving him a certain amount of trouble.

See Riz Sauvage's report http://www.ukgser.com/forums/showthread.php?t=244253&page=2 for some background

Although Alan wasn't the person I'd been hoping to bump into he was, as it turned out, along with Shadwell, his current travelling partner, on the F800GS parked alongside the Tenéré, originally attached to the larger UK group that included, not only the person I was looking for but also Steve and Ewan whom we had met the other day on the Jebel Sarhro piste amd the guys on the huge R series bikes

Notes, experiences and intentions were duly compared for a pleasant twenty minutes or so before we parted, both groups heading to Ouarzazate. They leapt aboard their bikes and roared off out of town into the desert and I started the delicate process of clambering aboard my machine in a way that prevented it from toppling off its stand. In the process I managed to tear off one of the straps of my daypack. The elderly and initially cheap bag had had it, was bungeed to the rest of my luggage and then ditched that evening at our hotel.

The rest of the run in to Ouarzazate was largely uneventful save for a coffee stop in the town of Skoura. We'd pulled up outside a café in the centre of town and were preparing to dismount when Phil was approached by a slightly chubby, bespectacled man on a moped. There was some conversation that I missed but Phil turned back and indicated that this character had a restaurant or café or some such and would do us coffee. Off we went, following this man on a moped into the interior of the town to pull up inside a pleasant walled compound. We were introduced to his wife and father, treated to a tour of the roof terrace, paid a modest amount for coffee and biscuits and then left, slightly bemused by the whole experience and resumed our journey to Ouarzazate across the desert in a battering side wind.

The city of Ouarzazate was built by the French as a regional administrative centre way back when but is now something of a centre for Moroccan motorcycling, quads and desert tours in general. It's also where the bike friendly auberge 'Bikershome' is based. I'd heard a fair bit about this outfit as part of my research for the trip and was vaguely curious about it and that had transferred to Ouarzazate for some reason.

The place was, in many ways, rather disappointing as the city had been built in the desert to a grand design that seemed to involve as many grand boulevards as possible and the complete lack of restriction on space seemed to have allowed the city to over inflate such that it felt, to me, rather soul-less and centre-less. As we had approached the city the first thing of note that we’d seen was a large bearded guy in baggy trousers aboard an R series BMW coming in the opposite direction out of town and as we roamed the overinflated streets of the city to orientate ourselves and searchfor likely looking accommodation we kept coming across him on his French registered machine.

He eventually stopped for a chat as we stood by the side of the road having a rummage in the guide book. The asked where we were headed in an attempt to be helpful but was somewhat bemused by the fact that we didn't quite yet know. We eventually settled on the Hotel La Vallee from the book on the Zagora road out of town having decided in the end and set about finding it which didn't prove too difficult in the end. The hotel was rather down at heel but neither of us were particularly keen on trekking around town looking for accommodation so we booked in and unloaded the bikes before heading back into town for a further look around and a coffee. On our return we had a short wait for the hotel's guardien to turn up to let the bikes in too.
 
Cheers for the links to our report guys, duly appreciated :-)

As for the contents of the panniers :-) Nothing went unused, remember, we weren't planning on using hotels, or auberges, and we'd riden from the UK, on a 4200 mile journey, wild camping all the way, so we needed a few more provisions and utensils than you guys.

Certainly not the most nimble beasts to take across the pistes and desert floor, but by hell we had some fun doing it.

Nice to see some great reminders of the two gorges, good photos! and good report!
 
A pleasure.

There are many ways of doing a trip like this and we'd obviously chosen very different approaches.

Still, a good time was had by all.

Overall, I was extremely happy with our low luggage modus operandi but our luggage could have been smaller still as we didn't use the tent or the sleeping bags/mats.
 
Day 10. Mountain pass.

This last day of the bike trip was always destined to be a short one as we had to get the bikes back to the rental place by the close of play and wanted to have a bit of time in reserve to deal with anything that might crop up. This is one reason why we chose Ouarzazate as it's only 200kms from Marrakesh via the main road and apparently not unreasonably more by a relatively scenic alternative route via Demnate. After some debate we decided that the main route that went over the High Atlas at the Tizi n Tichka pass would probably be plenty scenic enough to be going on with.

We busted the bikes from their locked compound, thanked the guardien and set off for Marrakesh. It took a surprisingly long time to get out of Ouarzazate simply because of the area that the city seems to cover. The boulevards were, as intended, very grand and the one leading out to Marrakesh was lined with ornate street lamps comprising a vertical pole and either one or two large swirling arms holding a lantern like lamp.

Once out in the desert we settled down to our now familiar open road cruising speed for the trip to the Atlas foothills. The day was reasonably overcast and as the bikes began to climb it began to get quite cold and so for the first time I put on my waterproof top to act as a wind proof. The scenery also changed in the foothills as there was much more evidence of more regular rain, thus topsoil and some agriculture although the fields seemed rather small, scrappy and rather drab.

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Another change was in the sort of roadside vendors. In the Draa valley they'd been flogging boxes of dates but there in this part of the Atlas they were selling small bits of Morocco. Most of the villages now had roadside tables loaded with fossils, other shiny rocks, nodules and geodes. Often individual vendors would have only a shoulder bag of goods and be leaning out onto the road presenting suspiciously brightly coloured sawn geodes for our inspection.

Once we’d passed the snow barrier in a small town well guarded by gendarmes we knew that this was proper mountain country and brightly coloured snow marker poles lined the roads. We settled into winding our way up the rocky face of the mountains in a series of loose hairpin bends towards on wet roads as it had recently rained.

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Traffic on this road was much heavier than the Tizi n Test to the west and included a hair raising mix of large tourist coaches and the beige brown Mercedes grand taxis going about their intercity business. The coaches were coming down from the pass on their way to Ouarzazate and the sand seas of the Ergs Chebbi and Chigagga and occasionally needed both sides of the road on the tighter turns which meant that the need for forward planning and timing was more obvious than usual.

The taxis were, like taxis everywhere in the world, travelling too fast for the greasy conditions and rather pushy. By the time we made the inevitable café and clutch of geode shops at the top of the pass it was thoroughly clagged in and threatening to rain. Parked outside the café was a quartet of familiar bikes including the Tenéré and so we stopped, battled our way past the stall holders all trying to entice us to view their wares and joined the Ewan, Steve, Shadwell and Alan for coffee and a chat.


A few more photos and a bit more courtesy of Riz and Alan again at #37 http://www.ukgser.com/forums/showthread.php?t=244253&page=3

One nugget that we picked up from the guys was the fate of the trio of R-Series riders after we’d parted.

http://www.ukgser.com/forums/showthread.php?t=244253 post #13

By the time that we'd finished and returned to the bikes it was raining properly and so it was on with the waterproof trousers too and then off careering down the other side of the pass. We’d all set off together but the bigger, more expensive bikes showed their worth in a very short time and I showed my cowardice on the slightly muddy, greasy roads with steep drop-offs and jagged rocks and in no time at all it was just the two of us again winding down out of the clagg towards the valley below.

As we descended the views opened up towards the rolling foothills and the dry plain beyond, the road surface dried and improved in quality to mature into an excellent road for any half decent road bike, being a long series of swooping turns.

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We made the most of it on our knobbly tyred underpowered trailies and had a good time. Like most good times, though, it came to an end sooner than I'd have liked and the road straightened and dropped onto the scorched plain on the run in to Marrakesh.

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After the mountains, this was starting to feel like work as we hacked our way along this uninspiring road through small scruffy workaday villages. Even so it was a little bit sad to reach the outskirts of the big city.

There is only one real way to handle navigation in Marrakesh and that's to plunge in and try your best. Having set his GPS to show our hotel to at least give us an indication of the direction we needed I followed Phil and we got on with plunging through a gap in the Medina wall.

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