Sat 17 Oct
We started with a really enjoyable piste across the Jbel Rhart, from Zagora, through Zaouia Tafetchna (I think) and onto the road towards Nekob...
As I said previously, a GSA is a heavy bike and not happy when the sand is more than a millimetre deep...
For me, today was the big day. I’d been here last year and had a couple of misfortunes trying to ride the trail from Nekob, over the Tizi-n’Tazezert and down to Tinerhir. On the first occasion, one of the bikes had a sudden and total battery failure, causing us to leave it on the trail overnight and ride round to Tinerhir, the long way, by road, at night, in a thunderstorm, up to our thighs dragging the bikes across the swollen Todra river and eventually to our flea-ridden, stinky hotel.
The next day, we sourced a battery and returned (the long way) to recover the dead bike. Unfortunately, I had a front tyre come off the rim and couldn’t get it re-seated. This turned into another night-time saga which resulted in us finding digs in Nekob and a new tyre being brought out the next morning. We never did get to ride “The Valley of Death” as it had become known.
This year it was personal and, with Ted opting to go by road, it transpired that I‘d be on my own, so a last photo was taken at Nekob in case I was never seen again...
It began well; I passed the place where my tyre came off last year, then the place where Allan’s battery had died... I was now on new ground! A small building and an old diesel-driven pump, there was civilization still...
The scenery was dramatic, obviously the plugs of old volcanoes, but the track was easy so far...
Then it started to get steeper, there were rock steps up ahead, I was told, but this section of the trail was still relatively easy...
I met a couple of guys from Hertfordshire who were on their way down... they had come up the tarmac road on the other side, so couldn’t tell me what the track was like down to Tinerhir. However, the rock steps were just ahead so I gritted my teeth, suck a mint and got on with it. I reached to top with no drama, the ‘rock steps’ was just a long, rocky section of track, no steps at all really... was it a disappointment or not?...
It was very different going down the other side... more like sandstone, easier, quicker...
There was even a little traffic in places. Overloaded? Not for Morocco...
Despite being a fast piste, it seemed to take forever to get anywhere... I thought Tinerhir was much closer than this... I kept stopping and checking the map and GPS, the sheer number of different trails made navigation confusing...
It was then that I had my “Experience.” I was motoring down the side of a canyon on a fairly loose, rocky track, when I rounded a corner and headed straight for a large washout. It’s a big bike and takes a lot of ‘persuading’ at times, and I’m a fairly strong bloke, but... I was heading for a big one... I was going over the edge big time... this was, at best, going to damage both me and the bike in a big way. I think I shut my eyes and screamed!
The next thing I know is... I’m back on the trail, under control, haven’t hit anything and I’m riding along as sweet as you like...
WHAT HAPPENED?
I got to Tinerhir, found Ted, had a shower and a couple of Cokes and pondered how wonderful it was to be alive... and should I go to prayers in the morning?