Archive for February, 2009

February
23rd 2009
Ebay fun

Posted under Uncategorized

Check out this great advert we found on ebay this morning, we laughed like drains!

Honda C90 cub

Mermy

1 Comment »

February
21st 2009
Touareg ‘aint just a 4 x 4

Posted under Uncategorized

So much has happened since I last had the chance to sit at the old remington traveller and bash out a blog on the worn keys….

Rosie and I left Essaouira which clings to the fact that Jimi Hendrix stayed there in 1969. Everyone there knew Jimi Hendrix when he visited, including the 40 year old man we met who was taught English by Hendrix, even though he would have only just been born. Also they all tell you how he wrote Castles in the Sand whilst looking at the deserted sea castle just down the coast. (He wrote the song in 1967, two years before he visited.)

We liked Essaouira and liked to wander through the Medina and see the sights and smell the…..whatever the smell happened to be. We will go back for a visit before we go home.

After Essaouira we went down the coast to Sidi Kouaki where the huge firm beach is perfect for sand yachting, so that is what we did. The campsite we stopped at, was very much to our liking, with no electric, water pumped from a well once a day and bread delivered by an old man on a donkey every morning. The day we left to go to Imesouane, which is a surf spot and a sleepy fishing village, I developed a urine infection. We stopped at a chemist shop en route and stocked up on anti-biotics and codeine, and I then parked up in Imesouane and I went to bed for 4 days.

After my recovery, we stayed another few days, eating fresh fish straight off the boats and chilling out at the campsite which is owned by ex world no 2 windsurfer Jamie Lever and his girlfriend Ann Sophie, a super lovely couple.

After we left Imesouane, we headed down to Agadir to find a supermarket and stock up our now empty cupboards. We did not like anything about the place and after a noisy night at a parking de nuit, we headed south to find the desert.

We drove solid all day till we passed the gate to the Sahara at Guilmem. We then continued to the village of Tighmarte which is wierd and quite amazing. The village is set in a huge Palmerie which is a palm forest in the middle of the desert, and although the campsite was closed, we met a Saharan call Faouzi who took us to his home and gave us mint tea and let us park outside his house for the night.

We met a genuine Touareg Caravan master who still travels across the Sahara with a caravan of 25 camels to trade in Mali. They only travel at night and sleep during the day when it is too hot. He showed us his Touareg passport issued by the UN which allowed him free access across international borders.

After our stop in Tighmarte, we headed over to Plage Blanche, where the desert meets the ocean. We were hoping to sand yacht on some of the 50 kms of beach, but there was no wind and so we contented ourselves with walking on the beach and collecting stone to bring home and polish.

Today we left the Sahara after getting up in the jet black night and driving hard to reach Tiznit. We are currently parked in a nice new campsite with concrete floor and we will get the chance to brush a few kilos of saharan sand from out of every locker and crevice. The stuff gets everywhere!

Palmerie
sahara
touareg

Love and Peace
Mermy and La Rose

2 Comments »

February
3rd 2009
Fancy a date

Posted under Uncategorized

50mph winds, rain, hail, flooding, and that is only one day. I know I get no sympathy from those of you wading through the snow back home, but that is the point. You are at home and we have travelled 1568 miles as the crow flies and probably double that by road, to sun ourselves in Africa. However, the people, sights, and pleasure we are getting from our trip makes the bad weather less a chore, and we know that soon it will be hot as we head for the Sahara.

First we are going to take a week in tourist hell (or heaven, depending on the viewpoint) at Agadir. We may get a bus up to Marrakesh for a sightsee whilst we are there. Then we will be going south. An English expat that we met yesterday was dumbfounded at the suggestion of going south of Tiznit as in his words “There is just nothing there” well, that sounds right to us.
date_stall

Love and peace
Mermy and Rosie

3 Comments »