Moroccowithfriendstravel’s Weblog

February 9, 2022

Morocco Enchanting Land JESS@FriendsTravel.com

#Morocco



Gateway to Sahara

an enchanting land of sea, sand and beauty.

#FriendsTravelWestHollwoodCa90069 is proud to have this fascinating land in its portfolio of destinations

#FriendsTravelWestHollwoodCa90069 established its presence in Morocco and with absolutely the best local experts because we want to give you absolutely the best.

Our Moroccan staff will take such a good care of you, you will want to call them your cousins.

Come with us and visit the enchanting land with style and luxury.

#FriendsTravelWestHollwoodCa90069 offers some classic and also some very unique tours to Morocco with guaranteed departures.

Special, tailor-made arrangements for individuals and families are our specialty.

They can be made for any day of the year.

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#JessKalinowsky JESS@FriendsTravel.com 24|7|365
#MoroccoVacations #BestValueVacations
www.FriendsTravel.com since 1985

Vector color map of Morocco country

February 28, 2021

Morocco Adventure JESS@FriendsTravel.com

We invite you to join #FriendsTravelWestHollywoodCa90069 Morocco travel experts on a luxury journey through this diverse North African country. #FriendsTravel custom-made itineraries in Morocco are characterized by insider access, cultural heritage, outdoor adventures and white glove service. Every trip curated to the wants, needs, desires and expectations of the traveler.

Begin your journey in the authentic #Moroccan city of #Fes, with an exploration of the city’s 11th-century medina. Then, travel to the High Atlas Mountains for a firsthand experience of Berber culture. The mountains also provide excellent options for active excursions like hiking and mountain biking with stunning views. Continue to Marrakesh, where you can stay in the opulent Royal Mansour, owned by the King of Morocco himself. With your personal guide, wander through the ancient souks or learn about traditional Moroccan cuisine in a cooking class with a local chef. By private helicopter, travel to the Skoura Valley, the Gateway to the Sahara, for a stay at the gorgeous Dar Ahlam. Enjoy the tranquility of the property, along with private gourmet meals al fresco in secluded spots on the grounds.


#FriendsTravelWestHollywoodCa90069 Google us. EMAIL us. #JessKalinowsky JESS@FriendsTravel.com 24|7|365

#Morocco #Tangier #Kasbah the markets a mosque and the Grand Socco cultural voyeurism in Tangier!
Tangier’s market boasts piles of fruits, veggies, and olives, countless varieties of bread, and nonperishables, like clothing and electronics.

I can’t think of any big city in Europe where you wake up literally at “cock crow.” In Tangier, Morocco — across the Strait of Gibraltar from Spain — the roosters, even more than the minaret’s call to prayer, make sure the city wakes up early.

I arrived in Tangier after a quick ferry ride from Tarifa, on the southern coast of Spain. Though it’s just a 35-minute boat ride away, Tangier feels a world apart from Europe.


Like almost every city in Morocco, Tangier is split into a new town and an old town (medina). The old town, encircled by a medieval wall, has colorful markets; twisty, hilly streets; and the Kasbah, with its palace and mosque. The Grand Socco, a big, noisy square, is the link between the old and new parts of town. The city is light on museums and attractions, but it doesn’t need them. Tangier’s sights are living in the streets.

To celebrate my birthday, I spent a couple of hours alone, just floating through the back alleys. Wandering through the market, just off the Grand Socco, I came across a collage of vivid images. A butcher was making a colorful curtain of entrails, creating mellow stripes of all textures. Camera-shy Berber tribeswomen were in town selling goat cheese wrapped in palm leaves.

A man lumbered through the crowd pushing a ramshackle cart laden with a huge side of beef. He made a honking sound, and at first I thought he was just being funny. But it wasn’t the comical beep-beep I’d make if I were behind a wheelbarrow. Small-time shipping was his livelihood, and his vocal chords were the only horn he had.

Around the corner, the click-click-click of a mosaic maker drew me into another tiny shop, where a man with legs collapsed under himself sat all day chiseling intentionally imperfect mosaic chips to fit a pattern for a commissioned work. As only Allah is perfect, the imperfection is considered beautiful.

In Tangier, many people can’t afford private ovens, phones, or running water, so there are communal options: phone desks, baths, and bakeries where locals drop off their ready-to-cook dough.

During my wanderings, I followed a colorfully scarved woman into a community bakery. She was carrying her platter of doughy loaves under a towel. The baker, artfully wielding a broom-handled wooden spatula, received her loaves, hardly missing a beat as he pushed and pulled the neighborhood’s baked goods — fish, stews, bread, cookies, and pods of sunflower seeds — into and out of his oven.

Tangier’s city port receives nearly 10 ferries a day from Tarifa, Spain — a quick 35-minute hydrofoil ride away.

After meeting up with my TV crew, we caught a taxi up to the Kasbah. Hearing a tap-tap-tap directly behind me, I turned around to see the back window filled with the toothy grin of a little boy. He had leapt onto the cab for the ride, legs and arms spread across its back side with nothing to grip. Realizing that the cab was about to make a sudden stop, his smile disappeared and he slunk back, hopping off the cab safely.

The Kasbah sits atop old Tangier. On Place de la Kasbah is the Dar el-Makhzen, a former sultan’s palace that now houses a history museum. The Kasbah is also the scene of a vivid gauntlet of amusements waiting to ambush parading tour groups: snake charmers, shop vendors, squawky dance troupes, and a folkloric three-stringed guitar player twirling the tassel on his fez around his head.

The view of the ocean from here is not to be missed. The artist Henri Matisse traveled here in 1912, inspired by his wanderings through this area and picking up many themes that later showed up in much of his art.

The vast majority of tourists in Tangier are day-trippers. But I like to spend the night, in spite of the “Arabian efficiency.” (Hotels have too many maids and doormen, and too few working machines — the printers function more like wrinklers.) If you’re here in the evening, make sure to be out and about in the medina around 9 p.m., when in the cool of the evening, the atmospheric lanes, squares, and people conspire to become even more interesting.

Tangier offers nonstop action and cultural voyeurism to the max. There’s so much to see here that it makes the Star Wars cantina scene look bland. Walking through the labyrinthine medina, dodging blind men, grabby salesmen, teasing craftsmen, and half-bald dogs, I think to myself, “How could anyone be in southern Spain — so close — and not hop over to experience this wonderland?”

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Fes or Fez. Fas el Bali is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Its medina, the larger of the two medinas of Fes. The city has been called the “Mecca of the West” and the “Athens of Africa”. Fez is really just the medieval city that it was contrasting his hometown with its fast-developing jet-set sister and rival, Marrakesh.

Kasbah Bab Ourika, Marrakech. Photo by Alan Keohane http://www.still-images.net

FES, MOROCCO – FEBRUARY 27, 2016: The Al-Attarine Madrasa is a madrasa in Fez medina in Morocco, near the Al-Qarawiyyin Fez Mosque

TITLE: DIETRICH, MARLENE • PERS: DIETRICH, MARLENE • YEAR: 1930 • REF: XDI002AN • CREDIT: [ THE KOBAL COLLECTION / PARAMOUNT ]

Jamaa el Fna also Jemaa el Fnaa, Djema el Fna or Djemaa el Fnaa is square and market place in Marrakesh’s medina quarter. Marrakesh, Morocco, north Africa. UNESCO Heritage of Humanity.

Bab Jama en Nouar medina wall door at Meknes, Morocco

The Menara gardens are gardens located to the west of Marrakech, Morocco, at the gates of the Atlas mountains. They were established in the 12th century (c. 1130) by the Almohad ruler Abd al-Mu’min

Photo taken in Chefchaouene, Morocco

Vector color map of Morocco country

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