I had a really good time in Morocco when I wasn’t in a city and an okay time when in a city. The mosaic, ceramic, rug art was really enjoyable and everywhere. Driving was mostly fine. Being a foreign tourist was, at times, taxing. However, the adventure climbing and canyoning potential was super amazing a huge highlight. I would definitely go back, with adventure partners.
I figured the UNESCO heritage site of the Ait Benhaddou Ksar would be large and impressive given it is a major tourist attraction. However, my imagination was a bit greater than reality. I expected the scale of a Rajasthani Palace, but instead found a small and moderately aesthetic fortified village. I did find some fun here, had the most memorable accommodation of my trip and mostly avoided the large tourist bus groups, but you should know up front its more popular because it was a shoot location of media like Game of Thrones.
It was photos of climbing on the steep orange walls of the Todra Gorge that initially peaked my interest in Morocco. While Tafraout in the Anti-Atlas Mountains was more of a granite trad area, Todra is a grippy limestone sport multi-pitch area. I spent four non-travel days just outside the canyon with the hopes of doing some harder sport and some of the many multi-pitches. The rock was good and the climbing fun, but the guide book situation a bit lacking. Unfortunately a guide-issue kept me from getting in a lot of climbing, but I created an awesome side as a result from that!
TJ finishing the 5c crack section of Techno Trousers
While it was sport climbing on the steep canyon walls of the Todra Gorge that caught my eye to put Morocco on my map, it was the area of Tafraout that solidified my trip. The Anti-Atlas Mountains are closer to the desert, warmer, lower elevation than the Atlas Mountains so perfect for a winter trip. There is endless rock to be explored around this small town with an adventurous, trad-feel. You can find some continuous cracks here, but much of the climbing felt like trad protected face climbing on juggy, broken (but almost always very solid (quartize). I was hoping for more of a sure deal for climbing and didn’t want to bring gear so I partnered up with TJ, a US ex-pat guide from Jebel Adventures who is probably the only multi-pitch or trad guide in the area.
Ifeni Canyon was my second technical canyon with Ahmed from Anti-Atlas Adventures after Ifelou Ihedan (V4 A3 II, 60m). It was a very natural canyon with a lot of deeper pools requiring swimming and it was close to a second aesthetic waterfall canyon we rappelled. I was again surprised by how much water can be hidden in these canyons when the rest of landscape looks so arid but I guess that is also kinda how Utah can look. Last canyoning of the trip!
Rains from a couple days prior canceled my canyoning trip due to high cold flow so I laid in bed, considering whether I drive South to see how the Anti-Atlas Mountains transition to the Sahara Desert. Browsing on some maps I pieced together an unexpectedly fulfilling day following Aoukerda Canyon 30 miles from deep gorge to giant floodplain while visiting a huge window, a sculpted Berber tunnel, rock art and only seeing one other tourist.
I wasn’t sure what to expect from my first technical canyon in the Tafraout area of Morocco’s Anti-Atlas Mountains. There is a short French canyoneering book here, a guide company, but it’s not something I’d heard of before about Morocco… The hand written topo from my guide looked cool though, with many obstacles so I said yes for Ifelou Ihedan (V4 A3 II, 60m). I was so pleasantly surprised by a real, natural, featured, novel canyoning experience that was full value despite it being short and communication challenges.
In Madagascar it is easy to get off the beaten path. So often that you’ll spend your time trying to find a beaten path at all! Traveling here is rewarding and we appreciate our travel where we:
Viewed beautiful scenes of rice patties mixed with colorful houses outside of Tana.
The Tsingy in Tsingy National Park of Bemaraha, Madagascar represent not only a rock formation endemic to Madagascar but also one of few rock forests found around the world. The Tsingy represent a maze of multi-tiered gray limestone finely carved by tropical acid rain into sharp pointy tops. Their sides resembling machined corduroy. Erosive acid rain rivers have carved canyons through these rocks to create a maze of rock one can walk, climb or crawl through. They are so unique to Madagascar that the Malagasy words for tiptoe are “Me Tsingy Tsingy” for how the locals would have to walk through these areas (on their toes). It is also one of the most expensive places in Madagascar, hard to get to and well worth the visit.
The brown, foam chunky Tsiribihina River with Baobab trees off the shore
I really had no idea what to expect exiting my bus in Miandrivazo under growing rain. Aside from the onslaught of “push-push” bicycle taxis looking for a faire that is. Somehow, in our effort to negotiate our trip of the Tsiribihina River directly with a boatman, we were funneled and joined by an ever increasing entourage of people (growing to over a dozen) looking for a commission and directing us like a magnet towards the Mayer’s office. Here we were back to negotiating down from an expensive package trip.