7 Day itinerary in Morocco, Africa
This traveling tour includes many grand scenic and cultural highlights of Central and Southern Morocco; amazement is guaranteed on this week-long tour and every day opens up new vistas, wide horizons, and contrasting cultures. Starting and ending in Marrakech, the tour is broadly circular. First cr... Read More
By Larbi
Physical Difficulty
Recommended Age
Operated in
GUIDANCE
starting point
trip type
trip attributes
Visit markets
Meet local people
Outdoors & Nature
Start/End
Night
Cross the High Atlas at the Tizi-n-Tichka Pass
At The Valley of a Thousand Kasbahs, enter the stunning Todra Gorge
Admire the extensive rolling sand dunes, clusters of palm trees, and many camels of Merzouga
Visit , Aït Benhaddou Kasbah, a World Heritage Site in Marrakech
Cross the High Atlas at the Tizi-n-Tichka Pass
At The Valley of a Thousand Kasbahs, enter the stunning Todra Gorge
Admire the extensive rolling sand dunes, clusters of palm trees, and many camels of Merzouga
Visit , Aït Benhaddou Kasbah, a World Heritage Site in Marrakech
Mid-Range Accommodation
Accommodation Categories
Arrival Marrakech
Your private driver will collect you from Marrakech Menara Airport to transfer you to your accommodation. He will have a sign with your name; look out for it once you enter the airport's arrivals area. Depending on your flight arrival time, you may have some informal free time to spend in the city before/after nightfall. Marrakesh is an exciting, exotic city, full of color and with non-stop activity. To spend some time in the center of Marrakesh, in and around the medina and the old city walls, provides interest at every turn. Options include Jemaa el Fna Square (a lively entertainment square), the Medina and its Souks, the Koutoubia Mosque (outside only), Medersa Ben Youssef (Koranic School), Saadian Tombs, Bahia Palace. All are easily reached on foot.
Meals: Dinner
Accommodation:
Explore The 'Red City' Of Marrakech
A Marrakech City Guide will be with you for ½ a day (included). Discussion will take place as to what places you particularly wish to see. There are many options for you to explore today including Jemaa el Fna Square, a lively entertainment square, the Medina and its Souks, an Apothecary visit, the Koutoubia Mosque, Ben Youssef Madrasa, a Koranic School, Saadian Tombs, and Bahia Palace. All of which are easily reached on foot. Koutoubia Mosque is a place of Islamic worship, where you'll hear the calls to prayer that come from the minaret. Koutoubia Mosque is the largest mosque in Marrakesh. You can also visit the Ben Youssef Madrasa. Built-in the 16th century, the Madrasa (also known as the Koranic School) was the home of Islamic students of the nearby mosque of Ben Youssef. Alternatively/additionally, you may wish to visit the Secret Garden, a recently renovated walled garden that is rather special and has been referred to as a "Paradise Garden". You may also want to watch the sun go down behind Koutoubia Mosque from the vantage of a roof terrace cafe, above Jemaa el Fna, perhaps sipping a mint tea. The Jemaa el-Fna square is a lively, colorful, and bustling public area with music, snake charmers, henna painters, hawkers and sellers. The souks offer a glamorous and colorful maze of narrow alleyways. It is a place to try to seek out bargains and to haggle for the best prices - it is quite a skill!
Guide: Included for the day
Meals: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodation:
Marrakech > High Atlas > Ouarzazate > Boumalne Dades
The High Atlas contains dramatic scenery on a grand scale. Only an hour's drive south from Marrakech, you enter their foothills. High peaks and deep, water cut valleys abound. Look out for Toubkal, the highest peak (4,167m). The mountains are home to the Berbers, who live in this beautiful but challenging land. Their villages cling on to steep mountain slopes. Taddert is en route, an ideal stop for refreshment. An Argan Oil Co-operative can be visited here (an example of rural development to help ladies gain income). Here you can really begin to appreciate how a life is wrested from a harsh environment. Near the top of the Tizi-n-Tichka Pass (2,260m), the watershed of the High Atlas, there are great panoramic views over the mountains, their peaks, and valleys, as well as the snaking N9 road recently travelled. Descending the south-facing slopes of the High Atlas there is much to still fascinate in the local activities seen. The climate becomes noticeably drier as you approach Ouarzazate. On arrival into Ouarzazate, the “Peaceful City” there is the option to visit Taourirt Kasbah. Departing Ouarzazate, heading eastwards, there is the very important reservoir of El Mansour. It provides water for domestic use, for farming and to generate hydroelectricity. In the very near vicinity is a major solar power plant development. Your journey then travels along the Valley of a Thousand Kasbahs, a Kasbah being a fortified “fort” where chiefs and landowners once lived. Many kasbahs are now in disrepair (having been made of pisé mud). At El Kelaa Mcgouna, the intensely cultivated plots of farmland are bordered by rose bushes. The rose petals are used in the cosmetic industry. In May a Rose Festival takes place, celebrating the year’s production. Boumalne Dades is a major town, bridging the Dades River and at the entrance to the upper Dades Valley. Overnight in Boumalne Dades
Guide: Included for the day
Meals: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodation:
Dades > Todra > Sahara (At Merzouga & Erg Chebbi)
Leaving Boumalne Dades and just after Tinerhir, the journey continues towards the Todra Gorge. The semi-desert landscape here reveals impressive buttes, mesa and plateaux. Many dry river beds are seen, river beds that come alive with thunderous power during flash floods from the occasional storms that occur here. The Todra Gorge is 300m high and was made by the Todra river, cutting down through red stained limestones. A walk through the gorge is a most enjoyable (and easy) experience. Imagining the mighty flash floods that can sometimes pass through it is very thought provoking. On then to Rissani and then to Merzouga. You are now in the Sahara! By now the massive sand sea of Erg Chebbi will be looming on the forward horizon. Here the sand dunes rise to over 200m and cover an area of 35 sq. km. The colour of this area of sand dunes changes depending on the time of day and are especially enriched and enchanting just before sunset. Having settled in to your overnight accommodation in a Bedouin Camp, there is the option (included) to take a camel ride into the sand dunes. Having ridden some distance, you climb up the nearest sand dune on foot to watch the colourful display as the sun sets; a most magical moment. After sunset, and as darkness quickly ensues, it is time to return to camp for dinner and a night by the campfire enjoying traditional Berber music from the locals. Before heading to bed, take a look at the night sky; the star show can be incredible in this area of minimal light pollution. Sleeping in your Berber tent, amongst the sand dunes of the Erg Chebbi sand sea, has to be a highlight of your tour. As well as the opportunity to view a magnificent sunset, if you are an early riser, then a Saharan sunrise can be just as thrilling as a Saharan sunset.
Guide: Included for the day
Meals: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodation:
Merzouga > Jbel Sahro > Draâ Valley > Ouarzazate
This journey is truly spectacular, traveling through a remote, empty land that borders the Sahara. Views are vast and extensive, with desert plains and high mountains and plateaux all around. This journey gives a real feeling of a wilderness; it is awesome in its grandeur. After Alnif, a possible lunch stop (and a place with fossil interest), it is on to the Draa Valley, a valley rich with date palmeries on the valley floor; very tasty too (many stallholders are seen, in the season, selling delicious dates). Turning north in the direction of Ouarzazate, it is then up and over the Anti Atlas and the Tizi-n- Tififft Pass (1,693m); spectacular, of course. This area is almost bereft of any vegetation and no wonder; here “bare bones of rock” form the landscape with minimal soil. The multiple layers of rock that were once part of an ancient ocean floor have been uplifted to create a landscape that is almost like a contour map, so clear are the boundaries between each thin rock layer. Ouarzazate for overnight
Guide: Included for the day
Meals: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodation:
Ouarzazate > Aït Benhaddou > Marrakech
Aït Benhaddou is the most famous Kasbah in Morocco (dating from the 11th century) and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Aït Benhaddou kasbah was once a chief's stronghold, a most impressive structure. It was an important part of the ancient trade route over the High Atlas between Marrakech, Ouarzazate, and the Sahara. Then it is up and over the High Atlas once again (but seen from a very different perspective). The highest peak, Mount Toubkal 13,671 feet (4,167m) in this impressive mountain range should again be looked out for – perhaps it was cloudy on the outward journey. The N9 road continues to wiggle its way upwards to the Tizi-n-Tichka Pass before starting its slow descent to the Marrakech Plain. Descending the north-facing slopes of the High Atlas there is much to still fascinate in the local activities seen. River valleys that have been deeply cut into the landscape can be seen. Many rock sellers are at the roadsides, all trying to boost their family’s income. You may wish to visit a small Berber village, Imozar. Here you can really begin to appreciate how life is wrested from a harsh environment. If invited in for tea and a little snack, this will be the most memorable event of your tour. After all the tranquillity and tradition of the mountains, however, soon you are in the midst of the hustle, bustle, and clamour of vibrant Marrakech. It has been quite a trip!
Meals: Breakfast, Dinner
Accommodation:
Departure Day From Marrakesh
In the morning, depending on your flight’s schedule and after a fantastic kaleidoscope of scenery, culture and encounters, you'll perhaps have some final moments to explore Marrakesh Medina before heading out to the airport for departure. Private transport and driver to Marrakech Menara Airport.
Meals: Breakfast
Accommodation
Meals
Transport
Activities
Not Included
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Hiking
Rural home stays
Indigenous culture
Visit markets
Meet local people
Travel with Purpose
Food & Drink
Beach & Sea
Outdoors & Nature
Classic Sights
I am Moroccan, I worked for a UK Tour Company, planning & managing tours. I gained skills in business management and now operate my own company, providing private, bespoke tours that benefit from my wide network of top- quality Moroccan contacts.
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