After passing me, they looked back and waved to see if I would take their photo. Suddenly a handful of children wearing hijab and colorful backpacks walked through my shot, smiling and giggling. At one point, as I was composing a photograph in a teeny alleyway barely large enough for a single person to walk through, I heard the scraping of several sets of sandals against the cobblestone. He took me away from the crowded souks filled with tourists and plastic souvenirs to a much quieter part of the medina. My guide, Mohammed, is one of these residents of the Fez medina. (After all, I wanted to get blissfully lost, but still have a way to get back easily).Īlexander+Roberts had arranged for a local guide to show me locations that went beyond the guide books. The best thing to do is to hire a local guide to lead you through the maze. There’s no point in trying to remember the twist and turns you take as you walk the streets you can get confused in minutes. I pushed my back against the wall to let a donkey carrying hundreds of gallons of water bottles pass me with inches to spare peeked into an open door to watch sparks fly from a blacksmith’s workshop took in the aroma of lamb and prunes cooking in a tagine pot right there on the street. There’s just so much action happening all at once. If you’ve ever walked the lively yet ancient streets of Varanasi, India or Venice, Italy, the Fez medina is a similar experience.Īs a photographer, entering the medina is love at first sight. The walled city is a UNESCO site and is considered the world’s largest car-free urban area. As a traveler, I don’t know if it’s ever possible to really get to know the medina, but I had to come back and explore. The last time I was here, I spent a week getting lost in the medina-sometimes deliberately, sometimes not-but I felt I’d only scratched the surface of the 9000+ alleyways, narrow streets, and lanes. One of the reasons I was particularly excited to return was to get a chance to further explore the ancient labyrinth of the Fez medina, the oldest walled-in part of Fez, Morocco that was built somewhere between 789 and 808 AD as the capital of the Idrisid dynasty. This was my second visit to a country I’d already fallen in love with during a trip in 2014. If you've been using KAYAK successfully up until now, try closing your browser and starting again.This October, I had a chance to travel to Morocco with luxury tour operators Alexander+Roberts as an ambassador of AFAR magazine. Please send us a message and we'll try to figure out what went wrong. Probably something about the web browser you are using made KAYAK think you are a bot. They tend to try to cram large suitcases in the overhead bin, and they prattle on about celebrities they know while you are trying to watch the movie. For example, we don't want bots running about trying to book airline tickets. Bots are generally a good thing, but some web pages are for humans only. KAYAK uses bots to search for travel deals. Search engines like Google use robots to build up search results. What is a bot?Ī bot, or robot, or crawler is software that visits web sites and collects data from them without a human present. If you are seeing this page, it means that KAYAK thinks you are a "bot," and the page you were trying to get to is only useful for humans.
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