As we are from Africa, we always wanted to go to Morocco, but never got around to doing it. Must have been quite an exciting trip?
It was! We went on a little bit of a whim. We were on a 6-month drift through Spain going down the Portuguese side and back up the Mediterranean coast. We had been invited to a wedding in Toledo in the middle of October which was our only fixed point and one of only 2 sites that we booked in advance. Other than 'bucket & spade' holidays a very very long time ago in the Bay of Rosas, we had never really visited Spain - tending towards Italy instead. So this was an excellent opportunity to rectify that.
Looking at the map, it was clear that we would end up at the bottom of Spain at some stage so we wondered about going to Morocco. Before we left UK, I negotiated a Green Card from my insurance company for the car giving me a 7 week window of opportunity and the caravan policy already included Morocco. I also bought a campsite book (in French - all that I could find) and a Michelin Road map.
We sat at in Tarifa for a week looking across the water at Morocco and wondered whether we should give it a go or whether we were totally mad. However, everyone we spoke to there, and in Gibraltar, said that we would love it. So we found a 10 year old Rough Guide to Morocco in a second-hand bookshop in Gibraltar, download the Lonely Planet Guide onto the Kindle and went for it.
We didn't really have a plan but, at our first stop in Asillah, we met an 'Old Moroccan Hands' French couple who circled various places on our road map that they recommended we visited. That essentially formed our plan and route.
We started at Fez, went south to the Sahara, turned right and went west towards the coast and then followed the coast down to Tan Tan. On the way back we went via Marrakesh, Casablanca and Chefchaouen. We were the only caravan right up to Chefchaouen where we met another one but there were lots of motorhomes & campervans.
This was 2018/19 and, for family reasons, we only had just under 4 weeks, so it was just a taster. Will we go back? Most certainly as soon as my new knee has settled down. The scenery is stunning, especially driving through the Atlas mountains, the people are delightful and friendly, the architecture interesting, the bazaars are lively, colourful and exotic (including the obvious tourist orientated one in Marrakesh) and the culture completely different from Europe which makes the whole package an adventure.
To put it all in perspective, we were then both nudging 70 towing a small but heavy 12 year old German caravan with a 2 year old Santa Fe.
If this post is being moderated, I am aware that this probably belongs in the Overseas part of the forum but I am not sure how to get it there and it is really an answer to Buckman's observation.
Bob