• TakeMeFurther
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ago. 2022 – ago. 2025

Vagabonding

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  • Random Acts of Kindness

    8 de maio de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    On my way to Tangier, I am accompanied by Youssef, a boy of about 15, of whom I know nothing more than his name. We have tried to speak to each other, but we don't get anywhere with our languages, only non-verbally. For a while now, he rides his bicycle sometimes beside me, sometimes behind me. Every now and then I sing a song that's stuck in my head or am happy about little things I show him.

    I plan to return some of the Moroccan hospitality today and invite him to a picnic. I don't tell him though, it will be a surprise. 😊
    I get one or two more things and then look for a reasonably nice meadow. He's probably already wondering what I'm doing, he looks so questioning. 😃

    Finally it's revealed: bread, spread, carrots, tomatoes and cucumbers make a good base for Moroccan burgers, and there's apples and oranges for dessert.
    When I tell him to sit down on the picnic blanket and eat, he is very shy at first, takes only a little and looks at me asking if he can. He has certainly never experienced anything like this before: tourists who invite you to eat - the world turns upside down.
    Little by little I encourage him to take more and we have a really good picnic. 😃

    It's great fun to share and give back a small part of what I was able to experience in terms of (guest) friendship in this country.

    The next day I meet Ilyass again, with whom I review our backpacking trip through Morocco and talk about upcoming adventures.
    Two months ago, we met in Akchour and a unique friendship developed.
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  • Bonding with Vagabonds

    5 de maio de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    I try to learn from all the encounters on my journey and take something with me. New perspectives, new ways of thinking.
    I learn a lot from Ishmaelle and Danielle in a very short time. Since they are also vagabonds, we have some things in common and can exchange experiences. We have deep conversations about God and the world, travelling, love and the search for a better life.
    I experience great warmth from them.

    They are much freer on the road than I am. With their two folding bikes and their backpacks, they can hitch a ride at any time. They have reduced their luggage to a minimum. That alone still amazes me and I start another list of things I could throw overboard 😁.
    They live much more cheaply than I do, because they take many meals from nature.

    We spend the day together and pick mulberries by the kilo and fill our bellies with them. We eat flowers and plant seeds that we find here and there. Bathing in the lagoon of Moulay Bousselham.
    The life they lead feels different. Much freer than mine, even less planned and timed. Too much planning constricts and prevents great coincidences. Anything can happen. The moment counts.

    We find a blueberry field and get permission to pick there. Another free meal. A really good one. I haven't had this many blueberries in 20 years. 😁 Then, after too short a time, I already have to leave them to cash in my ferry ticket.
    For now, it bites to say goodbye and review the experiences.
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  • Fès

    14 de abril de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    I found a really nice campsite. A bit outside the big city, but very big and green.

    Originally, I only wanted to stay here for a short time, but chance decided otherwise:
    I'm standing in the middle of Morocco's largest old town and the country's second largest city, when a familiar head walks past me.
    I recognise the hair. That's Dolph from Seville, isn't it?
    I run after him and sure enough, it's him. We spend some very funny afternoons and evenings together and almost become hostel managers.

    Since I don't have much time left within my 90-day stay and
    I can't decide what else I want to see, I just stay. The campsite becomes my home for a fortnight and I quickly make friends with Mohamed and two Nourredines from the staff.

    In between, Montezuma's revenge catches me and makes my stomach go Ramba-Zamba. I feel really bad for one day, sleep completely in my tent at the campsite and succumb to my fever dreams. Afterwards, the fever is gone, but the Ramba-Zamba in my stomach haunts me for a while.
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  • Moulay Idriss Zerhoun

    12 de abril de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    I visit the hilly Moulay Idriss. Volubilis, the most important Roman archaeological site in North Africa, is just outside the city.
    We don't agree on the entrance fee, I don't want to spend the money on just looking at a few stones, and there don't seem to be any further information panels that would help me to remember the place.
    I feed the street dog Lina and walk into town.

    There are three lookout points and many children who are happy to guide you to one of the points. I am accompanied by Ines (9) and Mohamed (9), who show me their town and take me to all the viewpoints.
    They collect a beautiful bouquet of flowers for me. When the bouquet threatens to turn into a huge place setting, I have to stop them (and another boy who has rushed over). 😄
    They get a little pocket money for the tour and I make my way back to Meknès.
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  • To have or not to have

    11 de abril de 2023, Marrocos

    There is a difference between knowing how rich and good we live in Europe (Germany) and experiencing it through direct exchange.

    Strolling through the medina, I pass a small dark entrance to a café. The two-metre-long corridor leads into a larger, dark and very smoky room, which is occupied by a television.

    I'm about to go out again when I hear a 'Hey, my friend!
    I start talking to Adil, who lives here and also likes to hang out after work. The TV in the corner serves as a cinema for everyone, there is no real cinema in the city anymore, so the small café becomes a social space.
    He is a man of song lyrics. Often enough he answers one of my questions with a rhyme from a song. We talk about good films. He was in one when he was a teenager. At the time, Willem Dafoe was in town for a film adaptation of the Bible story. He got a small part and ran into the actor once.
    He has met Andy Garcia too, but ignored him at the time and didn't think he was important. Only later did he find out how famous he already was and got annoyed 😄.

    Out of a casual acquaintance, we meet several times and he invites me to his house. We have Harira, the Moroccan soup, simple coffee and sweet pastries.
    I get another impression of what life is like here. His family used to be wealthy, now he lives with his father and brother in a small house. He has the only income in the household, the father is sick and the brother is unemployed. He buys things at a second-hand market, repairs and cleans them before selling them on.
    His brother is trying to join his wife abroad and is just waiting for the documents to be filled out that will allow him to leave the country. In a few weeks, the time will come and Adil will have to take care of his father alone.
    All three of them share a mobile phone.
    Despite this life of poverty, he gives to me wearing sandals and a traditional Moroccan robe as a farewell gift.
    Hospitality comes first in this country.
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  • Robbed and wanted by the police

    10 de abril de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    I start the day still a little tired from the exciting overnight stay with Zacharias and his family. Zacharias takes me to the police station to show them that I am in good condition. Then my journey continues.

    I pass a police checkpoint, where I explain the itinerary once more and leave my phone number.

    I want to drive a bit off the national road again today. It worked out well yesterday. 😊
    Just as I turn off and want to change to a side road, someone shouts from behind: "No,No! This is the wrong road!"
    A black Mercedes pulls up next to me and the driver tells me it's the wrong road.
    So there we have the plainclothes police. I point to my sat nav and argue that this is the short route though.
    "No no, that's the wrong road!" (my "wrong" road is 5km shorter than his "right" one. 30 minutes diversions 😤. ) I obey the police order and continue on the national road.
    The Mercedes follows me for hours at intervals of a few hundred metres. It gets on my nerves.

    Today it is also particularly hot and I am exhausted. At a river I drive off the road to the right and build a shady shelter for a siesta at noon. The black Mercedes is not in sight at the moment.

    A couple of guys come up to me and want some coins. Actually, I don't like to give money, but I'm really not strong-willed enough for a discussion, so I give them some.
    The boys are persistent and want more. More money and also some food. It's the "get everything you can" shtick I've seen before. Often enough I've seen that mischievous sideways look between their faces to realise that it's just an act. Within seconds, relatively happy kids turn into very, very needy kids. In the process, they further inflame each other and play a bit of theatre to get something out of it. It doesn't matter what you give them, they suddenly need something.
    I don't want to ignore the bad economic situation, be arrogant or make fun of it - I like to give to poor people within my means, but in my opinion, these boys don't need it as much as others and their diffuse desire to get something, be it food, a pen or something else, shows me that it is not acute.
    So after giving them some money, I go back to my shady spot, as the sun is really shining mercilessly from the sky today.
    The kids quickly lose interest and move on.

    My mobile phone rings, the number is unknown to me. It contains several double digits - to make it easier to remember the number. It must be the police, because you always have to pay extra for such a special phone number. I'm sure no one in the normal population has money to spare for such frills.
    I'm not in the mood for a conversation right now. First they keep me on their 'safe' roads and make me take detours, then they lose me and now they want to know where I am so they can keep following me.
    The ringing stops.

    After five minutes the next call comes.
    Then a call from a new number. So now two policemen are looking for me. I've moved up in the wanted list! 🙌
    After five minutes, the first number again.
    Then the second number again.
    My will to cooperate dries up completely. I switch off my mobile phone.

    As the sun fades and the temperature drops, I get on my bike and tackle the rest of the route.
    In the evening at the campsite I notice that my wallet is missing.
    I search all my pockets, but actually I know that the last time I took it out was in front of this group of boys.
    They actually stole my money and credit card...

    All I have left now is my Maestro card with high withdrawal fees and emergency cash in euro notes.
    A solution will be found tomorrow. Inshallah. 🙏

    The cash problem will become even more acute in the coming days.
    Now I notice that the debit card no longer gives money either. A phone call to the bank tells me that this card is also blocked. 😬
    They can't do anything more for me at the moment, just leave a note for my personal customer advisor, who will call me back.

    For the first time on this trip I feel unfree, life is difficult. Having cash always available has made the journey very pleasant. From now on I have to keep a close eye on the money until the problem is solved. Turn over every euro and, in an emergency, take a plane to the family to get cash from there.

    While writing a message to my bank asking them to call me back again, I read that the card is blocked 'at the customer's request' 🤨 - and then I realise my fatal mistake.
    Instead of a new credit card, I ordered a new debit card. The old one was automatically blocked. 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

    I try to get cash for myself by trying Western Union and two other financial service providers that advertise sending cash internationally quickly and easily. All three services fail due to technical deficiencies. 😂😂
    I can hardly believe my luck.
    Maybe I'll have to get on a plane and collect cash from the family after all.

    The whole problem has been dragging on for a few days now. In the meantime, I'm in Fez and looking for a solution from there.
    At about this time, a backpacker I had already met in Spain crosses my path.
    He helps me by making himself available as a cash dispenser.
    Shortly afterwards, I receive a phone call from my bank telling me that they have been able to cancel the card blocking and that the card is now working again. 🙏
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  • ‚Now you‘re part of the family‘

    9 de abril de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

    I am lying in a double bed near Khenichet in borrowed pyjamas.
    How did I get here?

    I wanted to see something other than the main road and drive more on the small roads with less traffic. There you can experience more, the encounters are more interesting, because here the smallest deviation from normality is much more obvious and causes more excitement.

    A couple of boys ride with me and talk to me in Arabic. They are friendly and interested, but unfortunately we can hardly communicate. My Moroccan is just good enough to count to five and that doesn't make for a satisfactory conversation.
    At some point they turn left and we wish each other a good journey ( I guess). 😄

    It's hot, about 30 degrees today, and I try desperately to balance my fluid intake.

    I drive to Khenichet and start looking for a place to eat. Next to me, someone rolls up on an old bicycle, several sticks of baguette in a basket in front of the handlebars.
    'Do you want something to eat?'
    'Yes.'
    'Come on!'
    We pass one or two bistros and slowly I understand that he probably doesn't want to recommend a restaurant but has extended an invitation. 🫢

    We roll out of town. I'm worried that he lives far away, but luckily we turn into a housing estate.
    There we are stopped by a black Audi. The driver, a plainclothes policeman, has seen us driving through town and wants to make sure that everything is all right with me and that I am voluntarily going with my companion Zacharias.

    Side note:
    It is quite common in Morocco for the police to pay special attention to bicycle tourists and follow them at a distance. They don't always make themselves known, but after a while it can become quite obvious that a black vehicle is following you in 500 metres at a crawl.

    The policeman confers with my host. Everything seems to be all right. He wants to know where I will be staying and where I want to go.
    I explain that I want to go to a petrol station 15 km away to pitch my tent. He replies that it is already too late for that. We exchange numbers and after dinner the police will be waiting for me to make sure that everything is still in order.

    When we arrive at Zacharias' house it is already dark. We enter and are greeted by the whole family and led directly to the prepared table.
    Besides Zacharias, my host, his wife and daughter live in the house, as well as his brother with his wife and child, his father and his uncle.
    We all sit together at the dining table and break the daily fast, because it is Ramadan.
    Zacharias says to me that I am now like his son and part of the family.

    I speak to the family (father and wife) in French, with Zacharias I get some help of an Arabic translator. His daughter watches all the translations with great interest.
    They help me learn the numbers up to 17 and the days of the week. 😃
    As I am showing photos of my family and the course of my journey, suddenly a man stands in the doorway. He is greeted warmly by the family and invited in for a coffee. He introduces himself as the security officer of the settlement. He wants to see my passport and takes photos of it.
    He also asks if everything is all right, how I am, where I come from and where I am going.

    Another person enters the house. From his appearance I conclude that he is an authority figure. He identifies himself as a policeman. I knew it.
    He asks the obligatory questions about my passport, my profession, my parents and their profession, my address in Berlin and, of course, my itinerary and where I will be staying.
    I explain to him my idea of a quiet night at the petrol station.
    He: Nah, there's a hostel in town.
    Me: Nah, I like camping.
    Him: You can sleep here.

    Now the situation becomes a bit bizarre, because no one has asked the family for their opinion. My understanding is that the family should issue the invitation. I think about how I can play the question back towards the family so that they make the decision. I turn to the family and say if the petrol station is not an option and there are no problems then I would like to stay with the family.
    Policeman: No, that won't cause any problems.
    I try a second time with passing on the question and again I am assured by the police that it is okay.

    Later, host Zacharias asks me a couple of times if I want to have a coffee. Due to the late hour, I don't really want to, but before I can express this, his daughter says no on my behalf. 😁
    I don't quite understand the situation. He asks several more times and his daughter declines several times on my behalf. The situation leaves me a bit baffled.
    He asks me again and the penny drops: he would very much like to go to a local café with me - his daughter, on the other hand, wants us to continue learning from each other at home with the translator. I'm sure the situation is just as exciting for her as it is for me.
    I finally understand that he would like to show me his favourite place. So we leave. In the café we take more selfies. More men join us and we talk a bit. About football, Ramadan and Islamic prophets. We write everything crosswise on a notepad, which becomes a nice memory.

    Finally we go back to the house. We take selfies with the dog, goat and family. They offer me the large family bedroom. Now I am lying here in the double bed, in Zachariah's prayer robe. I feel a bit bad because I sleep alone in the big room and because of me the whole family sleeps in the living room on the sofa beds.

    The night passes without me sleeping much. I am too excited. Because this family has welcomed me so warmly, I decide to have breakfast with them at 4am the next morning, as it is still Ramadan.
    Around 3:30 am I wake up and hear a soft noise. Too quiet for a family breakfast. I lie awake in bed and wait for evidence of the meal, but hear nothing to suggest it. Eventually I fall asleep again. When I tell Zacharias' father my decision the next morning, he just laughs. He wanted to wake me up, but Zacharias' wife forbade it. 😄
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  • Marrakech

    1 de abril de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    Marrakech is like no city I have experienced before. The impression I describe below may be related to my tiredness when we were in the city. It is very subjective and based on the very few hours we spent in the city. I suspect the city has a lot to offer and will definitely visit it again in the future.

    The city registers with me on all sensory levels.
    It's noisy. It is dirty. The smells change within a few metres (!) between urine, pungent smoke, incense, food leftovers, combustion fumes, dust, deep-frying fat, perfume.
    An assault on all the senses. 😅

    I am very glad that Ilyass showed me the different and authentic facets of the country before we go to see Marrakesh.
    Suddenly, there are almost as many Europeans walking the streets as Marroccans. The selling at the stalls and in the alleys is a little more aggressive. The worst thing in my eyes, however, is a group of entertainers who stand around the food pavilions and take turns singing 'this is Africa' to the tourists and parade around the block with a few instruments, strumming chorus snippets of well-known songs for a small fee 😣.

    As the sun sets, the atmosphere on Jemaa el-Fnaa Square changes and becomes more pleasant. Maybe just quieter, I can't describe it exactly.
    The vendors continue to offer their wares, but now with gas-powered lamps, illuminating the now dark square here and there with small orange wedges of light. It seems cosy.
    A few groups of people form in the square. At first I don't know what there is to see, but it looks like a storytelling session. A storyteller in the middle walks around and talks while the others listen intently.
    I would love to know what is being told there. ☺️
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  • Setti Fadma

    30 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    The water of the waterfall pelts down next to me and immerses everything in a fine mist of water. As I sit there pondering, a shelf with drinks catches my eye.
    An older man is coming up the mountain. He must be in his 70s and is wearing what is probably his best suit and flip-flops. On his back is a huge bag full of new drinks for the travellers who come here for a short refreshment.

    Setti Fadma is a good example of how important the income from tourism is for the population.
    There are a few restaurants and cafés along the river, but at the moment many are closed for Ramadan.

    Overall, there are few opportunities to earn a living here. Even for highly qualified graduates, finding a job in the country is difficult as the economic growth does not keep up with the population growth.
    In the coming weeks, I will gain more impressions of the difficult economic situation.
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  • Gas Haven (scenery "Hills Have Eyes 2")

    28 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    In the middle of the desert near Ourzazate is an American-style petrol station from the 60s (?).
    It was used as a film set for a horror movie and is beautifully abandoned on a lonely road.
    Ilyass and I camp with our tent a few hundred metres away.
    In the morning we find a sleeping dog in front of the tent, which lets us feed it a bit and cuddle it, and then spends the day with us.
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  • Space and time are relative

    27 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Hitchhiking gave me a completely new sense of time. In the beginning, I got a bit jittery every now and then when we were standing at a taxi stand or on a road and it was uncertain when the next transport would pick us up.
    It's all water under the bridge - now I make the most of the time we spend waiting.

    I have already made a few rounds around the bus and tried to do something with the street dogs, but they are too shy.

    (plot hole)

    I try my hand at stacking stones. I've gotten a lot better since I started 30 minutes ago.

    (plot hole)

    Ilyass and I have a brief discussion about whether we should crack the yellow school bus. Since neither of us has the necessary skills and it would be bad for the education of the region, we discard the idea.

    (plot hole)

    Ilyass is reading the Koran again. Since Ramadan has started, I too have been reading religion again for a long time and have read part of the Old Testament. Interesting, but not gripping. A lot of violence. Some chapters only describe who had how many children and how many hundred years old the persons became. The oldest person lived to be 969.

    (plot hole)

    Trying to find a comfortable sitting position.

    (plot hole)

    High spirits ! A car stops !!!
    False alarm. The driver just wanted to turn around.
    Boredom returns.

    (plot hole)

    I break off the wait after four hours and try to get transport in any direction. After another hour we find someone. Somehow more hours pass and at 10 pm we have reached our sleeping place.
    Since yesterday afternoon, 24 hours ago, we have been trying to reach the gorge of Tislit.
    We have come 108 kilometres by road.

    Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
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  • Aït Ben-Haddou

    26 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    I suspect that very few of you have heard of Ourzazate and yet most of you have certainly seen (the region around) Ourzazate.

    Lawrence of Arabia', 'Game of Thrones', 'Gladiator' and 'The Mummy' are just a few of the many films shot here.

    Walking around town, chances are you'll meet one or two extras or supporting actors and I suspect that most of the locals have been involved in one film or another in some capacity, for example as prop producers, set designers, technicians or drivers.
    Outside Ourzazate are the Atlas Studios, home to the sets of countless films.

    If you are interested in this topic, you should read the following article: ( sorry, its written in German)

    https://www.gq-magazin.de/entertainment/artikel…
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  • Oasis de Fint

    25 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Just look at these cute little rascals.
    It's hard to believe that they mutate into beasts at night, making incredible noise, chewing on everything and then PINKING AGAINST MY TENT!!!! ❤️❤️

  • Todra Gorge

    24 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    To cover the 200 km between Merzouga and the gorge, we are on the road from 9am to 6pm.
    The old me can hardly imagine how slowly we are progressing, the new me has already come to terms with it.
    Our route is Merzouga - Rissani - (Erfoud) - Errachidia - Tinghir and into the gorge. Four or five changes drag out the day, as we have to wait about an hour each time until our shared taxi is full. Whew.
    So far, the transport has always gone quite well, but Ramadan has just started and many people not only abstain from eating and drinking during the day, but also from the pleasure of travelling - and the taxis fill up very slowly.
    All right, with my bike it would have taken me about three days to cover the same distance.

    In the barren landscape of Morocco, every river valley quickly becomes an oasis that breaks through the desolate brown in brown. There are all kinds of trees, bushes, grasses, shade, birds, fresh, humid air - what a blessing!
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  • Erg Chebbi - a piece of the Sahara

    21 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    I was under the misapprehension that the Sahara is a sandy desert, but it is mostly a rocky desert.
    We are in Merzouga, the moroccan place that feels most like the Sahara to desert novices like me.
    If you look at the place on a satellite image, you notice that the erg, the dune area, is quite small.

    From the campsite at the edge of the sand, I take a hike up the largest dune. It takes me about 40 minutes and I only get about 2 km. It is incredibly exhausting to walk up there.

    I pause for a moment and look at the bizarre tracks in the sand.
    Every animal species leaves a characteristic pattern in the sand here - if I had a little more experience I could identify them now.
    Silver ants flit across the ground. These small animals are particularly well adapted to life in hot environments, as their outer skin shines silver and reflects a very large proportion of the sunlight. It is also the fastest ant species in the world. In order not to sink in, it puts its legs up synchronously and only very briefly. The trick doesn't work for me, with my two thick kicks I have no choice but to keep digging through the sand on my way to the top.

    As I stand at the top, my gaze falls on nearby Algeria, the end of the Erg Chebbi and the great expanse beyond.
    I have already crossed half of the sand, but the feeling of being in the middle of the desert does not set in. There are settlements in all directions and of course some jeeps and quads rattle through the dunes, so I wonder how the many tourists can imagine that this would be an authentic desert feeling. It's hardly worth getting on a dromedary.

    Later we watch the dromedaries eating. They are totally relaxed and don't let us disturb them.
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  • Aziza Cave

    20 de março de 2023, Marrocos

    For two hours we have been standing at a crossroads near Mesky and keeping our thumbs out. We actually only want to go 53 km further and see a cave, but the area is so remote that no one else wants to go there on a Monday morning.
    The mood is still good, I have got used to the new rhythm of life and now know how slowly clocks sometimes tick.
    We stand and wait. No one gives us a lift.

    A few taxis came and went, but all were full to capacity. Private people have not wanted to take us so far, many were in expensive cars. My observation is that the old, heavily used cars stop more often.

    I tell Ilyass that we have to change our strategy and go to one of the next bigger towns. The current plan is not working.
    He says that we should continue as before. Someone will come and take us.
    I say I will give this hope another 7 minutes.
    Seven minutes pass.
    I take my backpack and want to stand at the other side of the road to increase our chances.
    I barely get 50 metres when I hear him calling. He has conjured up a car from somewhere that will take us after all. It's amazing.
    The driver not only takes us to the crossroads, but even drives us to our destination.

    The cave is huge, over 4 km long. In the entrance area we meet a population of bats. Cute little creatures.

    For about 30 minutes we walk deeper and deeper into the mountain and pass through large caves, narrow passages and clayey passages.
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  • Lost places: The Aouli Mines

    18 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ 🌬 18 °C

    In the Drâa-Tafilalet region, the city of Midelt is not particularly well known among tourists. Only Moroccans who want to escape the summer heat or fans of geology come here.
    The area is rich in minerals and semi-precious stones and apparently also the preferred landing site for meteorites from outer space.

    About 25 km from Midelt is the mine of Aouli, which had its best times in the French colonial period. Lead was mined here between 1928 and 1960. Along the Moulouya River, which meanders through the mountains, several villages were built for the approximately 1000 miners, some of which are abandoned today.

    The journey to this remote area is difficult because there is no public transport. Ilyass and I manage to get to the village 11 km away by taxi, then we have to walk.
    The region is dotted with hills and mountains in orange to red soil and the ground is dry and dusty. Plastic bags have become entangled in some bushes and are wriggling in the wind.
    The sun is already low in the sky, illuminating it in a deep red as we start our walk.
    We are lucky and are taken by tuktuks to the settlement. We drive along narrow asphalt roads, now and then the road is so riddled with potholes that the driver prefers to drive just off the road.
    When we arrive, it is already dark.
    A dog barks.

    We are welcomed by a local who offers us to spend the night in his flat. Ilyass talks to him briefly, we are invited for tea and extend the encounter to a joint dinner.

    The flat is more sparsely furnished than I have ever experienced: everything is the simplest of the simple. Apart from the steel front door, there are no doors in the flat.
    The plaster is peeling off the walls, there are water stains on the ceiling.
    There is no electricity. When Aziz wants to charge devices, he drives to the village or buys batteries.
    It is dark, the living room is lit only by two candles and we additionally light up the room with our headlamps.
    This house used to be a cinema, he tells us, pointing to a hole in the wall through which we can glimpse the large empty cinema hall. Fine dust trickles from the ceiling and dances in the light of the lamp. We are sitting in the former projector room, now the living room.
    On the wall are two shelves full of collected fossils, semi-precious stones and minerals. He sells them to tourists who come to this area from time to time.

    The next morning we go to see the cinema hall and the town in daylight. Some of the abandoned houses are open and allow us to explore. The strong metal gates that protect doors and windows from flooding are striking. This did not help the cinema hall, where the water level must have risen 40 cm due to deposited mud.

    On the nearby hill we find another settlement, which is completely abandoned. The only building still standing is the mosque, which interestingly has everything you need to pray immediately: even water for washing and a Koran.

    At the end of our visit, we go into the old mine shaft, which leads straight into the mountain.

    Afterthought:
    I was told by a miner friend that you cannot easily walk down shafts , as the common shaft is a vertical hole. Consequently, I did not walk down a shaft, but along a gallery.

    Good luck! 🍀⛏️👷‍♂️🕯️
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  • imilchil - Lake Tislit and Isli

    16 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ 🌬 20 °C

    Silence.
    The tranquil landscape of the two lakes Isli and Tislit is in stark contrast to yesterday's strenuous hike. Moroccans like to come to such remote places to recover from their hectic everyday lives. (I can well understand that, the hectic pace quickly becomes too much for me too!😄)

    The area is somewhat secluded and not very touristy. To get a feeling for the vastness, Ilyass and I walk two hours to the second lake. We take very little with us on the hike. The most important thing is sun protection, my skin is already stressed enough as it is.

    There's really only scree and stones here. Dust covers the ground and sticks to our clothes.

    Our campsite by the lake is like an oasis in the desert.

    Funnily, here in this remote place I find some of the best pastries of Morocco in a small shop with only some small refrigerators.
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  • Hiking the High Atlas

    12 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    With the backpacking tour I fulfilled a little dream:
    Hiking in the Atlas Mountains.
    The barren, rugged rocks, the remoteness - it all had a fascination for me.

    We try to find the Berber Passage, a path carved into the rock by the local hill tribes deep inside the valley.
    We meet a group of young Moroccan hikers and join them to find the passage.

    The road leads us to the last village of the valley, from where we set off into the mountains.
    We reach some waterfalls that spring directly from the rock and from where the nearby village draws its water.
    The scramble begins at an embrasure between two mountains. The first metres are already quite steep and are increasingly blocked by large stones and boulders, which make the climb even more difficult. Every now and then there are small climbing passages that require short planning of the steps and a sure footing.

    After a long ascent, we stop at a particularly piquant spot and discuss what to do. This doesn't seem to be the right way and there are concerns about safety.
    I realise now that the others don't know where the way to the passage is any more than I do and only know a coordinate, but not the way there. 🤨
    I show the boys a map of the area, which doesn't give us any more information than that we have to go to the other side of the mountain.
    A discussion ensues about whether we should go further. Everyone is asked, then a decision is made by scissors and rock paper🫣😳. The decision is made to go back.

    Ilyass goes on alone to prove that the path is manageable. The rest of the group waits.
    He finally manages to climb the next difficult section and waves and calls out to us. Because of the distance and the echo, nothing can be understood.
    Ilyass waits at the top for us to follow him. We wait too, as we had decided as a group to go down. Stalemate.

    So we wait for each other for about 20 minutes.
    In order not to extend the waiting game into infinity, I suggest we split up. It was decided that the others should descend and since Ilyass will not come back to us, I will climb up to Ilyass to let him know.
    In the end, everyone comes along and we continue to ascend.

    It gets more and more difficult. There are some climbing passages that fall into the category of 'point of no return' for me, because they are already really tricky on the ascent.

    Almost at the highest point, we finally have to admit that the path is not getting any easier and that it is better to turn back now than to venture further into the unknown.
    So we finally start the way back. Most of the passages on the way down are easier to do with concentration and climbing techniques than I had thought and we eventually overcome even the most difficult sections.
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  • Backpacking

    10 de março de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Now I find myself without my bike in a village in the middle of the Atlas Mountains.
    Although the place is relatively large, it seems to consist only of this crossroads.
    There is a lot of activity on the main street. Handcarts are pushed past, mopeds with attached trailers rattle by. The air is dusty and smells of the remains of the stalls and exhaust fumes. Cats roam around, looking for somebody to pet them and food.

    Ilyass and I wait for the bus to leave, but it takes time. We don't have enough passengers yet.

    My bicycle journey has taken an unexpected turn. My bike had a defect that prevented me from continuing. It has been repaired, but I had already prepared myself for backpacking.

    Ilyass and I will see the Atlas Mountains, the desert and oases in the coming weeks. An adventure within an adventure 🤠.
    We start our journey in a remote valley of the High Atlas.
    The supply of the valley is done by big transporters that drive a few times a day and connect all the villages and small huts.
    It is unbelievable how much freight they can carry, because a luggage rack is welded onto the roof, which can transport any amount of material (and also people).

    The road is partly a dirt track that winds steeply up the mountains. We rarely drive faster than 40 kph and for the sake of the passengers on the roof the velocity shouldn’t be higher.

    Mobility is difficult in the valley. The vans leave when enough people arrive and that can take a while. Further back in the valley, you don't notice the delayed departure, so the only thing that helps is to wait and allow enough time.
    Ilyass and I sometimes wait half an hour (or more) hoping that the bus will show up and take us to the next village (for lunch) or back. Sometimes a private car comes along to give us a lift. If not, there are only snacks to eat 😄.
    Because there is not much gastronomic choice here, we eat only omelettes for three days 😂 - but it could be worse.

    In contrast to the somewhat monotonous food, however, the views show a fantastic variety.
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  • ‚The reason of life is to share‘

    22 de fevereiro de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    Near Chefchaouen is the Talassemtane Nature Park with the 70m high Akchour waterfalls.

    You can get there by shared taxi, a very efficient mean of transport.
    You will find these taxis at designated stations in the city. From there they go to interesting places in the surrounding area and also to other cities.
    You arrive at the meeting point and wait until enough passengers have arrived. That is seven people including the driver. Often the cars have enough seats, but not always:
    One of my trips took place in an old Mercedes where we sat in the back row with four people. The car had already travelled more than 700,000 km!
    Because of the full Taxis everyone pays the equivalent of just over 3 euros for a one-hour ride.

    So I take this taxi to the Akchour waterfall and directly meet a young Moroccan (Ilyass) at the station, who I had met before.

    I set off on the several-hour hike to the actual big waterfall. Small waterfalls appear every few metres and delay my stay, because there is a lot to discover.
    The actual big waterfall turns out to be the smallest highlight, as it has almost no water today.
    Instead, the best moments are those on the way there: a bird 🐦 here, a butterfly 🦋 there and the view of the valley.
    In addition, I spend the rest of the day with Ilyass and his friends, eating tajine and other typical dishes with them. They teach me a lot about their culture and language.

    Farid, one of the boys, finally says at one moment 'the reason of life is to share'.
    A philosophy of life that I would like to adopt more in the future.
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  • Everyday stories

    22 de fevereiro de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    I am in Chefchaouen, the town where many houses are painted blue. Photos during sunrise can look really good here because of the golden lit mountain tops and the blue house fronts of the town opposite. I get up early and climb the next hill.
    A dog comes to me, I pet him, he lies down. Because he is shivering, I put my jacket over him. (It still smells like a dog now 😃)
    Then a cat comes along. I crouch down for a photo and concentrate fully on it. She plods up and just sits on my legs while I squat there. It's really uncomfortable for both of us, but she doesn't let on.
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  • The Border to Marocco

    19 de fevereiro de 2023, Marrocos ⋅ 🌬 16 °C

    Border crossings are always something special. They used to be really exciting: everyone is nervous whether you will be let into the foreign country without any problems, you speak a foreign language (or you don't, which is even more exciting!😜), the border officials sometimes seem intimidating.

    Although I'm sure I'm not carrying anything unauthorised, I feel excited.
    For years I have travelled almost exclusively in the European Union and therefore I am no longer used to crossing borders.
    And this is Africa. After all, anything can happen!

    I slowly roll up on my bike so as not to do anything wrong.
    I am waved through from one person to the next and roll through the border at walking pace. I look around attentively for faces that either stop me or wave me on. I really don't want to have an official against me whom I accidentally pass.
    I am guided past the queue of cars into an empty check-in lane. The box there is unoccupied.
    I stand there and look around - no one is here. The only occupied box is the one with the cars. But they didn't want me there, they wanted me here where there is no one. 🤔
    Should I drive on?
    Should I go to the box for the cars?

    I slowly roll on and come to an official in a long coat to whom I hand my passport. He takes a quick look and waves me on.
    I am now in the zone between Spain and Morocco.
    I've made it through the first half - almost.

    A whistle sounds. Behind me a second official in uniform waves: I shall come back. I turn around and roll back a few metres. The longcoat and the uniformed man are discussing. Then the longcoat waves me away from a distance:
    I shall roll on. I turn around and do so.

    Again the whistle. The uniformed man waves me on again. I have skipped the procedure and have no exit stamp. Instead of walking the 20 metres back to the gatehouse, I am now supposed to
    - roll on
    - but then join the queue leading back to Europe.
    - re-enter the country
    - get the exit stamp and then leave the country properly with a stamp. 🤯

    A diversion for me, but the officials have the power of interpretation here. 🙇‍♂️

    I want to carry out the procedure as I was ordered and turn left through a gate to the entry queue.
    I explain the situation to the officer standing there, then he makes a short radio call to the uniformed officer. Finally he waves me on. The exit stamp is irrelevant for entry into Morocco.

    In contrast to the exit, the entry is completely uncomplicated:
    'Do you have alcohol?'
    - Yes, but only to burn, not to drink.
    'Do you have a drone?'
    - No.

    They want me to open another bag and then I enter Morocco. 🇲🇦
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  • Gibraltar

    11 de fevereiro de 2023, Gibraltar ⋅ 🌬 14 °C

    Before my visit to Monkey Rock, I was warned about the treacherous creatures that inhabit this mountain. 🐒🐒🐒
    I should keep my pockets locked, not take out any jewellery or electronic devices as soon as they are in sight and never ever look them directly in the eye, as this provokes them. 👀

    In preparation for the trip, I practised with Roberto walking back to back through the park with our eyes down so that we could protect each other's backpacks.

    Then we meet the wild gang of monkeys. All precautions turn out to be unnecessary. The monkeys are interested in us, but show no interest in our belongings.
    They sweetly play with each other, slide down the railings or chase each other around the yard.

    Finally, we descend into St Michaels Cave, which seems huge and whose partly mushroom-like surfaces are brightly illuminated by different coloured lights.
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  • Natural Park Alcornocales

    10 de fevereiro de 2023, Espanha ⋅ 🌬 13 °C

    The Chilean-German duo is on their next road trip - in Alcornocales.
    We are on our way to the nature park in a rented Dacia Logan. This time we will hike all day and observe wild animals in their natural environment. Our backpacks are full of food for an epic picnic, which we have in the afternoon in a cave-like shelter with spectacular views.

    Our high expectations of the park are met: we see
    - a griffon vulture
    - a family of deer
    - a peregrine falcon(?)
    - Rattling storks
    - a dung beetle
    - at least one exquisite bird that disappears again too quickly to be photographed 💨
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