Friday, 1 July 2011

Back to reality

Well that's just about it =)
We made our way up towards Mallaga to meet Hana and David at MotoAdvenTours and had a great time talking about out trip and hearing their stories from their own adventures. From there we camped by a lake, stopped off at the Alhambra, spent a night sleeping on top of a mountain 40km up a dirt road in the middle of the Parc Natural del Ports, and pressed on towards Barcellona. In Tarragona at the 'hostal' we met Arborea; Shanti and Buck from Maine who were playing in town that night and nicely put us on the guest list. Finally we rode north to Robin's organic farm where we parked up the KTM under a tree and he gave me a lift to the airport with the roll sack stuffed with dirty laundry.











I think I can say this trip has changed me, I can see it when I look back at how I viewed the world I was seeing in each blog entry or think about the things that worried or were important to me before we left. Robin will keep on travelling, as yet unknown where, and it won't be my last trip either, in fact the HUMM will be a good mini adventure in three weeks time! I'm certainly glad we finally got out there and did it =D


PS Now that I'm back I'll be adding some GPS traces and better images to those post that are still in iPhone format in the next couple of weeks!



Wednesday, 29 June 2011

Atlas' the Riff

Getting round the loop and back on to the main road back to El Kebab got harder and harder. Rocks got bigger, scree got looser, slopes got steeper, the only thing improving was the donkey/goat count but maybe the road was just too rough for them! The balding rear tyre on the KTM meant the bike sometimes came to a halt still spinning while trying to get up loose stuff, getting back down often felt like the rear with all the luggage and spare tyre was going to overtake the front.
Eventually we crossed some tough river beds and came down in to a very rural village where carpets and clothing dried on the roofs and hung on the walls of the small half earth, half breeze block buildings. Women stopped working to look while children formed a moving grandstand what followed us as we rolled along the road, giggling and waving. No asking for stillos and cadeuxs here, it didn't look like any motorised vehicles came this way let alone tourists.
From the village we kept dropping, now riding along a ridge with the green valley spread out on either side and gradually descended in to it where a proper river crossing awaited us. Some farmers sat on a hill opposite to watch as we checked it for depth, maybe we disappointed them when we powered through with wet feet but without any other dramas and rejoined the main road, heading back towards Kebab and Khenifra for some lunch.
In a small cafe, sheltering from the midday sun, Robin got some kip while I updated the Captains Blog, stardate: about half past one. As the sun moved round we set off towards the Sources de l'Oum-er-Rbia. It looked like back in the 60s those in search of peace and understanding must have flocked here to look for it in the bubbles of a shisha pipe or at the bottom of a pot of mint tea, they would have stretched out on rich coloured carpets inside the now almost empty small wicker shelters, overhanging a narrow rushing river at the bottom of the rocky ravine. Several small streams,(the 'Sources') sprouted from the stone hill sides and were named by hand painted signs before they ran down between the love shacks. Even the men and boys trying to rustle up business seemed to have tested some of their own products and the whole atmosphere was very relaxed. We passed the women brewing tea and climbed up small wooden bridges and over slippery rocks (no H&S here) to a ten meter high waterfall that claimed to be the source of the river. It was quite a beautiful natural setting with the sun getting low at the end of the valley and the coolness of the spray until breathing deep we realised the smell, and the tissues all around. It seemed a lot of visitors felt nature calling in a more urgent voice!

We left and rode up through the Foret de Cedres which reminded me of the SchwartzWald in SW German, dark and humid and full of bird life, then suddenly opening up to grass pastures with views over the tree covered landscape. How we could have ridden from what felt like the surface of the moon to this in a couple of hundred miles seemed unbelievable.
There was just time as the light failed to get round Azrou and on to the main highway and  to Meknes. Nice things were written about the souks and old town of Meknes but finding a reasonably priced hotel proved no easy task, odd as it wasn't really on the tourist trail. As it neared midnight and we dodged a drunk hooker a recommendation took us to the elderly but very traditional tiled hotel Regina inside the medina where we were welcomed in to the courtyard with the bikes after riding up some steps we weren't sure even the 21" front wheels were big enough for! After dinner in the main square and dealing with a waiter who tried to double the bill with a tip for himself (!) Otman, Abdul and Unis at the hotel invited us in to their 'den' at the reception where the pipe was bubbling and the smokey air smelt of apple tobacco. Only Otman spoke enough French to communicate easily but it was an interesting talk about day to day life and work for Moroccans. He left late, pedaling his noisy mobilette up the road for an early start next day in the kitchens of a near by restaurant, of course not before we swapped contact details and promised to email the photos.
The next morning while our washing still dried in the window of the hotel room we ate breakfast in the cafe next door and I ordered a black tea. When it came I asked for some milk, the waiter looked at Robin as if checking his friend here wasn't mad then when he poured it in he checked again that he had done the right thing! We didn't have much luck looking for some of the things we were after in the medina but it was a really interesting place to wander around. More spacious than the others we'd been to it still had distinct areas, a shoe area, socks and underwear, dried fruits and sweets and even a blacksmithing quarter which was full of sooty black gates, window grills and bedframes, showered in orange sparks and noise and acrid with the smell of grinding wheels and arc welding.
Getting the bikes back down the steps was much easier and we said our goodbyes and used the rest of the day to aim for Chefchauen and the hotel Rif again; it had been a great first stop in Morocco and it would be nice to see Abdul again and do some gift shopping before the crossing back to Europe. The chain of the KTM was making some strange noises on the ride but when I tried to tighten it I found the adjuster had seized. Even riding up the smallest track between the thickest bushes wasn't enough to find a spot to repair the problem undisturbed so while Robin explained to the three boys that popped up that we were spacemen from Mars I investigated. One lad was just old enough that he clearly though he shouldn't be quite so entertained by the puppet show of spaceships and monsters he was receiving but obviously couldn't help himself joining in with the other two! The chain didn't sound much better but the next day I found the problem; a missing roller, nothing that could be sorted now though.
Climbing up to Chefchauen took longer in the dark and stuck behind a trail of tired diesel cars that growled their way up the steep road. Abdul recognised the bikes right away and with a really genuine welcome we were shown to an ensuit room and shook hands with the owner. He was a large man with big smile and carried the air of having worked hard all his life and returned to his home town to enjoy the fruits of his labours, he looked at the sky and waved his arms about as we talked and he enthused about riding bikes in the desert and sleeping under the stars. It was nice to be back in what I think was probably my favourite town of the trip.

Monday, 27 June 2011

Gorge-ous




Spending a couple of nights at Julia's would have been nice. The food was good, the rooms nice and clean with things to do and see all round the area (I was particularly intrigued by the snowboards and skis outside one rental shop). It was only 40 kms or so across the Hamada (rocky) desert to Algeria and should we have fancied a go without the 50kg of luggage the dunes at Erg Chebbi near by were favourites for bikers to practice their sand bashing. It was also now nearly June though and we had an appointment with Hana to pick the stuff up Spain on the fifth, then Robin's temporary farm job starting and my flight home on the 11th. The plan was to leave the KTM with him until returning for the Horizons Unlimited Mountain Madness rally the following month. We sketched out the return journey that morning so we would leave Africa on the third and after a lazy morning playing with the kittens and a big breakfast (and tour of Julia's geological samples from the local area), for one last time we turned north.
The guide book we'd borrowed from Hana listed a 'tourist circuit' up the road in Rizanni, but rather than being a lap of the Moroccan TT it was a track through a dozen small farming villages that had been blessed with Tarmac for the benefit of visitors. Apparently the inhabitants of the town used to make their living guiding tourists to the dunes in Merzouga, now with the road being recently built and importantly included on gps maps (the old trick was the remove or alter the road signs) this was planned as an alternative income source. It took less than half an hour to cruise along the black top but we'd already been a little spoilt by the hidden gems we'd found elsewhere on our travels.
Thankfully getting away from the desert things were becoming a little cooler, again we were of course climbing in to the foothills ahead of crossing the east end of the High Atlas. The valley between Jebel Ougnat and Sahro used to be home to the stoney piste of Chris Scott's route M4, Doug who we'd met through the Horizons Unlimited site had also recommended it. Unfortunately for us Morocco's road building program had arrived before we did and most of it had been overlaid with shiny new tarmac, that said bits that couldn't be upgraded had been rerouted and some of the old track was still accessible. We followed one bit until it came to a crest beyond which there was a stoney dry river bed and 1:1 gradient climb up the hardcore to the new road. While I was off looking for another way round or a place to spend the night Robin met a local farmer who had come over to say hello, unexpectedly we found ourselves trying to speak Spanish as he spoke no French, but as Maria always says we managed to communicate with hands and feet! He invited us back to his house for dinner and to sleep but we just managed to explain that we wanted to camp in the mountains tonight, he was so genuine it was quite difficult but this was meant to be out last night in the desert and could be one of our last chances to sleep outdoors before Spain (as we noted on the outbound journey the north of Morocco is much more populated). Somehow it would have felt wrong accepting a meal from this man and his family but at the same time it felt wrong not too, he looked like he could barely afford to feed himself, farming as he was in this extreme environment, and yet he welcomed and invited us with a big smile.
We made it up the river bed to where I'd spotted a opportunity to climb on to the new road and a couple of miles further up Robin found a track in to the hills on the opposite side. We'd decided generally camping off tracks above a road was better than below it as people rarely look up =) After some hunting about amongst some herding pens off the track we picked a ruin where we thought it wouldn't upset anyone if they found us in it. The hills here were lined with the same green stone chippings we'd found just west of Zagora, it gave the illusion of a softer more familiar environment than this really was, finding a black scorpion the size of my hand under a rock was a quick reminder of the reality!
Just as we were starting to cook dinner in the early darkness a trail bike pulled up and stopped, a black figure greeted us as he beeped the alarm of his bike. The darkness made communication difficult but we figured out he worked for a mine further up the track, pulling something called verdigris out the ground. I've tried to find out what this is but as yet no luck, something to do with the copper stained rocks we guessed, can't promise a prize but any answers most welcome! We also worked out we should expect a hoard of workers to arrive the next day at 8.05am, oh well no lie-in then! After saying there was no problem with us coming for a look tomorrow morning he road off west in to the hills where a dog was barking and a light hovered on the dark silhouette of the land.
The dog woke me in the morning, snuffling around the camp, it ran off yelping when it realised we were there, I felt lucky it hadn't pee'd a good morning in my ear. Now the sun was coming up I climbed the hill above us as far as I could to take in the lay of the land, the yellow sunlight being slowly poured over the green shapes picked out every rock and contour. When I got back Robin was making friends with a kid about ten called Mohamed, it was his dog that had come exploring. He headed off but as we were packing up returned with his mother and two brothers from beyond the hills! We exchanged smiles, some words and gestures and Robin found out how many goats and other animals they had using the powers of animal impersonation, then the mother started gesturing wanting something to eat. We never travelled with more than we needed given how limited our luggage space was so we parted with half our breakfast biscuits, after all the little family looked like they needed them more than we did. A couple of 'shukran's and they again disappeared in to the hills.
The hoards of mine workers were well over due by now, riding over the rise to where the mine was supposed to be our failures in communication became more apparent; Mohamed's family looked like they ran the mine, by meeting the two parents we had by now actually met all the miners! The loose stoney trail climbed back and forth up the hillside, steep jaggy rock reaching up on the left and down on the right, below were the black goat hair tents of the family and small round stone pens holding the animals. At the end of the track the view was amazing, three hundred degrees of mountainous lunar landscape, black rock peaks bursting through grey sedimentary layers and the soft green chippings, dark volcanic rocks littering every surface. This was also where the mine was; several deep JCB cuts in the summit, fragments of translucent quartz lay around the place and a diesel compressor sat to one side. Just as we started the tricky descent on the trail we heard a voice from below, the mother was climbing up the rock face, she said hello again and climbed past us, taking a shortcut to the mine. She giggled to herself as she stumbled backwards and nearly dropped off the edge!
Our next stop was Todra Gorge, but not before riding through a swarm of bees. They clattered and popped over the fairing and visor but thankfully didn't get in the vents in my jacket. I felt bad, they smelt of flowers and I could imagine their faces as the remainder stared at the KTM shaped hole in the group.
Todra was a deep cutting in the sandy coloured rock, some times the sides came straight down or over hung on their way down to the crystal clear river at the bottom, other times they were layered bulges like stacks of giant donuts. Most of the road at the bottom was rough concrete meaning it could expect to find itself underwater at some point of the year. There was even a hotel hiding under one overhang, we both agreed it looked like it was living on borrowed time! The first half of the gorge seemed well touristed, the latter less so, in fact other than us there were only a couple of Dutch motor homes, bouncing along slowly.
Robin was following me as we came in to a very poor looking village on the left of the roadside. A boy and a girl about four and eight ran out, arms and legs flailing, in front of the big camper we were currently behind. It braked but while still moving they started trying to climb up it, shouting about bonbons. The mother or big sister ran after the smaller boy and grabbed him off the vehicle but the girl, with a desperate look on her face kept banging on the windows. The drivers was obviously unsure what to do, the girl was quite distraught and they obviously didn't want to injure her. Then the mother shouted and distracted her long enough that the driver moved off, crying and shouting she ran right past me and grabbed Robin, shaking him, in my mirrors I could see the bike vearing and she grabbed first the handlebar, then his arm and finally the pannier. We'd spoken to Barak, one of the guys who worked at Julia's about the whole cadeux/bonbon thing and he said as a kid he remembered tourists turning up and showering them with pens and pencils and sweets. It seemed these poor kids had been lead to view every foreigner as a Santa Claus, understandably they were upset when he didn't have anything to put in their stocking, tragically they were risking their lives to get his attention.
Slowly the gorge opened out in to a valley and when it got wide enough the base began to fill up with more cultivation, sides of the river lined with small irregular fields. Suddenly a large bush ran across the road followed by a short rotund woman, shouting at it. Just below the bouncing branches four mischievous donkey hooves were visible, we had to pull over to avoid laughing ourselves into a ditch as the bush 'ee-oh'ed its self down the road!
Further along we passed a cliff that was wall papered with bright carpets, sheets and clothes, drying in the sun while the family worked the crops below. As I turned back to the road a bike was coming the other way with the rider waving frantically, he was gesturing to stop, an oval country sticker on his fairing read 'TIM'. It was none other than Mr motocycling-in-Morocco himself, Tim Cullis, after a chat! Tim contributes regularly to ADVRider and other traveling wed sites, writing guides and articles for people heading to Morocco by motorbike, Robin had a stack of his info printed out and I had some of his guides in my phone, it was nice to meet the man himself! We exchanged news about the roads we'd ridden and got some pointers for the route ahead before a group photo and saying goodbye.
The map marked the roads surrounding Tizi-n-isly as 'Difficult or dangerous',  though 'and' may have been more appropriate. A narrow strip of tarmac, frayed at both edges and pot-holled down the middle was a two lane highway, at best the kerb like drop to the dust and gravel at the side (or at worse the plummeting drop to the doom below) made passing oncoming traffic a challenge. Most drivers went out of their way to make room though before arriving in Tizi one fire engine ironically had forced us off the road. Tizi itself was a busy town with streets full of people and animals, built on steps up a steep hill, it felt as real and un-touristified as it could get. The road kept climbing and higher and higher we went on our way to El-Kebab. We'd chosen Kebab as a good breaking point for the night and it wasn't far from the route Doug had recommended, while the town may have had a disappointing number of fast food outlets it did take us up so high and presented such an amazing vista it felt like we could see all of north Morocco.
There was a small track on the GPS just beyond the 'Bab which went straight up the next hill and looked like it might be good for camping as the lower hills and valleys were usually farmed but higher areas less populated. As we climbed it began to resemble the 6-day Trials, but steep gravel slopes, washed out ruts and exposed boulders were only half the problem, the steady flow of surprised looking people and animals and people riding animals down the track made it tricky, stopping engines to let a goat herd pass was always followed by a tricky, scrabbly hill start. At least they were coming down, the hill top would be empty we thought, but no, green pastures and more and more people and villages!
After riding most of the track before it returned to the main road houses thinned out and an even smaller branch took us up to a summit where a quarry had been dug, finally the end of the line. From here the view was just immense, there seemed more hazey horizon to look at than the eye could take in. Mountains seemed to roll all the way up to the Mediterranean which the imagination could almost place right where they met the sky. It was quite a spot to pull out the mats for one last camp and our second last night in Africa.
 

Saturday, 11 June 2011

Gone Feshing

I'd woken up in the in the dark to see an angry looking figure with balled fists standing over where I was sleeping, it glared down silhouetted against the starry sky. Luckily it turned out to be Robins DR and knuckle guards but it got the adrenaline going! Over all it had been a bad night for both of us though, it had been a hot and sweaty evening but the temperature had plummeted over night until we were wrapped up and shivering over breakfast. A big beautiful orange sun rose through the dusty desert air between the jaggy peaks and didn't have to climb that high before again we were peeling off layers. We'd read it in a few places and had found it was very true; Morocco was a cold country with a hot sun.
The trail we followed lead through a valley to the east before it opened up on to a wide plain of firm sand sprinkled with small stones. In the distance mountains and a couple of kasbars shimmered already on the horizon and a small dust cloud coming the other way gradually turned in to a white pick up truck which we then exchanged waves with. We got up to a good speed on the firm stuff with only a couple of soft wallows to negotiate before we were greeted by a high speed 2CV followed by a desertised truck, both Pari-Dakaring across the plain. The kasbars looking like Foreign Legion forts amongst the dunes turned out to be camping grounds, the high walls giving protection from the sand and wind and there were more than two once we got going, each announced it's location in the dunes or rocks with a battered hand scrawled sign displaying coordinates. People inside ran out to welcome possible visitors or beckoned us in when they heard the engines coming, we'd wave but in the sand stopping wasn't an easy option.
Aiming at a gap in the dunes occupied by one 'fort' in particular we burst through past it and on to a dry lake bed of crazed white mud. It was difficult to see definition and contours across the baked bleached surface but in the distance there were buildings at the foot of the hills and we found a shallow brown receding lake.
Stopping on the firm ground I tried to wash my hands in the water but only succeeded in painting myself brown, it felt good though; the heat was pretty intense by now.
From the buildings of Um Jerane ahead a white Land Rover appeared, a large moustached man trying to round up travellers for his auberge. We managed to get directions from him to find the right sandy track out if town which lead between two hills and in to the valley beyond.
However the Ktm was loosing power again. The hotter it got the more it seemed to happen. It was annoying on the road but on the sand it became dangerous. Several times while trying to power through deep soft stuff it went and the front dug in, without power the only way to avoid going over the bars or washing out was to work quick and balance the deceleration with the back brake, exciting stuff.
We stopped under a tree to let the bars on the gauge fall and heard two single cylinder engines approaching from opposite direction, two middle-aged French guys in bright coloured body armour on XTs were joined by three support 4x4s of friends and partners. In the spirit of desert comradeship they offered their help after enquiring if we were ok but unfortunately it wasn't the right place to start stripping the fuel system again. We exchanged notes about the roads ahead and wished each other well, we didn't share a lot of language but the words 'fesh fesh', a point at our baggage and a shake of the head didn't bode well for us! We shrugged and smiled, there was only one way to go, could it really be any worse than the sand we'd bashed before?
Well yes and no, ridding round a rise to see a valley filled with nothing but smooth rolling white dunes made our collective hearts sink. Ridding 50yrds in and getting the KTM buried to it's back axle had me climbing the tallest dune I could find and shaking my head like the Frenchmen!
I laid the bike on its side and filled the hole left by the wheel but in the heat I had no strength to get it rubber side down again, luckily Robin arrived with a helping hand and a pep talk. He pointed out the obvious, we'd just have to churn through it!
The next five or six kilometres were a test of many things; riding skills, engine temperatures, rider temperatures and tempers. We were literally running in sweat, Robin stopped to adjust something and it poured out his waterproof sleeve, the pale corrida of my jacket was showing huge dark areas and our water supply was taking a beating. We wove our way though the soft sea, feet paddling and tyres spinning, trying not to run in to each other as we both tried attack it with some degree of speed to gain stability, while not getting separated amongst the dunes and dry oueds. This was proper Fesh Fesh, we'd had bits before but not kilometres of it without escape or ability to see the end or even horizon.
As soon as it had began it stopped and we were suddenly riding between dry fields on a road of sorts which became the outskirts of Ramilia. Builders working on a breeze block building ahead waved us down, not ones to miss an opportunity they wanted to be our guides and take us to the local restaurant, it took a bit of work to extricate ourselves before we literally rode round the corner to park under the shades of the very place, we were due a few cold drinks!
Achmed the owner could have been a stunt double for Quentin Tarrentino and sat and talked with us as the wind whipped the sand about, sticking to our wet skin and getting in my Fanta. Kids played all around in the hot square, entertained by pointing and giggling at the strange travellers while one older girl occasionally approached us trying to sell crafts we sadly had no space for in our luggage. Fatigue was showing all round and face down in a puddle on the table Robin fell asleep.
Luckily the road out of town was a bit better and we put tyre pressures up a little to deal with some of the small rocks now in the sand. We crossed more dried riverbeds, each a maze of small cliffs and canyons to navigate, it was overlaid with deep ruts and tyre tracks but at least the going was firmer.
The hot wind from the south was picking up clouds of sand and blowing them across our path, once so thickly we had to stop under a tree and wait for it to die down. As if by magic a small family appeared carrying a basket of crafts, after shaking hands and thanking them for their offering they said goodbye and disappeared again in to the dunes.
It was hot work riding and at a water break further down the road a chubby young guy, face wrapped from the wind and sand, arrived on a mobillette. He advised against the road/feshfesh ahead and invited us to his auberge but it was still too early in the day, he did however suggest a diversion though a village on the other side of the valley before bouncing off down the tracks making sand riding look easy, if a little slow and less exciting!
We had learnt the hard way to be a little caution of 'good advice', a few hundred meters of deep sandy oueds and rocky climbs out again had us wondering if the lad on the scooter was now dispatching a conveniently located 4x4 recovery truck from the village at the other end. However it wasn't the mobilletteier we should have worried about, rather the guys in the next village so desperate to 'guide' us poor lost foreigners back to the piste for a few Dihrams that the way ahead became everything from impassible or non existent to a forbidden military zone! It was on the Garmin though so we pushed past them but only to encounter a second wave followed by two on a scooter in hot pursuit. British manners nearly got the better of me and I stopped just short of telling them we didn't want the F-ing piste and where to stick their military zone before blasting off in to the desert quicker than they could follow. Thankfully it worked and the way ahead was all as predicted :)
Finally the main piste became gravelly and firm, we were riding a bright white roller-coaster of jumps and berms like down hill mountain bikers. The DR's shock seemed a little tired and it was bottoming out but the laden KTM was in its element, leaping from peak to trough like a hyperactive hippo on a trampoline, it was great fun!
I cleared a rise in the air and passed a mobillette on the far side, trying to wave. At the top of the hill we met the first of three blue Merc supply vans Achmed had told us were due in Ramilia today and rode past a few more desert auberges, there was a feeling we were slowly returning to civilisation. Indeed on the horizon a radio mast popped up followed by some pink buildings and a roadside distance marker for Merzouga, then the prize, Tarmac! We stopped to celebrate, each time we rode on sand and lived it seemed good enough cause, we still weren't skeletons in the desert and the carefully choreographed self timer photo of an aerial high-five proved it!
Chez Julia gave us a warm welcome, the earth building with a tall exterior wall was well signposted in Merzouga and the mercifully cool rooms lead off a central kitten filled courtyard. Julia was an Austrian photographer/painter come interior designer who had at some point settled in her country of inspiration, with the help of some Moroccan staff her B&B was clean, reasonably priced and prided itself on serving good food. After filling the shower tray with sand we met Hugo from Paris in the dining room, a young guy travelling for 10 days on his own he was a kindred spirit who had also found sanctuary from Marrakech in the desert. We sat and swapped stories for a while then, inevitably, turned in for a well needed early night.

Friday, 3 June 2011

The Desert Garden

Getting back on the piste heading east towards Zagora was a bone shaking experience! The brown wavy sedimentary hills to the south contrasted with the darker black volcanic rock that spilled across the plain from the north and livened up the ride. To the south was evidence of a new road being built and it was no real surprise when at the cross roads for Bou Rbia there was a sign for Mecanique General! Luckily frpm here the piste widened and smoothed out, obviously used for servicing the village, with more curiosity than effort the Ktm was easily pushed past 80mph, a weird feeling but it seemed to confirm what the 990s were built for! After the short blast things became a little sandier until we rolled on to the Tarmac approaching Zagora.
Zagora was basically one long street. Like so much of Morocco they were busy resurfacing the road. We stopped in the shade for a drink and found Robin's front tyre was rapidly going flat, inside it looked like heat of the piste run had melted the previous patch and it was rolled up and blistered like a BCG scab, ew! Fixing the puncture was one thing, keeping the constant stream of mechanics on mopeds who wanted the job busy was another!
We'd read about an old battered metal sign on the way out of Zagora from the days of the camel trains that still read 'Tombouctou 52 Jours' but it was escaping us, luckily Hassan at the cafe wanted to show us after lunch and we followed his small but unstoppable 20kph mobilette through town and over the roadworks. Meeting him was much more memorable than the sign however which it turns out had been replaced with a painted concrete wall and story books. Not badly done but a little less authentic than expected!
One of Chris Scott's routes from his book Morocco Overland departs from the back of Zagora and arrives a day later
In Merzouga. Torsten told us he'd had quite an adventure along this route and Gert had been keen to escort us along it as it sounded quite tricky, it didn't sound like one to miss :) We adapted it a little by taking in the Vallee du Draa first and joining it just south of Tazzarine.
There are few bits of the Michelin map of Morocco so packed with palmtree and kasbar symbols as the Vallee du Draa, which gives a pretty good description of the place! From the stony desert we rode through a dense green ribbon of cultivation watched over by tall palms and huge earthen kasbars and towns. Small fields were lined with tall walls that over the years had slowly begun to melt back in to the ground and interweaving the lot were carefully maintained channels and canals, like arteries feeding the landscape. We took the piste up the east side of the valley rather than the main asphalt road and had the pleasure of riding through a near continuous stream of villages filled with smiling waving people and kids wanting to high-five as we rode past, it was like our first day in Morocco again.
The structures that could be built from just earth and straw were properly mouth openly stunning, five or six story tall fortresses with carvings and cutout decoration round the top, mosques with minarets and tall elegant archways, and amongst it all the disused buildings coming full circle and slowly returning back to the soil they originally came from.
It was getting dark by the time we arrived in Tarrazine and there didn't seem to be anywhere to stay, heading out we thought maybe we'd find a spot in the desert towards Tarhbalt but with luck screeched to a halt beside a sign pointing in to the sand labelled Les Jardines De Tazzarine, Auberge, it had to be worth a go! A tricky ride in the dark took us to a small walled farm where a boy in a stripy jumper ran out to nervously great us, it was a very warm welcome as the rest of the family waved from the house and we were ushered through a gate in the wall, they seemed very pleased to have guests even so late! As one by one the lad switched on the lights they highlighted corners of a vegetable garden edged with Bedouin tents and dotted with circles of stools and tables hidden in cosy corners and under wooden shades. It was like finding Eden in the desert, we were quite taken aback!
Dinner was huge on the low table in the carpet lined and open sided restaurant tent, they offered tajine and couscous but either of the two dishes that arrived would have fed both if us, even without the soup starter or melons for dessert! Saide the owner turned up looking a little flustered in his blue jellaba and tourist turban (presumably just called back from the pub!) completing the three generations we'd met that lived in the Jardins (www.lesjardinesdetazzarine.com)
Our tent was lined with carpets and looked every bit a film set sleeping beneath the mosquito nets.
It was time to get back in the desert! Robin was up early to change his back tyre and pads but a few technical difficulties stretched things out until we snoozed through the midday sun, and oddly rain shower too as the wind picked up. I was lucky enough to get a tour of the property from Saide, through his house where the women were preparing grain and vegetables, on the roof terrace where an extension was being built and finally round the back yard where the donkey and some goats were kept. His father was a nice old chap dressed all in white with a small hat, with few teeth he didn't speak but smiled the whole time and shook hands at every opportunity. Saide lead us through his village back to Tazzarine for fuel, water and of course mint tea. Robin's old knobbly tyre found a home on what must now have been one of the gnarliest off road hand carts in the Sahara :)
Things got more desert shaped from here on, turning east from Tahrbalt the dusty Tarmac stopped but the piste was closed too, embarrassingly an old man chased the 'cadeux' kids away with stones while we asked directions. Heading out on a track we were soon at the top of a gorge overlooking the bridge building work that had closed the piste. From no where half a dozen curious kids arrived who lined up to shake hands before we left to find a way down.
The rough tracks through the stone strewn hillside were a maze of dead ends. Eventually we found a scrabbly track down a cliff face in to the valley below where there seemed to be an oasis. With a gulp we rolled over the edge, it was hard on the arms with some big drop offs and slippery gravel. I got to the bottom and watched Robin from the valley below, it was scary just as a spectator! The sandy track lead to a house with an old man and a girl with a baby, we checked directions and crossed over the dry sand filled riverbed before climbing in to the village on the other side. Villagers stopped us left and right to offer directions but it was as much to see where we were going and coming from. Crossing over the river again and up a steep climb three young women pointed us down the road out of town. It deviated from the gps track I had for Um-Jeran but when Robin stopped to ask the girls panicked and nearly ran away, they were smiling and laughing but obviously unsure of the spaceman asking directions to the next village, even the spaceman took an unsure step back!
The track lead through a rocky valley before a branch climbed up to over look a plain. The route down was badly eroded but watching a moped in the distance we were able to retrace our steps and find another track. The scree on the track was tricky and the worn tyre on the ktm struggled a little, even Robin with his new Metzler spun a doughnut on one ascent.
On the plain we found a ridge to sleep on, the wind died down and it was another amazing stary night. In the distance were the lights of Um Jerane and once or twice before we fell asleep the yellow glow of a mobillette headlight rose and fell on it's way through distant dunes.

Saturday, 28 May 2011

Once more across the Atlas...

I took the baffles out the KTM's exhaust today. In general we tried to minimise the attention we drew but amongst the Marrakech traffic I felt the more people looking the better, given shoulder checks were unheard of and mirrors scarce. Vehicles still pulled out, in particular the mopeds, but it felt better knowing they at least heard and glanced over to see their fate approaching! Five minutes had already been enough to convince me no one riding a moped in Marrakech had any intention of living anyway!
It was so hot yesterday, there was no relief from a breeze either, 38decC it said in a petrols station in the cooler evening and everything was sticky and clammy. Today was nearly as bad but with things to do we headed in to town with the intention of making a break for the mountains before long. Maybe it was because of the heat that after leaving the Unimog draining over night Jason found a big frog doing back crawl in the oil change pan this morning, poor thing!
As we found any area of Tarmac can be used for a vehicle in Marrakech, speed and safe proximity have no relation, priority and even driving on the right side of the road are optional and heaven help anyone who believes in lane discipline! In no time just to make progress we found ourselves throwing thoughts of roadcraft to one side and at least partially adopting the lunacy of those around us, the scary thing was that evidence of the driving style not working was also all around!
With some Googling, some scouting and some seeing off of an annoying tout with no teeth and bottle bottom spectacles (I've never seen Robin loose his temper before!) we found Cycle Afra, a couple of guys selling scooter parts who hid their angelic wings well, that's what they turned out to be when they said they could get shiny new Metzeler tyres to us by 11am the next day. We did wonder if that was on an African clock but after another night back at the camp site we were greeted with big grins and a MCEKaroo and Enduro3 for about the same price as back home, thanks guys! For anyone else in need: Latitude: 31.620492° Longitude: -7.990622°
Not only did it cool heading in to the mountains it started to chuck it down and in 30 seconds we were drenched, in 60 I remembered the bottom of my right pannier was still split open!
Splashing through the mud we found our way in to the colonnades of a part built shop where the workers were sheltering and a scooter or two joined us. I taped up the box and after half an hour or so we ventured out again, steaming and sticky in the sun.
The foothills of the Atlas enroute to Ouarzazate looked a bit like Scotland. The hills were rocky but dark green and sprinkled with sheep, what made them different were the cacti, earthen buildings and increasingly chasmic drops! As vegetation thinned to individual bushes on the hillsides the bottom of the valleys became filled with sheets of green and gold; billiard table flat overlapping terraces of crops like handfuls of giant beer mats sprinkled from up high.
Eventually the road climbed up over the jaggy volcanic teeth sticking out the top of the Atlas, it looked very similar to the hills in Edinburgh and I wondered if they shared a history. We passed number of victims be it a truck that had emptied it's guts in an oily mess, a sand filled lorry on it's side clinging to the crumbling verge or a crumpled post van opposite a truck driver climbing up the cliffside with some of the pieces. On every corner small piles of crystals and fossils were for sale gathered by locals, often teetering on the brink of a Tolkien-esque plunge.
We rode along a short ridge before dropping back down the other side, on both crossings the south of the Atlas had been more rolling and less rocky and by the time we took a shortcut off the N9 left to detour past the ancient city and kasbar of Ait Benhaddou the trail was a BMX track of compacted dry clay, great fun!
Up on the hill the terracotta town looked an ancient warren of towers and terraces. On reflection it would have been a fascinating place to stay but this evening our target was Ouarzazate. Unfortunately the Bikers Home promising a workshop, hot showers and cold beers was closed but we were lucky to find the friendly Hotel La Vallee who locked the bikes in a courtyard and did a great breaky for less than tenner a head. At the restaurant across the road we met the toughest kitten in town, he was beating up the other cats and even tried to get the dinner off our table, all while looking like the photo on a greetings card!
In the morning one of the staff Hamid told us a little about the pistes between Foum-Zguid to Merzouga as his village lay just past Zagora. Torsten had experienced quite an adventure riding from Merzouga to Zagora and it had made us a little apprehensive about the route, particularly as Gert had also offered to take the luggage and escort us in the Hilux! A compromise seemed to be to ride up the Vallee du Draa after Zagora and shortcut down from Tarzzarine, taking 70kms or so out of the rocky stuff.
From Agdz to Foum-Zguid the hills were gentler but the occasional canyon or plunge still took the breath away. There was less farming here and the cliffs and hillsides were beautiful stripped ribbons of sedimentary layers, as if the contour lines of the map had been painted on and then subsidence and weather taken their toll.
As we entered the valley just after Tasla it looked like everything was covered in a thin layer of chickweed, I had to stop and check, in fact the dark shimmery green was fingernail sized chippings of rock and we soon passed through what looked like a large copper mine. There were a few other mine shafts in the hills too and the green shimmer still tinted areas when we rode through the oasis and onto the piste of the N12 heading east.
This was a barren volcanic rock strewn plain between two jebels that could have been used for spoofing the Apollo moon landings; grey sand was nearly lost amongst the jaggy carpet of fist to football sized black chunks. In the complete lifeless-less silence we pitched camp in a sandy hollow, the sun disappeared and the clouds came over. With a few spots of rain a hot, moonless black duvet was drawn over us.

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Escape from the Sahara

Bends in the road, curves, ups an downs, earth and green stuff, palm trees, even water, this wasn't desert any more! We turned right out of Tiznit and climbed in to the hills towards Igherm. The road swept and rolled through villages and and over summits, mostly good quality Tarmac it was an endless rollercoaster compared to the thousands of miles we'd just ridden. Contrary to the warnings though it was hot, very hot, one local told us the weather was unstable just now, it had just been raining hard the other day.
And it was nice to feel welcome again, kids shouting and waving and groups of village elders returning sageful nods. Only the women who seemed to be working hard everywhere were more reserved; in the first village all wearing black with gold hems, covering their faces as we approached and from there on dressed like bright coloured Japanese ninjas, all but the eyes veiled up. A lot of villages were dotted with billboards showing photos of the king.
As evening drew around us we found a track to a phone mast on a ridge and getting away from the road. Ruins of what looked like a walled farm complex sat on the summit and all around us were piles of eroded rocks, riddled with veins of hard quartz like medical teaching aids. Again we slept under the stars, this time looking across several valleys and villages.
The sound of a savage battle awoke us, it was impossible to tell who was winning; the donkeys or the cockerels in the villages below, both were making equally good efforts! With golden sun breaking across the rocks we got an early start to cross the Atlas mountains. Gert and Remmie has texted to say they would be in Marrakech the previous night so we arrange to meet them around midday, what we didn't factor in was the road ahead! 200kms, mostly single track, partly gravel, often victim to land slides and subsidence and climbing to 2400m up a near vertical wall of rock. This wasn't built by the Swiss, nothing was blasted through, it clung to the outside edge of every projection and only sometimes was a 10 inch wall there to hide a little of the fate awaiting the unwary! I've ridden a good share of Alpine roads but this was the first mountain pass that really gave me a touch of the vertigo wobbles.
With luck but also a little disappointment we found the northern side of the pass to be gentler gradients and easier on the tyres, brakes and survival instincts. It unwound from hairpins to rollercoaster to plains and by early after noon we arrived in the outskirts Marrakech.
Wide streets and the gps it was quite easy to find Camping de Relais where we had planned to meet Gert and Remmie. But as we got nearer we spotted them going the other way, a note left at the camp site said they had headed in to town and were then going to head south, it didn't look like our paths were going to run parallel after all. Right after that the KTMs fuel pump problem seemed to return, it was popping and banging and cutting out again, we just managed to limp in to the camping site.
Relais wasn't cheap but we treated ourselves to a 'nomad' tent, the PVC smelt like a bouncy castle in the sun but it was nice inside and over looked the blooming garden and pool. But one thing more than the others we were very aware of was this place was hot, we were baking without any breeze! In the slightly cooler evening we hauled the left tank off again and the fuel pump out, no obvious signs of plastic shavings this time but we tried giving the tank a good wash out just in case. After a swim the next morning I took the other tank off as well and began a battle that would last until the afternoon to pull the subframe straight and get the tanks fitting right without pinching the fuel hoses again. Luckily Chris came over to say hello, a young guy driving a 4x4 Transit camper south on his own (brave lad!) with an awning to get out the sun and a selection of bigger tools! He even had a bottle jack to spread Robin's pannier rack back out! Parked beside Chris were Jason and Claire in a most impressive UniMog camper that looked like it could go pole to pole without even noticing, their site is www.moglet.co.uk
By the time everything was shipshape again the head of the day was intense. Riding in to town to see the ruined Palac de Balaii, amongst the chaos of Marakech traffic with scooters coming out of both armpits, was all just too much and we gave up, settling for a walk instead and trip to the local supermarket. Luckily they sold both beer and ice-cream and after two lollies and riding back through a thunderstorm we had a barbecue with Chris, part way making up for all the beer denied to us over the last few weeks.

Saturday, 21 May 2011

Beach bums

The encampment in the park D'Arwin was truly a little bit of heaven on earth, I kept thinking of how much Maria would love it with the birds and waves and creatures in every pool. The fishing was good and the guys had started at 6am and were pulling out as many fish as they hung hooks on the line, not all to their eating taste with a lot of small sharks and catfish which were let go. By the time they returned there was more than enough for lunch, meanwhile Robin and I did a cooked breakfast which was a surprising success given what ingredients were available!
The shy older guy who looked after the tents, Silvo, helped prepare the fish and they were barbecued on a drift wood fire pit dripping in Remmie's marinade. Remmie pulled out the stops and presented the fish on a big dish piled with rice and cucumber and we ate together in the coolness of the tent. This really was the life, if only we had a few cold beers!
It grew dark quickly and we re-stoked the fire, Silvo joined us with his tea making equipment and brought a carpet and some chairs, I got the feeling he was pretty lonely as he didn't actually live in the village and enjoyed the company. Again master chef Remmie got on the case and between them we went to bed full of omelette and sweet tea.
The group got an earlyish start to tackle to route back. Robin and I made good progress this time despite some wandering dunes and thankfully this time without major incident made it back to the Total station in an hour and a half. The Hilux had just arrived and they were pumping the tyres back up, we'd completely passed each other in the desert without noticing. With some quick goodbyes again Torsten negotiated with a truck driver heading south and the Belgians took off north, with luck we'll see them again in Morocco.

Robin had received some sad news about the loss of a very close friend's mum while we were in Senegal. At 11am, to coincide with the funeral in the Uk, we headed in to the desert behind the station and had a quiet moment, facing north. Two curious donkeys came and joined us while Robin said a few words about Sheila.

Back in the station about twenty early 90 Mercs had arrived as this years German Dust and Diesel rally, driving down to Dakar before back to Mauritania to sell them, if only Torsten had waited half an hour! We ate breakfast and got on the road.
It was strange to see the landscape changing again in reverse, even the types of cars and encampments rolling back, like some kind of test to check it had all been real the first time. The storms must have passed and the sky was clearer again and mercifully the air cooler, in fact as the road turned along the iron ore train line to head back towards Nouadibou the temperature fell noticeably, the wind now coming from the sea rather than the desert. We met the dodgy looking road block again at the turn off for the frontier but could see they were real gendarmerie in the pickup this time, a document check and away across the rail track where the air was now properly cold.
Since I had done the Mauritanian entry I elected to do the exit, which all went surprisingly quickly after a wait for the end of lunch break. It was quiet today and these guys had all been a lot more professional last time than their southern counterparts, in an hour we were back in no mans land, determined not to buckle another wheel on the rocks or plough it into a other sand pit!

We rode past the wrecked cars and piles of pillaged goods, along the sand tracks and past a few cars and lorries picking their way in the other direction. When we reached the money changers in the central clearing Robin stocked up on a few Dhirams before we rode the last section to arrive in palm tree lined reception alleyway of the Moroccan frontier. If Senegalese border posts were Ford Fiestas and Mauritanian BMWs, Moroccan felt like a Bentley. Efficient, polite, smiling (maybe they could send over a few interns from US immigration). With a chat and a laugh and a 'Bon voyage!' we were back in to Western Sahara. The Bureau de Assurance closed at 6 so arriving at 5.45 the guy had already gone to the pub, there was nothing for it but head up the road to camp.
Learning from last time we found a pile of rocks marked with a rag and headed down the track towards the Marine post, turning to head along the beach a bit. We had a very friendly visit of course to check who we were and cooked dinner, washing up in the crashing waves on the rocks beyond the small sandy cliffs.
The way back seemed a lot longer than the outbound leg, unwillingly my mind started playing games trying to guess the next petrol station or land mark. I remembered the sand eaten rocks, hollowed out by the whipping winds, the herds of shaggy camels looking grumpily at the noisy vehicles, towers of rocks built up by shepherd boys, great slabs of sandstone stood up and hand scrawled with an advert, but I hadn't noticed the emerald green sea, streaked with blue and topped with long racing white horses. Sometimes it appeared between the cliffs or dunes others it dropped away and I stood on the pegs to catch the last glimpse, it was beautiful in the sunshine.
The KTM was getting a bit of a wobble on so I pulled in to a petrol station to check the tyre pressures, low front, very low, then we spotted the thorns, about twenty of them from the desert. In fact just as we'd pulled out two that had made it through the 4mm inner tube and patched them under a tree Robin checked his front tyre and found the biggest thorn of all, deflating the tyre instantly when he pulled it out. It was going to be slow progress today!
In the next petrol station a man in crazy glasses and juggling trousers approached us, he was Portuguese and with his friend riding two GSs down to Burkina Faso. He asked about Mauritania, if we had experienced any problems and told us they had just had three days of rain through Morocco. Further up the road we could see the evidence, the desert was flooded on to the road, bowls and oueds in the landscape now full of redish brown water, some areas of green looking brighter beside the dark wet ground. It seemed crazy, mud, in the desert!
We spent the next night in Boujdour, a fishing town come military base, being served by a mini Joey form Friends just down the road from the traditional Moroccan styled hotel El Qoeds, tiled blue with hand carved plasterwork, the bikes even got a garage.
The sand kept rollin past but now there were less dunes again. Laayoune was full of white UN 4x4s and minibuses. They helped us locate the only bar in town, hidden through a network of passageways at the back of the smart hotel. In the dim illicit surroundings a few business men wobbled about served by an old school barman with everyone on a tab, we drank the first beers since our most southern point in Senegal. The interior decor must have originally matched the rest of the hotel but it was obvious it hadn't been touched or even cleaned in a long time, like the shady black sheep of the family, lead astray but still reluctantly included in the establishment.
It was no easy task trying to find the southern entry to Plage Blanche from El Ouatia along the coast behind Tantan. An old guy with deep sunken eyes told us by the beach in town that he hadn't heard of it but that the coast further north was full of US military playing war games. This tied up with what the French lads had said last time we were there, they had stood and negotiated access from a side road to the beach. We headed up the track along the clifftops and passed through some abandoned earthworks, it was stoney and hard going on the DR, with the odd surprising muddy puddle! Climbing a rise we stopped to discuss progress and an APC appeared from no where grinding it's way at a steady speed across the track! Looking around there were more of them, spinning, driving, going in every direction at once like a box of windup toys let loose. A jeep bounced over with an irate older guy and a smiling middle aged driver both in uniforms, it was indeed now ALL a military zone and these ten tonne ballerinas were the toy soldiers the old man had meant. More than a bit disgruntled I told the officer a road sign might have been a good idea, we got an apology but not much else, just a lumpy 10km back to town.
Turning inland the countryside instantly became greener and we pulled up hills and across plains, overtaking lorries stacked high and old Renaults burning oil. We were out of Land Rover land again back in to the world of the hard worked Mitsubishi truck. As the sun got low we found a sandy washout behind some rocks cut through by the main road, it was surprising how quickly the sound if the road disappeared and then stopped as the traffic wrapped up for the night. The stars began to poke out and Robin decided to break out the last of his 'gift' shortbread, it had survived the miles of desert for a fitting end; sitting on the rocks with a nice cuppa overlooking the valley.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

'We can't stop here, this is bat country!'

The landscape changed again before we hit the main road that would take us along the Mauritanian border towards the crossing again. Some sort of irrigation pumping station by the lake was feeding the surrounding land through network of canals, the results were green fields filled with crops and people working hard in the sun. The piste was packed firm here but still full of potholes, not the kind of potholes that might buckle your wheel but more that might swallow it whole! Small bridges crossed the canals every so often and were like motocross jumps.
The main road was narrow due to years of erosion. It was built high off the ground and gave a good view of the green Senegal to the south and dry yellow Mauritania to the north. Sections were under repair and the traffic was diverted down temporary parallel pistes which was adding time to our journey. By the time we reached St Louis for some fuel, provisions and a post box it was after mid day.
At Diama our old friends were waiting. I drew the lucky straw and was through the customs within five minutes with a smart young officer with a flying stamp. Robin wasn't so lucky but managed to wait out the police demands for bribes and when it came to the bridge again I named our personal friend the bridge engineer I had been talking to last time we were there to half the 4000 Ougea each the guy wanted. We even managed some money changing with the guy.
The Mauritanian side wasn't so easy, the police were demanding their 'weekend' (Friday and Saturday) rate of €10 a bike, an unpleasant skinny scruff of a chief with black teeth liked to make himself feel important from behind computers and scanning equipment labeled 'EU Donation'. Eventually I got it to €5 each but he demanded crisp smart bills, customs were not so easy but then there had been what seemed a more legitimate €10 when we entered at the northern border.
Outside two Belgians had arrived in a black Hilux and were trying to get in to a yellow Jeep, they had parked it there at the start of the year and a friend was supposed to have driven it back to Nouakshott but it hadn't happened. Our outlays were small beer compared to their five months storage 'fee'.
We paid up and were away, getting as far as the police check up the road with the park warden. This time the price was €10 each, when we laughed at him it became €5, when I went to get the original ticket out my luggage it was back to 1000 Ougia again (€2.50), the only problem being we didn't have any Oogs left after the border! Eventually we settled with €5 and 2000 Cifa, disappearing in to his pocket right in front of the watching gendarmerie. He joked and laughed the way we learned corrupt officials always did after they got at least part of their way and headed off in to the park.
He piste was as rutted as before, keeping the speed up with the ktm was tricky as the wild pigs darted out the reeds on one side and across the plain on the other. Robin again took to a track alongside where more mobility but less suspension travel was better suited and it wasn't long before we were passing through the deep sand of Keur Maceine. With no cash we kept on going and found ourselves again dodging camels along the spectacular rise and fall of the Diama Piste, this time in the soft sand diffused light of the sunset.
A bit further and we stopped at a small village to ask to use the well, while Robin filled the bottles from the 10m deep shaft the kids asked me to read all the writing in English on their clothes, from the reactions I'm guessing it sounded pretty funny to them!
Before the main road and leaving the park we turned off in to the desert landscape and rode three or four hundred meters round the back of a small rise to pitch camp under a spiky tree. The usual pasta and sardines under a half moon sky.
The next day I found myself in a familiar comforting place as check points came and went; the crap at the border had made me feel far away from home and I was really missing Maria, back on the black top and sitting behind the bars of the bike I had my music on and could watch the landscape rolling past again, knowing every km that shot past was going in the right direction. Each salute from a professional and friendly Mauritanian officer felt reassuring, the Senegalese corruption had only infected the country so far.
The desert rolled back again from orange to white sand and we rode in to Noukashott and navigated through the dusty streets to the old pizza place opposite Auberge Saharah, today didn't feel like a day for experimenting.
As we ordered who should arrive but the two Belgians from the border Gurt and Remmie! They joined us for some over cooked pizza and it was great to hear some of Remmie's stories about teaching in Dakar and Gurt's about organising various rallies across Africa while we all ate. They invited us to join them for a couple of days up the coast on the beach in Park D'Arguin, Gurt was a keen fisherman and Remmie a keen cook, it seemed too good an opportunity to miss. We'd actually heard of the place from David and Hana but hadn't had the courage to go off exploring in the 'badlands' of Mauritania by ourselves.
We scrubbed our plan and headed across the road to join them at the Auberge. As the gate of the courtyard drew back a familiar German numberplate came in to view, closely followed by the smiling face of Torsten, he'd survived riding the iron ore train! Hugs and handshakes, it was good to see him safe and well and we introduced him to our new friends. He had a couple of his own too, another Belgian, LouisJean driving a truck back down to Mali loaded with a prototype jet boat for use by customs on the river Niger and Abraham, a retired and converted Londoner returning from studying Islam with his Imam in the desert.
The evening was good fun, it was nice to have familiar company while we fixed the truck, swapped stories, visited the fish market, got some more welding done on Robin's pannier rack and finally went out for something to eat. A plan formed for Torsten to join our fishing party by taking the Hilux north and hitching back south afterwards, it was looking like it would be a great few days!
Morning came and the key for my luggage bent again. I grabbed a taxi in to town and returned an hour later red faced and pissed off. The locksmith had started by breaking the key, then messed up cutting a new one, then tried to swap the levers in the lock to make them match then finally, before restraining him, trying to cut down the levers. It took physical effort to get the pieces back and I told him I would return with a new barrel and would use his workshop to fix the mess he'd made. He looked pretty sheepish getting caught, ironically the Obama poster above his bench in the tiny workshop read something like 'truth and justice'.
The mess had delayed our departure long enough so I suggested the guys head off and I catch up later since i had the gps coordinates for the 60km route through the dunes. Nicely Robin joined me heading back to the locksmiths where luckily the boss had arrived and took no time to right the mess his apprentice had made. He showed me pictures of his bike which were both sadly rotting in a garage, can't get the parts he said, a piston and a big end bearing for a kx125. He took the web address off my Straightliners Tshirt and we swapped emails, he was a nice guy.
After fuel we were on our way again. I kept the level low as there was a station right by the turn off in to the desert and reducing the weight of the bike would help in the sand. I couldn't find the tracks of the 4x4 at first but once we got on the the waypointed route they became apparent. I struggled to get back in to the sand riding again until Robin convinced me and we started making better progress. The route snaked about dodging the biggest dunes and dotting between dark areas of sand which marked firmer ground and a resting point. Just when it was all going really well it went horribly wrong!
Pulling through some tall dune grass the way ahead opened up to deep sand ploughed in to ruts by dozens of 4x4s, these weren't going to pull the bike side to side, they were going to sink it up to the axles! It dropped in to the first one and I kept it on the power and in line for several meters then another track crossed the path and the suspension compressed and unloaded over the furrows, as the bike came back down to earth the front dug in as the bars went lock to lock and there was no where for me to go but over the top! Luckily the bike flipped over to the left but I tucked ready to slide, it being soft sand however I dug in too and went end over end like a well tossed caber! Quite literally as the dust settled I got to my knees, the world was awash with sparkly colours and my head felt like lead, I turned round to look back up the tracks and saw a black and blue heap fifty yards back, Robin had done the same thing! I beeped the horn and he returned my thumbs up, we walked towards each other, hugged one another with relief and sat down laughing about how it must have looked, sand was quite literally all over us!
The reality of it was it had been a lucky escape. Robin landed on his chin and wrenched his neck, his sunglasses grazing him just below his eye, I'd be knocked even sillier than usual and had a pain in my ribs and the bikes both had bent bars, the DR a cracked screen and twisted forks and the KTM a broken indicator, creased screen, squashed gps and bent front subframe. It was however all rideable, as were we!
We had learned our lesson and gave any signs of tracks a wide berth, riding a few hundred meters off to the sides of the gps points. We got our confidence back and soon the village appeared across a wide plain of deep red sand, it was tough going with the throttle wide ploughing through, certainly not somewhere to stop! Behind the village were the big dunes and behind that the Belgians 4x4, a row of traditional tents and the crashing sea. We paid our 3600 Oogia to the park ranger on the quad and drove down to the beach. The sky was yellow and orange with sand blurring out the sunset while opposite it was still blue, feeling triumphant I did a victory lap of the wet glistening beach through the bright green weed waving at the guys fishing on the rocks at the end of the dunes. It felt great to have made it!
They were pretty surprised to see us. Gurt said the tracks had all but gone since he routed them and he'd had to change his course to get the Hilux through. They expected us to get 500m and turn around and Torsten had guessed a half or whole days ride to cross it.
We unpacked in to the tent which was lined with carpets, mattresses and pillows just as films always said they should be and had a great evening, with the tide in the long rolling waves washed the beach just feet from the back of the tent.

Monday, 16 May 2011

Out to pasture...

It was the 10th and Robins Birthday, time for a day off riding! There was no better place for it either than Myriam's and the beach and lagoons beyond. We'd made a lot if friends the night before and it would be good to hang out in the bar another night too, with or without the entertainment of the two touting masseuse using gestures to over come the language barrier!
We did some bike maintenance then strolled down to the beach between two rows of breeze block buildings. The waves and tide were high, dramatic stuff and it made getting along the beach to the lagoon quite exciting, dodging waves and rocks. At one point Robin was left hanging by his fingertips as a wave hit the wall below!
Everyone on the beach wanted to talk, about their shop, about their drumming or other enterprise, or just to ask for money to feed a puppy in a plastic bag :/ A couple of poor security guards baked in the sun outside a posh hotel while guarding the helpless white whales that were washed up on the deck chairs, sunbathing wobbly bits while being spoon fed; it felt embarrassingly colonial. They were pretty much the first Europeans we'd seen in weeks. Further along the beach the lagoon was beautiful, the tide was turning and standing waves formed in the outlet to the sea, dogs played on the waters edge and several locals were jogging in the sand.
While changing money in town we bumped in to Muhammed, we'd actually met him briefly on Goree, a tall slim Rasta with a one love outlook on life. It was cool he recognised us and came over to drink Cafe Touba sitting on a wall in the square before going back to his house to hang out for a bit. Down a sand street it was a room in a divided house built round a courtyard, simple but he had plans to fill the place when he moved the rest of his merchandise from nearer Mbour. He insisted on a gift of a couple of the necklaces he makes and sells before walking us up to the internet cafe run by a guy who called himself of all things Mr Ben the shopkeeper, it wasn't a show I'd imagined being exported to Senegal! He was learning English and spoke pretty well, his favourite expression being to abbreviate 'we're together' to 'we be gether', in good humour! Other guys came and went and it felt like we'd met and chatted with most of Somone by the time we left in the dark, waving our goodbyes to the last of the locals, and walked down the sand at the side of the road. Live music was playing somewhere off in the countryside and it was really nice to hear it in come and go with the breeze in the peace of the dark street.
The reggae was playing back at Myriam's and we had a warm welcome from Sarif who'd taken up his position on the chair at the door, winter woolies and all. The bikes were still safe inside the courtyard and we joined the gang for their 'family' meal; a big dish of Senegalese rice beans and fish with pinches of chillies at one of the tables in the bar, we felt so privileged and welcome it was even harder to leave the next day!
An early start got us up to Bandia national reserve to catch the animals before they sleep after midday, rhino, giraffe and buffalo were promised wandering amongst warthogs and monkeys. A long red earth road lead up to the ticket and guide lodges beside a tall baobab. The entry cost was huge, it was going to be about £150 for a one hour tour so we settled down for a wait to see if we could share the 4x4 with anyone else who might turn up. From a seat with a cold drink in the restaurant it was possible to see the watering hole and everything but giraffes and rhinos passed by, by the time midday came and went without any other visitors we felt we had actually had a good slice of wild life so the disappointment wasn't too bad.
We missioned on up the secondary road from Sindia to Thies then east to Kbombole on the primary. To Baba-Garage (no sign for a photo unfortunately) to Darou Moustr should have been a secondary too but turned out mostly to be 4x4 trails through mostly sand, sometimes pretty soft! It was easier to ride along side, dodging the baobabs and thorn bushes and stopping in some of the villages, occasionally to the tune of 'toobob toobob!' (foreigner) sung by little kids voices. Villages as always were the most tricky where the sand was thickest and most trodden and speed needed to be kept low for safety, we felt pretty guilty spinning the wheels to get free while fighting not to make too much of a spectacle but still people smiled and waved back.
Camp was made just past Segata, rolling off 300m in to the land beside the road and parking under a tree in the sandy earth. It was a beautiful night without a tent and the first time we'd had moonlight as we cooked and got ready for bed.
Sunrise was a large orange circle hovering behind the Bonsai like trees on the horizon. It broight with it a friendly farmer, hand hoeing the land for the coming rainy season. He was elderly wearing a long brown woolen shirt and bobble hat with few teeth when he smiled at us. We offered him some tea and without any In Wooluf he asked for something to eat and luckily the mangoes from a village yesterday were on hand. He turned and started shouting to another farmer, 'petite petite petite!' he called and he came to join bringing a little fuzzy haired kid with wide eyes. The son spoke some French and we talked a little about the land and found out they didn't like the tea without shovels of sugar like the Moroccan Nana. Maybe it's individual experience or maybe it is the result if years of food and monetary aid from the west but people we were finding often demanded and got upset when they didn't receive money, at this point the old man began this and we decided to pack up the tea party and move on, but not before leaving some more mangoes. It was a bigger problem in Senegal than the other countries we had been to and it could be quite upsetting, usually it was the kids with tins but occasionally adults too. Knowing what to say or do was always tricky, particularly if we'd just asked for directions for example. Sometimes we could make a joke and get a smile turning tapping pockets in to a drum kit or saying 'yes yes for me please!' when they shouted 'cadeux!', others all we could do was say no, sorry. What was even more difficult to deal with was when an embarrassed elder chased them away with a stick. In fact something seemed to have suggested to people that every westerner simply oozed money, we had to negotiate some crazy prices some times, people thinking nothing of doubling or tripling the price and we heard a few times during negotiations 'but €10 is nothing to you', even when dealing with big businesses.
From Louga we kept north to Mpal where turned down a sandy street that lead out in to the Pal-merinaguene Sylvo-Pastorale Reserve. The map had again mislead us somewhat; there being no fuel in Mpal (we had to overshoot and return) and again a 'secondary road' being no more than 4x4 tracks in the sand! That said it was possibly the most beautiful ride of the trip so far.
The beginning just after lunch was the most tricky section, with no clear route we asked in every thatch built village. People were shy and occasionally a little scared at first when we stopped but always warmed up even without any french to help things along. We saw signs for 'Senegal Hunger Project' along the way and could clearly see how hard life could be in these rural areas, though the hospitality still extended to occasional invites for tea. Later when we couldn't stop in the sandy sections nods and waves were exchanged with smiles and sometimes shouts.
The name of the reserve was apt and most of the sand was topped with thin lime green grass which goats and bony cows roamed across.
Half way across we stopped for an oil change on the DR. It had been difficult to find anywhere during daylight where we could get a moments peace with the bikes to do it and the cool breeze beneath a spiky tree was a good spot, even if the sandy soil wasn't ideal conditions!
The last section of fast firm piste turned in to a quagmire of soft rutted sand 15km before we expected a nice Tarmac road, there was nothing to do but power through it to Kuer Momar Sar. Again the map was lying about the route and we were glad to have google maps downloaded on the iPhone to cross reference with!
The Tarmac took us north to G'nit and the potholes continued north, not just potholes to damage you're wheel but quite capable of consuming the whole thing! With the bikes we could mostly dodge round them but the poor locals trucks and 4x4s must have taken a beating.
Again we camped under a tree in what had now become Saharan desert again and again we were welcomed in the morning by a happy shepherd this time inviting us for breakfast. We'd already eaten so shared a little of ours with him before getting back in the road.

Friday, 13 May 2011

Furthest from home...

We chickened out or riding the bikes in to town this time and hailed a cab, the driver was a silk pajamaed harlequin and listened to us saying 'Dakar Marina', repeated it, demonstrated boats floating, and then took up to the airport. Everyone we spoke to said that the best visitor attraction in Dakar was the Isle of Goree, reputedly once involved in the slave trade but now a beautiful period village full of resident artists and mostly Senegalese visitors. After checking the customs office really was closed on a Sunday (had a chat with the security guard just in case as the pass avant finished today) we waded through the sea of belt and watch sellers that formed around us with 'no merci's and progressively less sympathetic looks. At first we thought it was another rip when the boat price was three and a half times more for foreigners than locals :/ but the visit was worth it.
What an amazing place! Painted houses either side of narrow streets were planted with flowers and lined with paintings for sale, birds of prey circled overhead, people were playing on the small beach by the pier and drinking outside restaurants. On top of the isle is a huge double barrelled piece of artillery from 1902, installed by the French and decommissioned when they left, leaving the network of posts and tunnels around the top of the rock for the squatting community of artists. In fact there was a buoy the boat rounded before drawing alongside the pier and Brahm, one of the five brothers occupying the gun, told us it was marking a wreck where 600 people died the last time the gun was used in anger. Brahm was a great guy who leapt about talking with enthusiasm about his adopted home while we talked about lifestyles, peace and war, art and Braveheart! I plan on dropping him a postcard from Edinburgh to say thanks for the tour of his home, I hope Brahm @ the Big Gun works as an address!
Monday and there was no escaping it, we had to pack up the flat and get an early start to hit the Doune first thing. It was surprisingly easy to find again and we only got pulled over once, luckily the officer loosing interest and walking off without even asking for papers! The other nice surprise was while sitting in the Place de Independence, surrounded by kids learning how to set KTM tyre pressures, Robin returned to say the customs didn't want a bribe this time! There had been a fixer this time but he did seem to have made the difference.
The bike tyres were passing the halfway wear point and we had been trying to sort out replacements by email but with no luck. A French guy on a 990SM had come and gone but only had the same contact I'd been emailing at Saudequip. At that point as luck would have it a loud quad 'baruped' in to the square and nearly ran over a bollard stopping to talk to us, it was a young guy who wanted to buy the Ktm! This was the second time I'd been asked in Senegal and wasn't the last either, there was demand for big bikes it seemed but a shortage of supply. Max turned out to be an importer who now lived in itay most of the year, except when easing shipments in to Dakar. A few phone calls and we were on the road having our eardrums blown and precision riding testing trying to keep up with the quad through the streets. Unsurprisingly we got pulled but the officer looked at the pass avant and walked off, strange but it wasn't until the next day before we realised why; apparently our fixer had got us put down as family of the ambassador to Guinea, we were visiting dignitaries!
Max's pal Issa had been a mechanic in the Dakar Rally twice before it was lost to South America. His yard was down some small streets and was full of bikes and engines in various states of dismantle, half a dozen guys were working around the place and the street outside was busy with people buying and selling. No luck this time on the tyre even with a few phone calls but Robin noticed a bend on the rack of the DR which Issa had welded up with a brace in no time. I promised to pass on his details for any other visiting riders needing a pit stop!
Issa Minou Motos
776347859, Latitude: 14.676157° Longitude: -17.453499°
We said our goodbyes and Max lead us to a petrol station beside a post office for fuel, stamps and postcards, with a handshake and a cloud of burnt rubber he returned back towards Issa's.
It wasn't long before got in to conversation with a huge guard on a tiny scooter from the prison we hadn't noticed next door. It sounded like a harsh place and he said it was home to three Scots as well, mercenaries with life for murdering a taxi driver while trying to get to the war in Sierra Leone. He was very philosophical about it, he said they'd had plenty of time to think about it too.
The Lac Rosse was next up, a pink salt water lagoon if the sun and humidity are right, traditionally the Dakar Rally had finished beside it. It was a great missed opportunity that at the end of the dusty potholed road there seemed to be nothing but salt works and beachside hotels. No finish mound, no plaque, just trucks. A kid on a horse came past on the shell piste and made it leap in the air, we waved and took photos of ourselves where we thought the chequered flag should have been, jumping about as well.
As the daylight slipped by it was time to get south, our furthest away night from home would be spent along the coast north of Mbour, recommended by a number of people. The sun was just beginning to set when we rolled in to Saly, it looked like a real seaside beach town fuelled by bars and quad bike hire, finding a reasonably priced place to stay was more elusive until the jolly round face of Salif greeted us at the door of Residence Myriam in Ngaparou, shaking us firmly with a mittened hand and grinning from bobble to bobble under his wooly hat. We met the whole crew too, Ali, Camo, Baysha and the guys welcomed us in, fed and watered us and made us part of the family to a soundtrack of Bob Marley and Senegalese Ballack.