It’s
one of those funny quirks of life is that the day before a trip tends to be
absolutely awful. Unlikely obstacles
gang up to throw themselves into your path with a conspiratorial glee, like
packs of cowardly dogs. Such was the
case the day before my trip to Taza.
Read previous entry for details.
Sometimes,
though, the pre-travel day is so miserable that the actual day of the trip
feels bad for you and turns out extra cool just to compensate. It’s nice when fate takes a little pity on
you while it’s kicking you in the gut.
As
I’d said in my last post, some friends and I had planned on a day trip to the
nearby town of Taza, which apparently had mountains and canyons and spectacular
vistas and whatnot.
I
was a little leery of taking our little rental car, battered and ancient as it
was, up the twisting Moroccan mountain passes.
Actually, I was goddamn terrified.
Mountain roads in developing countries are death traps – tiny little
dirt ledges cut into the sheer mountainsides, barely wide enough for two cars
to pass abreast. Add in the fact that
stepping behind the wheel will turn the most sober and responsible Moroccan
into a murderous psychopath and you’ve got a recipe for an exciting little
drive.
All
this was on my mind as I went my first faltering miles into the maze of the Rif
Mountains near Taza, but soon I was just having too good a time to worry
much. Anyone who likes driving can’t resist
a good twisty mountain road – the spectacular views, the tight turns, the all-too-reasonable
fear of death.
We
passed a canyon at one point with a little waterfall cutting down the center
and couldn’t resist the urge to get out and explore a little. It was a little eerie just how similar it was
to the Jemez and southern Rockies where I grew up, so I was feeling nostalgic
as I hopped and skipped like an eight-year-old down the dirt path on the side
of the canyon.
I
was a ways ahead of my friends when I got to the bottom, where the waterfall
emptied out into a pond that was the perfect shade of pure blue. (Julian – it was pure water). It was a
magical place, and I wasn’t the only one who thought so: a group of young
Moroccan guys were hanging out nearby, cooking fish and brewing tea. When they saw me they hopped up and came forward,
waving.
To
be honest, I was a little leery at first, and I made sure to keep the pond
between us, which must have seemed pretty rude.
But it was hard to shake the constant litany of warnings I’d gotten
since arriving in Morocco about how dangerous it is and how careful you have to
be whenever you’re go anywhere that’s slightly off the beaten tourist
track. Apparently around every corner
robbers wait in malevolent silence, ready to murder you, steal your valuables
and desecrate your corpse.
It’s
bullshit. The only time I’ve had any
concerns for my safety here was when I trespassed on someone’s property. They were understandably pissed, and came
after me to make sure I hadn’t stolen anything or done any damage. Every other time I’ve met someone in a
situation that might be dangerous, they’ve turned out to be incredibly
friendly. I’m not saying that there
aren’t desperate and violent people out there, I’m just saying that the vast, vast
majority are wonderful, welcoming people are delighted to see a Westerner get
away from the normal tourist spots to see a little of the real Morocco.
These
guys were no different. Once I’d gotten
over my timidity and came to join them they shared their tea and fish and we
relaxed in the sun for a while. My
friends all spoke Arabic much better than I did, so once they joined us we were
able to have a decent conversation and enjoy the day together. It felt like being back in Peace Corps, which
was great.
After
we said goodbye we loaded back up into the car and made our winding way to the
Friouato Caves. I’ve been to tourist
cave systems in America, like Carlsbad Caverns – lit with electric bulbs, accessible
via carefully groomed pathways, with helpful plaques every hundred feet to tell
you what the big lump of rock you’re looking at is supposed to be.
This
was not like that. The initial descent
was down a tiny concrete stairway cut precariously into the side of a giant
chasm that plunged over 700 feet straight down.
My friend counted 658 stairs before she lost track. Once at the bottom we donned our hardhats and
headlamps and squeezed through a crack in the wall, into a tight, long tunnel
that cut deeper into the earth without the helpful assistance of stairs, lights
or sanity.
At
that point we were spelunking, and we found out, as millions of spelunkers have
before us, why it’s called that. Caves
are wet. Each stalactite might only loose
a drop every couple hours, but add that up over millions of years without a
decent maid service and the whole place gets pretty damp. Every surface was slick with a kind of muddy,
calciumated, gritty ichor that clung to your clothes and skin. It certainly which made climbing interesting. Each of us slipped and fell at least once,
and by the end we were coated with mud and slime.
At
one point the only way forward was to cross deep pools of stagnant cave water,
which we managed with the aid of some bridges the cave owners had helpfully set
in place. When I say bridges, of course,
I mean planks of rotting wood less than a foot wide, slippery as a dog’s
nose. I can’t remember the last time
I’ve had so much fun walking ten feet.
That’s
another thing I love about being in developing countries. A tourist attraction like this could never
exist in America; the lawsuits would be through the roof. Liability insurance would be more than all
your operational costs combined. You’d
have to put in those electric lights and concrete paths and stupid little
plaques, and no one would get to walk the planks. You’d have to tame the place.
After
climbing back out of the caves and changing out of our filthy clothes, we piled
back into the car and got on the road. I
was enjoying the drive, and on a whim I took a random turn that led down into a
small valley. For some reason people I
travel with don’t like it when I do stuff like that. We were all in a pretty good mood, though, so
there weren’t too many arguments when I said I just wanted to see the bottom of
the valley then come back up and rejoin the main road.
Maybe
it’s my vanity talking, but I always get the vague feeling that fate likes it
when I do shit like this. It tends to
reward me with random coincidences and strange adventures. This time, we saved some German hikers.
We
saw the three of them about three-quarters of the way down, struggling up the
road and about ready to drop. Their
massive backpacks swaying back and forth made them look like exhausted blonde
hermit crabs. It was two men, a woman
and their dog, and they had gotten lost hours earlier and wound up at the
bottom of the valley, a couple dozen miles from their truck, which was at the
top of a nearby mountain. We squeezed
one of the men in and ferried him to his car.
I assume he went back to pick up his friends, although for all I know he
could have just high-tailed it out of there.
Still, karma points are rare these days, and you pick them up when you
can.
At
that point it was getting on to dinnertime, and none of us had eaten since
breakfast. The German who’d come with us
told us about a restaurant he’d heard was in a nearby village, so we set off to
find it. It wasn’t in the village he’d
mentioned, or the one after it, or the one after that. People we stopped on the road kept assuring
us it was just a little ways ahead, always just one village away. Every so often we saw a small cardboard sign
pointing the way, taunting us.
After
over an hour and a half of questing through the mountains we finally stumbled
on one of the most beautiful hotels I’d ever seen. This place was like a fairy tale castle, with
gardens, towers, and a sprawling villa.
Thrilled, starved, and in a state of shock we stopped the car outside
the gate and rang the bell. No
answer. We knocked, we banged loudly, we
shouted – nothing. A few passing locals
assured us that there were people inside, though, and since it was either find
them or drive starving back to Fez, I climbed the wall.
I
felt like kind of a jerk, sneaking onto this spectacular estate that someone
had clearly put so much time and money into.
Chalk it up to hunger, desperation, and a completely unjustified feeling
of justification – we’d come so far!
Waiting
for me on the other side was a massive German shepherd, a monster straight out
of mythology whose ancestors must have mated with a bear at some point in his
evolution. The damn thing looked like a
direwolf. He stared at me with eyes that
cut straight through the rational front of my mind and into the reptilian
hindbrain, where fear lurks, the part that still remembers being a shivering
primate, hiding from predators in the Mezosoic nights. Then, without breaking eye contact, the
hellbeast wagged his tail, lay down, and rolled over for a belly rub.
He
followed me cheerfully as I explored the sprawling grounds of the hotel,
complete with swimming pools, a performance area, and a vegetable garden large
enough to feed a village. I thought the
place was deserted until I accidentally scared the hell out of some cooks when
I wandered into the dining room. They
said the owner was away for the evening and the kitchen was closed.
My
Arabic wasn’t really up to the task of begging for my dinner, so I called in my
friend Caitlyn, who’s been studying in Fez for the last eight months and is as
close to fluent as makes no difference. She
also speaks French, and is generally a useful person to have around, a kind of
linguistic Swiss army knife. Somehow she
managed to convince them to open the kitchen and cook us dinner, because she
has powers I do not understand.
I
was hoping for just a sandwich or some soup or something. Instead they rolled out a four-course dinner,
with salads, fresh breads, a fruit and cheese plate, and a main course of
grilled lamb and mushroom. It was
incredible, easily the best meal I’ve had in Morocco. They topped it all off with a desert of diced
fruit and cream in bowls of rosewater topped with cream. I didn’t even know that rosewater was a thing
you ate. The whole thing was like a
dream - I kept expecting us to get turned into swine or something.
Stuffed
and happy, we loaded back into the car and made our way back to Fez. Every so often you get a good day, and when
you do you gotta squeeze all the day out of it you can.
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