We were only spending one night in Rabat, so per our now-familiar tour routine, we had to have our bags outside our doors before breakfast. With the time change, we were all awake and feeling good. After breakfast, we loaded onto the bus, which as I said earlier, was more full than usual, but there were still sporadic empty seats, including an unoccupied fourth for us. All Gate1 trips assign seats, and then rotate people every day, so everyone gets to be in different parts of the bus, interact with more people, and to keep things equitable.
K and I thought we'd seen a good bit of Rabat the previous afternoon, with our walk through the medina and city center. We had a city tour this morning, and we never even went to those areas, as there was so much more to see. For being the capital city, it had a very laid back and civilized feel to it. We started at the very impressive royal palace, within a huge complex. This was the king's (King Mohammed VI) main palace, but he was out of the country -- in France -- during our visit. The only way we were to know, we were told, was that the fountains within the walls were all off.
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| Entrance to the Royal Palace in Rabat |
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| King's "Private" Mosque within the Palace Compound |
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| The Royal Palace |
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| Main Entrance (We had to sneak the picture) |
We continued to the Roman ruins of Chellah, which we simply beautiful, and very unexpected. Chellah is a large area of Roman ruins, within walls, built on the banks of the river which divides Rabat. This river first drew the Romans, who built the very impressive fortifications and city. Now the area is more of a park, with beautiful trees, flowers, and shrubs, and a huge number of nesting storks. It seemed as though every column and high point was occupied by an humongous stork's nest, complete with storks who paid no heed to the tourists who had invaded their privacy. Storks, we were told, have wintered in Morocco for millennia (we would, in fact, see them in every city we visited), but for the past decade or so, most have remained year round, with Europe getting warmer thanks to climate change.
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| Entrance to Chellah |
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| Chellah -- Ruins of Roman City |
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| Chellah |
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| Storks Nesting Everywhere! |
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| Locals Enjoying the Sun |
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| You Can See the Size of the Stork Nests |
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| The Berber Language |
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| Anna and Katherine in Chellah |

Driving through the impressive diplomatic quarter, we drove to the seaside corniche and its so-called Kasbah. This term is used in Morocco to describe, usually, the oldest and/or highest area of a fortified old city. After walking up the steps and the gate featured in the latest Mission Impossible film (of which they were very proud), we entered a crazy labyrinth of stucco buildings all painted in blue and white. It looked as though we had been transported to Mykonos in Greece. I have no idea if it is true, but we were told the blue color is used as it is believed to keep away mosquitoes. It may work, as we saw none during our entire trip. In fact, we encountered next to no insects of any kind during our trip. Even the flies we saw were some curious sort, who hovered in place, and never seemed to go toward people or light. My theory is that the insects are kept in check by the millions of birds in Morocco. As with the storks, all kinds of birds from Europe winter (or remain year-round now) in Morocco, and their singing and presence were inescapable. Evidently Morocco has a huge tourism boom centered on birding trips.
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| Entrance to the Rabat Casbah -- Used in Mission Impossible V |
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| In the Casbah |
Our final stop in Rabat was the Mausoleum of King Mohammed V, who was Morocco's sultan under the French, and then king from independence in 1956 until his death in 1961. His son, King Hassan II, who died in 1999, is also buried there. It was quite beautiful, with a huge colonnade, which was originally supposed to be roofed over and turned into a mosque. Mohammed died unexpectedly, so the mosque was never completed.
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| Royal Guard at Entrance to Mohammed V's Mausoleum |
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| The Colonnade, which was supposed to become a mosque |
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| Mohammed V's Tomb |
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| Inside the Mausoleum |
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| Mohammed V in the Center, Hassan II on the Upper Left |
We made our way out of Rabat and drove eastward, away from the ocean, toward one of Morocco's four ancient capitals -- this one being Meknes. Ironically, we just read in this month's
Money magazine that Meknes was voted their number one international travel destination recommendation. We, unfortunately, did not spend much time here, other than a nice sit-down lunch and driving tour, and I definitely would have liked to spend more time there.
Very close by, our next destination was the ruins of the Roman city of Volubilis. It started as a Berber city in the 3rd century, grew under Carthage, and was the capital of Mauritania for a while, before the Romans came. We had been hearing a lot about Berbers over the course of the morning. The term Berber derived from the Roman?/Greek? term for barbarian. Though certainly meant as an insult at the time, it is now proudly claimed by a majority of modern-day Moroccans. We spoke about the Arab Spring uprisings of the previous decade, and it was explained that to avoid such an uprising in Morocco, the king made major concessions. Not only did he cede a majority of his power to an elected parliament, but they said his most popular move was to official declare Berber as the second language of Morocco, after Arabic. French had been the second language, and is still spoken by most Moroccans, but it was "officially" replaced by Berber in 2006. Now, all road signs are supposed to (but they're far was uniform) be written in Arabic and Berber (which has it's own unique alphabet). Signs in areas with tourists and along the highways are also written in French. The French "protectorate" of Morocco was relatively short, only 44 years, up until 1956, but their influence is apparent everywhere, from the french words worked into Moroccan Arabic, to the food. French boulangeries and patisseries were on most every street corner, with their names in French.
Anyway, Volubilis was destroyed by an earthquake in the mid-17th century (the same one which all but obliterated Lisbon), and was not unearthed until the late 19th century. More than 50 percent of the city is still believed to be underground, and signs of excavation work were everywhere. It has been declared a UNESCO world heritage site, so all of the archeological work is supervised (and underwritten) by the United Nations.
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| Artifact Found in Volubilis |
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| Mosaic Floor with Head of Medusa |
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| Map Showing Extend of Roman Empire -- Volubilis is on bottom left |
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| Volubilis |
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Anna in Volubilis |
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| More Stork Nests |
From Volubilis, we had a perfect view over to the hilltop hamlet of Moulay Idriss Zerhoun, which is famous as the city settled by Moulay Idriss in 789, who brought Islam to Morocco.
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| Village of Moulay Idriss Zerhoun, settled by man who introduced Islam to Morocco |
It was another two-hour drive from here, along a winding two-land road up and down through incredibly green agricultural land, where every possible vegetable and fruit seemed to be growing. We also hit our first mile-long stretches of olive orchards. Our guide was extremely proud to report that as of 2018, Morocco had officially surpassed Spain as the number producer of both olives and olive oil in the world. The trees were introduced by the Romans in the 3rd century, and were perfectly suited for huge areas within Morocco.
Our home for this night and next was to be the city of Fez (or Fes). It is Morocco's second largest city, after Casablanca, with about 1.4 million people, but it never felt anywhere near that size. Like Meknes, it was one of Morocco's four ancient capitals, and is now known as home to best examples of Moorish architecture in the entire country. It has two incredibly beautiful old towns, or medinas. In fact, in addition to the two old towns, there was new town, which dated to the 16th century; not very new. I loved Fez, it was the highlight of the trip for me.
As the following day's all-day tour of Fez was optional, we had a general driving orientation tour of the city, before we reached our hotel. On the way, the bus made a quick stop at a French supermarket, one of the view to sell alcohol in the city. We were to learn that most of Morocco is dry. I don't think it is by law, but most restaurants and many hotels simply don't offer alcohol. Our hotel for the night was dry, but Gate1 worked out an arrangement whereby they would allow guests to bring their own, including to the restaurant. I took the opportunity to buy a cheap bottle of Moroccan wine. After figuring out how to uncork a bottle of wine without a corkscrew (use a belt buckle, if you're curious), we sampled it and agreed it wasn't even worth the $3 I had paid.
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| View of Fez From the South |
From the balcony of our hotel, we could see the snow-covered Atlas mountains in the distance. In fact, one of Morocco's two ski resorts was located about 40 minutes south of town. Dinner was on our own, which was fine. We went to a very local place recommended by the guide. We were the only ones from our group to go, and we were the only foreigners in the place, which bode well. As with all the restaurants we visited during the trip, the menus were not in English. Only Arabic, Berber, and French. As in France last year, my middle-school French was again put to the test in ordering correctly. Jet lag had definitely caught up with us by the time we walked back to the hotel, and we all crashed immediately.