Lindblad Expeditions / National Geographic
For Affiliates
Request a Reservation
Brochure
My LEX Login
Contact Us
1.800.EXPEDITION
Cruise Destinations
Guest Experiences
Video
About Us
Email Updates
Submit
Browse DERS By
Month

Year

National Geographic Endeavour

Expedition


GO 





Daily Expedition Reports
Print Print Tell a Friend Tell A Friend
May 3, 2008  Previous Next 
From the National Geographic Endeavour in Morocco Find your Africa cruise
From the National Geographic Endeavour in Morocco
Fabric
From the National Geographic Endeavour in Morocco
Donkey

Fes, Morocco

Today, our expedition took us to the colorful, historic Moroccan city of Fes. After an early breakfast at our hotel in Rabat, the group hopped on the bus and rode through the hilly countryside, passing by fields of olive trees, vineyards, goat herds, and villages called duoar in Arabic, while the tinted Atlas Mountains loomed far to the East.

Where the city of Rabat is known as the administrative and governmental focus of Morrocco, Fes represents the agricultural, spiritual, and cultural center. Purple Jacaranda trees greeted us along the roads as we rolled into this old city, dating back exactly 12 centuries to its Islamic founding in 808 A.D. Passing the most modern section developed by the French in the early 20th century, we briefly stopped at the gates of a royal palace in the second, “new” section of Fes, known as Fes El Jedid, where Jews and Arabs had settled after escaping the Inquisition of Spain in the 13th and 14th centuries.

At last, we stopped in the old town, Fes El Bali, and here we began our adventurous walk through the labyrinthine Quarawinn quarter of the Fes Medina. Following our nimble guides, we navigated the colorful streets, passages, corridors, tunnels, throughways, and narrow ways of Fes, exploring all directions of the town! Left, right, up, down, over, under, through and between. In again, out again, onward again and forward again, we visited pottery craftsmen, tanners, embroiderers, carpet weavers, makers of jelabas and caftan garments, and other vendors selling their various wares. An interesting mélange of spices, fresh produce, smoke, tanned hides, perfumes and various animals treated our senses, and the quick holler of “Balak!” told us to quickly move aside as a cart or donkey rushed by.

We met for lunch in the ornately tiled and pillared hall of the Palais M’nabhi, where we enjoyed the charming entertainment of a talented, smiling belly dancer. The weather was lovely, the colors fantastic, and the ornate woodwork, tile work, and craftsmanship of Fes kept our senses (and our wallets!) entertained all the way to the end of the maze, where we hopped on to the buses and rode back to a well deserved dinner in Rabat.

Ryan Wallace, Expedition Staff
Click here to read the author's bio
Find your Africa cruise
 BACK TO DER MAIN  Previous Next 
Galapagos Cruise | Alaska Cruise | Baja Cruise | Antarctica Cruise | Arctic Cruise
Follow us on Twitter.    Join us on Facebook.    Watch us on YouTube.    Stay up-to-date with our blog.