Returning from one month holidays- offroading trip- discovering a beautiful Greek island Evia with our good old friends was a great opening for our future off-road adventure Project: Morocco. This time we were on a tight schedule, rushing home.
Returning from one month holidays- offroading trip- discovering a beautiful Greek island Evia with our good old friends was a great opening for our future off-road adventure Project: Morocco. This time we were on a tight schedule, rushing home.
We only had time to unpack and repack our mobile house and were already on our way headed towards ORC center based in Stuttgart, Germany- for some up dates on our G-wagon.
…headed to Azalai company based in Martigues, France- for some quick updates on our cabin house.
Infotech…
*ORC (Germany) Mercedes G Pro
(55 new stallions and two Recaro saddles to be precise)
*Azalai (France) Cabin- mobile house
It took us a week to prepare our G-Wagon for the Project: Morocco before we finally met our friends in Sète, France and shipped ourselves to Tangier Med, Morocco.
Group of three off-roaders was a perfect choice, sharing the stories from a cross the seas.
Morocco is a vast country with so much to see, spread over a wide area.
We were planing to drive the unknown beaten tracks.
Aiming to discover the hidden remote berber villages.
The only way to do it all and to do it in a way that gave us enough freedom and flexibility to meet tuaregs was to pass the rocky roads of the High Atlas mountains.
photo: Mr.Henri Nicol
It was a hard track, road was bumpy and sand was just about everywhere.
We were determined to get on the ancient trade route from the heart of the Sahara-Draa Valley.
…and drive across dry Iriki lake to get the taste of the golden sand dunes, share a glimpse of the previous really Dakar track…
photo: Mr.Henri Nicol
The adrenaline was pumping while driving the hidden oasis of the river Draa and dry lake beds in the seldom next to the Algerian border.
What an adventure!
Taste of the golden sand dunes, Sahara desert.
Let’s do a bit of mishmash now. Let’s explore one of my favorite cities I came across in a Middle Atlas.