“From September to November, North Africa, still warm, invites you to relax among colorful spice stalls, magical expanses of dunes, magnificent orange palaces, vast and green oases and unforgettable Berber cities… The thousand and one nights are told …”, we read in the introduction to this report.
For the publication, Marrakech, “is one of the unmissable places! Not to be missed: the Jamaa El-Fna square, the Majorelle gardens, the YSL museum, the palm grove, the Bahia palace, the Koutoubia mosque, the Medina “.
Rabat, the administrative capital of Morocco, the 2nd largest city in the Kingdom, listed by UNESCO since 2013, continues the publication, “also invites you to beautiful escapades: walking in the heart of the Kasbah des Oudayas, visiting the museum of civilizations, reflect at Saint-Pierre cathedral, refresh yourself in the botanical garden, linger in the vicinity of the Chellah necropolis, do some shopping at the souk.
The author of the report also fell under the spell of the “blue city” of Chefchaouen, famous for its facades and arches in indigo shades that leave you dreaming, or even Fez, the eternal, “which still enjoys a rich past culture”, without forgetting “Tangier, authentic but nevertheless cosmopolitan which suggests great discoveries” and the city of Essaouira “which is an ideal seaside town for taking a breath of fresh air and a change of scenery”.
Passing through Agadir, “a former fishing port which is now seen as the 2nd tourist city in the country”, the newspaper notes that Morocco “also conceals natural treasures to be discovered on foot or on the back of dromedaries, like this shelter prankster monkeys, the Ouzoud waterfalls which refresh and amaze young and old alike.
The Moroccan Sahara and Atlas also appear in this list which invites you to travel in particular “to the surroundings of Erg Chebbi which offer lunar settings and nomadic villages where you can spend a few memorable nights in bivouac, in search of the most beautiful stars”.
The newspaper finally invites you to discover “the most renowned and best preserved fortified villages in the Ouarzazate region: Aït-ben-Haddou, listed by UNESCO, site of legendary film shoots of Lawrence of Arabia and Prince of Persia.”