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N, K and I |
I started off as a backpacker in this little town just over a month
with my girls K and N – we had travelled all the way up and down the country and
finally found respite by the seaside. We’d heard great things about Essaouira,
the windy city that drew in many keen kite-surfers and surfers alike. The white
and blue washed walls of the old medina look as though they were once vibrant
colours, alive with the buzz of the 60’s. The atmosphere mimics many beach towns
with its simplicity and calm; fisherman lay their morning catches out by the
pier and vendors contentedly man their stalls, selling a range of colourful, flowy
beach garms. But unlike anywhere else in the world, the Moroccan flare holds
its own unique quality - desert men lead herds of camels draped in colourful
material over sand dunes on the beach while young, good looking men gallop
along beside them on stallions.
The looks here are so varied, in the medina the older local men walk around in traditional, long cloaks with pointy hoods while most of the younger ones have that cool, surfer dude look with scruffy, bleach blonde hair and tanned skin. Many also carry a funny air of Jimi Hendrix, a celebrity name that still graces these streets since his brief visit years ago; the ‘castle’ in which he stayed located at the end of the beach is still talked about and visited regularly. The rumour that he impregnated half the city isn’t too hard to believe when you end up in conversations with a bunch of local guys with the same curly hair and flared trousers… it does make me grin. Unlike the rest of Morocco, Essaouira seems to have found a balance of traditional meets modern; the behaviour is far more relaxed and every other local asks you out for a drink despite it being forbidden by Islam. The call to prayer still sounds 5 times a day and the people are still proudly Muslim, their value system just seems to be more internalised.
The looks here are so varied, in the medina the older local men walk around in traditional, long cloaks with pointy hoods while most of the younger ones have that cool, surfer dude look with scruffy, bleach blonde hair and tanned skin. Many also carry a funny air of Jimi Hendrix, a celebrity name that still graces these streets since his brief visit years ago; the ‘castle’ in which he stayed located at the end of the beach is still talked about and visited regularly. The rumour that he impregnated half the city isn’t too hard to believe when you end up in conversations with a bunch of local guys with the same curly hair and flared trousers… it does make me grin. Unlike the rest of Morocco, Essaouira seems to have found a balance of traditional meets modern; the behaviour is far more relaxed and every other local asks you out for a drink despite it being forbidden by Islam. The call to prayer still sounds 5 times a day and the people are still proudly Muslim, their value system just seems to be more internalised.

At this point in my travels I was (unsurprisingly) lacking a working phone, bank card and warm clothes, so for practical reasons I returned to London with the girls. W

It wasn't too long before the date of my return had come back around and the cloud of anxieties had blown over me. I opened my sleepy eyes on the plane just as we were touching back down on African soil and I could finally hear the whistling winds of Essaouira. Deep breath - I'd made it! Second time lucky…?
Great new find: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p7C3lMi6dLw&list=RDp7C3lMi6dLw
I can't wait to hear how this journey goes down .......
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