Sunday, November 27, 2016

Giving Thanks for the Little Things

Winter has come to the desert. Just four weeks ago I was sweating it out and whining about the conservative clothing that was roasting me to death as I peddled my way to the university in 90+ degree heat. I would easily drink a gallon of water over four hours just to remain standing in front of my classroom of sweaty students. This week I found myself bundling up in two down jackets, mittens, and a hat for my frigid morning bike ride. Then, once my afternoon classes rolled around, I was comfortable in my classroom until the sun started to go down. By 5:30, I was teaching in my down jacket, my hands were so cold I couldn't hold the marker to write on the board, and I could see my breath in the air. I guess I chose not to listen to my science teacher the day we talked about desert temperature swings. I ignorantly assumed that I would need no umbrella this year and that flip flops would be the footwear of choice every day. I was wrong. It's cold. And rainy.

Despite the erratic weather and temperature swings, we did manage to have some great "Morocco moments" this week. First off, I decided that struggling with Darija was not enough of a challenge, so, on Saturday,  I went to a workshop to learn about the Amazigh culture, language, and alphabet. The Amazigh are the indigenous people of North Africa, and they retain their own languages and culture. So, just for kicks, I learned the Tifinagh alphabet and tried to practice spelling words that contain sounds that don't exist in the English language. Sadly, the only benefit may have been brain activity that may eventually help ward of dementia. My Tifinagh skills are atrocious.

Sunday, I tested out the Moroccan rail system and took a train to Berrechide to visit a class of English students. The train was a relaxing and smooth-sailing adventure with a sunny window on the desert landscape for the three-hour journey. The students, enthusiastic 8th graders, got a taste of basic American culture and played a game of Jeopardy before taking their turn to interrogate me about American politics. With limited English, they still managed to come up with some zingers. "Why does Donald Trump hate Arabs?" was one of the first. "Ummm. Don't you want to know the nice story about the Statue of Liberty or something?" Ugh. Fortunately, after I bumbled my way through a few non-answers, we moved on to snacks and picture-taking and left the messy world of politics behind. After class, I got to enjoy a nice lunch in a park with one of the teachers who is also one of my graduate students. In addition to lunch, I got some deep, dark religion discussion which helped add to my education in "Islam according to women in Morocco." When the chance presents itself, and I find women who are willing and excited to talk, I have been asking the same questions of each of them just to learn more about the diverse perspectives of Muslim women here. It has been fascinating.

The view from the train
Berrechide class

When we realized that my birthday on Tuesday was going to to coincide with a nasty weather day, we decided to take advantage of a sunny Monday to celebrate. I was spoiled like a queen! Birthday week had already involved cake for breakfast every day. Then, on Monday morning, we took the classic Marrakech horse-drawn carriage ride through the Medina in the sunshine. After we dismounted, we headed over to the plant vendors in the square to buy a birthday plant for our balcony. I picked a nice, fat palm tree with an eye toward creating a habitat for the fat green chameleon I intended to buy. Andy escorted the palm back to the apartment in the back of a truck, while Brianna and I collected roses from the plant seller and headed into the Medina in search of a birthday lantern. We found a great sunshine lantern that can double as a wall decoration to complete my happy place on the balcony. The only thing left to do was to visit the spice market and free a fat chameleon from her caged existence. Katrina was the one that called to me, and she was promptly transported in a little metal spice box to her new home on our balcony. She has spent the week making the rounds of our apartment and roosting on top of whomever's warm head is willing to take her. We are trying desperately to figure out what to feed her. There seems to be a dearth of bugs in November in Marrakech. It's just too cold. She has not taken kindly to our vegetarian offerings, so we are going to have to get creative in figuring out a way to attract insects to our house. Chameleon problems.







My real birthday turned out to be as nasty as predicted. So , I ate more cake for breakfast, snuggled with Katrina, spent the day connecting with friends and family, and enjoyed a delicious home-made birthday cake for dinner. Perfect. I am one lucky girl indeed. It seemed only fitting that Thanksgiving should roll around just two days later, and I should find myself, once again, contemplating how very blessed I am.

Tangia Vendor in the Medina
Olive Souq
As the week wraps up, we have found our way to Fez. Katrina has made the trip with us, and we have smuggled her into the guest house. It was a long day in the car, but she was a star - just enjoying the sights from her perch on the back window. Andy negotiated the rainy roads like a champ. We spent a few quick minutes in Casablanca checking out the enormous mosque that sits next to the sea. Then we headed north through Rabat and east, again, to the ancient city of Fez. Rain, darkness, and cold conspired against us, but somehow we managed to locate a parking space just outside of the Medina wall and wind our way through a narrow mouse hole to what turned out to be our guest house. It is one of those hidden treasures of the Medina. Behind a metal door at the dead-end of the tiniest alley (in which I had to stoop over so as to not smack my head) we found a four-story beauty of Moroccan tile and carpets, friendly hosts with tea, and a room with not only beds, but also a heater!! Nothing could make me happier at the end of this wet, wintry week than to have control of a heater in a sweet little space like this. It's the little things.

Katrina heads to Fez

Casablanca Moment




Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Celebrating 48 with Katrina the Chameleon

How could this adventure possibly get any better? Why not add a reptile to the mix for kicks and giggles? What better time to do that than for a birthday celebration? So, yesterday we welcomed sweet little Katrina to the Marrakech mix. It was just one of those things. Those weird things. There are cages of turtles and chameleons in the market. The vendors assure us every time that they are not for couscous. I know in my head that it's wrong to support the capture of these animals. I justified in my heart that I would make one life better by buying a chameleon and freeing it from the cage in the market. And, honestly, they are just interesting and odd and cool...and I could never have one in freezing Vermont...and I just wanted to see how many cool colors it could turn...and their eyes are freaky...and the polka dots are awesome. Ok. I just did it. No justifying.

So, we spent a little while in the spice market browsing, patting chameleons, assessing babies versus big kids, and asking about prices. The vendors just kept trying to sell us spices and tea. We decided the chameleons were just there to attract people to the spice shops. When a vendor did finally answer about a price for the chameleon, he said he would stuff it in a cigarette box, so we could sneak it on the plane. Heh. We may need to worry about that next summer, but for now we assured him that we did not want to smuggle anything out of the country in a cigarette box.


Katrina was perched on top of a green cage showing off her polka dots (and, yes, she was already named). She stole my heart right away. Brianna was drawn to the babies, which were no bigger than salamanders. But I kept coming back to Katrina. When it came time to negotiate a price for her, her seller insisted that she was super valuable because she might have babies inside. "Inshallah." Oy. I outwardly expressed appropriate fertility joy at the prospect, and inwardly said "Inshallah not." What would we do with a litter of chameleons? I honestly am not sure how to take care of just one.



This was not one of those over-thought decisions. Andy bought a palm tree for Katrina at the market - another little adventure in negotiating - and then figured out how to transport a tree back to the apartment. Brianna bought me a sunshine lantern that will provide permanent sun to keep Katrina happy. I paid for Katrina and stuffed her in a spice tin (much better than a cigarette box) to transport her to her new home on our balcony. And now, Katrina the Birthday Chameleon is happily installed in her new digs. She spent the day exploring the apartment, which mostly looks like moving at the speed of a sloth to the highest roost that she can find. She seems to enjoy the warmth of just sitting on someone's head and traveling around the house on that mobile perch.


Once we figure out what she is actually going to eat, our next question will be what to do with a chameleon when we travel. Stay tuned for Katrina the Road-Tripping Reptile's adventure to Fez.


Katrina's bday treat


You just don't get that silhouette in the 802


Saturday, November 19, 2016

From the Atlantic to the High Atlas

I am living in an outdoor sun-seeking girl’s paradise (yes, Mom, I am wearing my sunblock). Sunday and Monday found us basking in the warm glow of the big yellow orb next to the Atlantic Ocean in sunny Essaouira. And, just four days later, we were soaking up golden rays against a back drop of snow-covered peaks in the High Atlas Mountains. Fret not, in between I did do some teaching. But this week’s highlights were all about the sea and the mountains.

Essaouira, about three hours west of Marrakech by bus, is a sweet seaside city with a white-washed medina, an active fishing port, and a long, sandy beach best known for its wind. It attracts surfers, kite-boarders, wind-surfers, and people like us – just looking for a sunny break from the city. As COP22 excitement reached a frenzy in Marrakech, we hit the road for the coast. The bus logistics were remarkably straightforward and hassle-free. Three hours after we boarded in Marrakech, we were deposited just outside the medina walls in Essaouira. A two-minute walk put us into the heart of the medina with beautiful white plaster buildings mixed with traditional Moroccan doors. We wound our way down a quiet alley to find a place to stay. Andy, who was incredibly excited about the prospect of staying in a riad, a traditional Moroccan house set around an open-air courtyard, readily agreed to check out the Riad Nakhla. We arrived to an eerily dim lobby, where we were told they could happily give us rooms a bit later when the “small problem” with the power was resolved. We decided to cross our fingers and trust the universe to take care of this “small problem.” We deposited our bags and said we be back in a couple of hours to check in.





We got busy exploring the medina in the best way possible – completely lost. The good news is, now that we have been hardened by the Marrakech medina, there is nothing left to intimidate us about medina exploration anywhere. The merchants in Essaouira were remarkably friendly and low-key. The alleys were uncrowded. We wandered happily for hours. We remarked at the size and number of cats everywhere. The feline DNA strand being shared in Essaouira is on the verge of creating some kind of abnormal super cat. We saw well-fattened cats that looked to be a mix between house cats and bobcats. With a never-ending supply of fresh fish provided by the fishing port and the local restaurants, Essaouira is the ultimate choice in stray cat living. In a way it was a nice break from our usual Moroccan cat scavenger hunt which typically ends with us feeling guilty for not adopting a scrawny cat or ten. We felt confident that every stray cat in Essaouira was better cared for than any house cat would be chez-Borch.

Not sure what this guy was looking at, but
it was a little creepy.

Apart from the cats, we enjoyed delicious food, gallery after gallery of Moroccan artwork, and the frenetic activity of the fishing port with fish sellers gutting their just-caught supply and setting it out for sale. In addition to the world’s biggest cats, Essaouira also sports an impressive collection of enormous sea gulls which spend the afternoon hovering attentively over the port just waiting for the leftovers. We spent some time strolling along the beachside promenade and soaking up some sun. The beach itself wasn’t anything to write home about – needing a good green-up day before I would be tempted to enjoy the sand. But, the wind and the waves attracted their share of water sports enthusiasts.

Weird child with beautiful plates

Hats on a wall


The universe took care of us as we had hoped, and, when we returned to our riad, we found two traditionally-decorated Moroccan rooms with functioning electricity waiting for us. Our window provided a great view of the mosque directly in front of us (which, by the way is not a bonus when the call to prayer at 5:30 a.m. pipes directly into your room) as well as a peek of the ocean with just a little neck-craning. The roof-top terrace was the real gem, though. It was super moon night, and, as we took in the moonrise over the city and the sunset over the Atlantic, I felt incredibly grateful, once again, for this amazing opportunity.

Rooftop views from Riad Nakhla



And, as if that were not enough, we followed that sunshine to the Atlas Mountains at the end of the week. November 18th is Moroccan Independence Day, so it’s an official holiday weekend here. We headed for Imlil, the jumping-off point for local hikes into the mountains, on a “grand taxi,” which is really an over-stuffed minibus. Andy, having done this once already last week, oversaw getting us to the bus parking lot at a reasonable hour. We ran/walked to the lot so that we could find a bus, negotiate a price, and sit and wait for 45 minutes for it to fill up and for the driver to eat a leisurely breakfast at the stand on the curb. We knew that this was part of the deal in choosing to take budget-friendly transport. So, we tried to sit back and enjoy the local color and tell our own stories about the people on the bus while we waited. Brianna and I decided that the little lady sitting directly in front of us was definitely the ringleader, and we vowed to stick with her. After we had been waiting to depart for what seemed like an eternity, she marched off the bus and had a few loud words with the driver, who promptly started the bus and left it to idle while he ate his breakfast. She continued to harass him through the window until we eventually pulled out. She kept repeating, “Imlil,” so we decided she would make sure that we made it to our destination.

We pulled out of the lot with a full bus by U.S. standards (meaning every seat was full), but, as we drove out of town, the bus really started to fill up. We picked up people and baskets and bags wherever we saw them waiting on the road. Eventually there were people packed into every nook and cranny of the bus with children wedged on laps and the money-collector hanging off the bumper. As we started up the mountain with its switchbacks, hugging the edges of drops into oblivion, the little boy squashed in the aisle next to me started turning green. Ladies began fanning him and unzipping his jacket. A plastic bag came out, and I looked away – selfishly praying that this packed can of sardines was not about to start smelling like a bag of vomit. I breathed deeply and attempted to find the positive in the situation. I decided I was thankful for all the warm bodies surrounding me. I figured they would provide extra padding if the bus should just roll off the edge of the road. Just as I had come to terms with the realization that my fate was completely out of my own hands, and I had decided to let the universe (and that feisty little lady) take care of me, we came to a halt in the town of Asni. This was not Imlil.

Imlil street
The bus driver told everyone to get out. This was the end of the line. The feisty lady got feistier, got some money back, and disappeared. We shuffled off the bus and onto another that was allegedly going to take us the rest of the way to Imlil. First, however, we needed to idle for another 15 minutes next to the exhaust pipe of neighboring bus. Just as I was about to keel over from a carbon monoxide headache, someone decided it was time to get on the road. The next part of the journey was similar to the first. We packed people in at every turn. Brianna and I sat awkwardly squashed across from a woman with an adorable little girl. We shared some homemade cookies, and, lacking any vocabulary to warn them that they contained peanut butter, I watched anxiously to make sure no one stopped breathing. They both seemed content, and we happily smiled at each other until we, at last, arrived in Imlil and unfolded ourselves from the seat and stumbled into the fresh air.

 The mountains were right there – hovering over us with their snow-capped peaks and rugged rocks. Imlil is a little mountain town where you can get a last meal and rent climbing gear before you take off on your adventure. It’s the starting point for the trek up Toubkal, North Africa’s highest peak at 14,000 feet. We were just out for a day hike, so we simply enjoyed lunch on a rooftop terrace, where we could take in the views, before setting off up a steep path past donkeys and carpet vendors – looking for our own bit of mountain peace.


Odd child found along the trail
The views were fabulous from the start. First, we enjoyed the contrast of the towns tucked into the desert brown and red colors of the hills with the stark white snow and the clear blue sky. Eventually the towns disappeared, and the river bed down below became a lush green oasis. We could see goats grazing in the patches of green. Sure-footed donkeys and their drivers lumbered past at remarkably fast speeds. We followed the sun in the direction of the looming peak of Toubkal. We stopped for a Coke at a mountainside shack, where cold water from the spring cooled the drinks. We climbed for nearly three hours, finally reaching our first patch of ice, before deciding it was time to head back down and beat the sunset. Surrounded by high peaks, the sun goes down early, and darkness and cold arrive quickly. We covered the last of the steep downhill before losing the warmth of the sun, and we were serenaded on our hike through the river bed by a couple of girls singing happily as they followed the same path. 

Our singing companions
Dusk arrived as we made it back into town, and we opted for a cushier shared taxi van with four other hikers to take us back to Marrakech (fearing we may have missed the last bus of the day).  Chilly and tired, we all conked out in the taxi and remained blissfully oblivious to whatever kind of dark-mountain driving antics that may have taken place. We arrived back in Marrakech unscathed and were soon absorbed by the throngs of people crowding into the main square for Moroccan Independence Day celebrations. The mountains were but a fading memory. There was nothing to do, but embrace the energy and the crowd, eat ice cream, and get swept up in the celebration. Happy Independence Day indeed.








We found snow! Now we can go down.




And just a few more from Essaouira...


Bri pots a ball in snooker
Medina wall meets the ocean

Bri contemplates life

Andy versus the Atlantic

Essaouira fishing Port