Morocco
“Morocco is built on legends.”Tahar Ben Jelloun
Bordered by both the Mediterranean sea and the Atlantic ocean, the North African territory of Morocco has remarkable scenic, geological, and environmental value, encompassing the wild Atlantic coast, the mountainous Mediterranean coast, the Strait of Gibraltar, but also vast Saharan desert areas and the Rif, Middle Atlas, and High Atlas mountain ranges.
The latter, with peaks exceeding 4,000 meters above sea level, represents a dividing barrier between the desert and the western plains and preserves some of the most astonishing natural and human landscapes in Morocco and Africa. Mountainous Morocco, often predominantly Berber, is a land of centuries-old traditions, intense scents and colors, as are the Arab villages of the hilly countryside and plains.
But it is Morocco's cities where the exotic spirit of this land blends most closely with its history and its vestiges: the atmosphere of the alleys and squares of the medinas of the imperial cities—Marrakesh, Fez, Meknes, and Rabat—is indescribably evocative, as are the historic Atlantic cities such as Essaouira, El Jadida, Tangier, Asilah, and Larache, the white city of Tetouan, the blue city of Chefchaouen, and the kasbahs of Ouarzazate and the Draa Valley.
Our expertise covers the entire Moroccan territory, Mediterranean, Atlantic, mountainous and desert, both urban and rural.