It was to be the trip that would best all other trips. Hike across the steppes of the High Atlas Mountains, and then summit Mt. Toubkal, North Africa’s highest peak—all in three days. The trip, crafted with a healthy sense of idealism, promised to be one for the ages.
An outfitting mission took us to Marjane, the Moroccan equivalent of Walmart, the night prior to our departure. Peanut butter, spaghetti, and bread fed this on-the-cheap expedition. Two more SIT students joined our expedition an hour before we were set to jump on the train to Marrakesh. Being adaptable college students, we welcomed them and clambered aboard the aging Moroccan train headed to Marrakesh.
Four hours later we arrived, bought some more supplies, and looked for a taxi to our final destination, Ijoukak. But as we solicited for taxi rides to our destination, it became clear that we weren’t going to be able to get there. First, all the drivers were demanding exorbitant sums of money, and then they flatly refused to take us to Ijoukak as they claimed there weren’t hotels (the guide book later totally refuted this claim). So we reconfigured our hike, and six hundred dirhams later, were on our way to the nearest major town to Mt. Toubkal, Imlil.
The taxi ride was as expected, exciting, but it was dark so we couldn’t see the terrifying drop offs from the road, nor did we have a particularly aggressive driver. We arrived just before midnight and grabbed a hotel for the night. The next morning we got up early and eagerly began our hike to the base camp/refuge at the bottom of the mountain we wanted to summit. We climbed to sweeping views, gorgeous skies, and pristine air. But our euphoria was crushed 2-½ hrs into the hike when a local guide told us that we were headed in precisely the wrong direction. So we backtracked, with our spirits only lifted by young girls from neighboring villages who insisted on shaking our hands and showering flower petals on us as we descended. Five hours after we began, we arrived at our starting point (after following a mule train on a short cut), still with a full day’s hike ahead of us. At this point, summiting Toubkal was very much in question.
Determined, we set out for a hike of an indeterminate length. We climbed through walnut orchards, charming Berber villages, and scampered across a massive, dried out riverbed. With a thunderstorm at our heels, swirling gray clouds to our front, we rose up and up through shale valleys, until we reached an altitude of 10000 feet. The altitude took a toll on all of us, dulling our motor skills and in one case, inciting nausea. Battered and exhausted after eleven hours of hiking, we arrived at our base camp amidst a hailstorm, just before sundown, at 6:30. Our base camp was a glorified ski lodge, with a kitchen, common room, bathrooms, and dorm style sleeping with as many bunk beds jammed into a room as possible. For the weary traveler, it was heaven, however.
The next morning we set out for Toubkal, and began climbing through one of the most gorgeous valleys I’ve ever seen. Not soon after beginning, we found snow, yes, snow in Africa! We paralleled a glacier, and two hours in, ran into another group of descending hikers. Once again, we learned that we were in fact again going in precisely the wrong direction. Frustrated, we descended again, although the views did not disappoint.
I’m going to take this opportunity to explain how we made these seemingly ridiculous mistakes. I can assure you that we were not as inept as my story makes us out to be. First, traveling around this region normally requires the services of a guide. To be blunt, there are few signs, and some places are intentionally wrongly signed so that you need to hire a guide. The region is built on guiding and tourism, and this is how it is protected. Being cheap students, we elected not to hire a guide until we climbed Toubkal. For our first mistake, we merely missed one turn, which was not marked. In the case of our second blunder, I discovered that the map in the refuge was oriented south north instead of the standard north south alignment, which precisely flipped our course. Lastly, we wandered without maps—but again, this was not our fault. In an effort to protect guiding, the Moroccan government simply does not sell maps to foreigners without forcing them to go through a weeklong vetting process.
Spurned twice, we regrouped. With two other people, I needed to be back in Rabat the next morning, so a summit of Toubkal was again seriously in question. Unwilling to give up, we crafted a crazy plan that I still can’t believe we pulled off. That afternoon we hired a guide to lead us up Mt. Toubkal, and after another night of fitful sleep, rose at 4 a.m. for a 5 a.m. alpine start up the mountain. Donning headlights, we began our climb. One member only brought sandals, so she ascended the mountain in them through snow. Under the stars, we clambered up the mountain unaware of the treacherous terrain we were crossing, but honestly, I was too dazzled by the stars to care. Midway up the mountain the sun climbed over the ridge, and we were treated to a beautiful sunrise.
At 8 a.m. we summited. There was four inches of snow at the top, and the temperature was below freezing. The altitude, 13000 feet, caused our fingers to swell up, and movement was not particularly easy. Panoramic views of the High Atlas wrapped around us. Clouds rested several thousand feet below our lofty nest, with Algeria and the Saharan desert in sight. After half an hour of bliss, we headed down. The descent was precarious, with steep drop offs, icy paths, and cold limbs dulled by a lack of oxygen. An ice field provided a brief break from the rocky trail, and so I ran down its slippery slope, sliding through the snow in my hiking boots with a light pack strapped to my back. We returned to the base camp at 10 a.m., took a two-hour break, and then set out for Marrakesh at noon. Six hours later we arrived in Imlil and arranged a cab to Marrakesh.
Despite all the miles traveled and rough country conquered, our most dangerous segment still lay ahead: the taxi ride from Imlil to Marrakesh. We crammed six people into an aging Mercedes sedan, the only transportation from the wayward town. The taxi’s speedometer didn’t work, the tachometer didn’t function, and the brakes sounded like they were about to give out at any moment. Eager to save the brakes, the driver didn’t use them unless collision was imminent. The ridiculous, thousand foot drop offs obscured by darkness on our inbound trip were all too evident traveling back to Marrakesh. For one perilous hour, we traveled on a one-lane road with two-way traffic and few guardrails. Shaken, we jumped on a train to Marrakesh, and got back into Rabat at midnight. All told, a nineteen-hour day, with fourteen miles of hiking and the tallest mountain in North Africa conquered.
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