An orange seller in the market.
One of the vendors in the souk (market) selling things.
A snake charmer in the square with actual cobras.
Another vendor in the souk, selling spices.
Typical Moroccan meal, chicken tagine. A chicken stew cooked in a special clay pot.
Nice lanterns in a cafe.
Allison in one of the many historic buildings. This one a several-hundred-year-old religious school.
One of the many very detailed carved doors.
View from our drive through the Atlas mountains.
Selfie
Camels in front of one of the historic Casbah. The casbahs are adobe-style fortresses/towns built into the hills.
Closer view of the camels.
A waiter at a casbah cafe.
Selfie in front of the casbah.
Local man walking across the footbridge to the casbah.
Typical view of one of the small towns along our drive.
Sunlight on a door in another casbah.
Sunrise from the terrace of one of our hotels.
Giant slab with trilobite fossils (notice door for scale!) at one of the many fossil shops.
Giant slab of crinoid fossils
Inside one of the casbahs.
Inside of our "tent" (geodesic dome) at our desert camp.
Window view from a casbah.
Bicyclists crossing a flooded area on the way to a casbah.
Camel train in the Sahara desert.
Camel driver in the desert.
Camel train
A beetle in the desert.
Another camel train at sunset.
Bonfire at our desert camp.
Another view of the landscape from our drive.
The craziest / brightest rainbow that I have ever seen. It hung around for the better part of an hour on our drive.
Moroccan monkeys in the forest.
Tile / door detail at one of the Riads that we stayed at. (A Riad is a typical house with a courtyard in the center. Many have been converted into hotels/guesthouses. Most of the places we stayed were this style.)
Better view of a Riad.
More detailed doors.
A blacksmith in the souk. There were several of these small blacksmith shops in a row doing actual work (not just for tourists). They were making simple knives, and decorative pieces like door knockers and hinges.
95 year old man making combs, shoehorns, etc out of horns and camel bones.
The tomb of the founder of the city of Fez.
The Blue Gate, one of the entries into the Medina (historic old town).
Courtyard of another Riad that we stayed in.
Door knockers on the door of the royal palace of Fez.
Giant (historic) scales used by the camel caravans for weighing goods for trade.
A traditional leather tannery for tanning and dyeing leather. It did not smell good.
A vendor selling dates in the souk (market).
View of the medina (old town) from a rooftop cafe.
Allison peeking out of a window in another historic religious school.
The photographer in the desert. (As captured by Allison).