Showing posts with label Errachidia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Errachidia. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

New Service to Tinghir from Fez Airport

Moroccan low-cost airline Air Arabia Maroc has expanded its Fez-Errachidia bus service by 135 km to reach Tinghir in the region of Draa-Tafilalt

The updated bus service will also stop at Goulmima, a city in the province of Errachidia.

Air Arabia has said that the new service “marks an additional step in the continuing support that the company offers to develop tourism in Morocco.” The company pointed out that this service would also increase accessibility to previously hard-to-reach regions.

The shuttle bus services are provided by Air Arabia Express.

Tinghir is the perfect destination from which to explore the Todra Gorge. Situated on the east side of the High Atlas Mountains in Morocco, the Todra Gorge is recognised around the world as one of the most spectacular canyons, where over the millennia the Todra and Dades rivers have carved out layers of rock, giving rise to canyons 300 metres (980 ft) high but in some places only 10 metres (33 ft) wide. After leaving the gorge. the river widens, developing into an oasis edged with the red ochre of the desert.


The gorge, though in a remote area of Morocco, is a popular tourist destination and has been outfitted over the years with hiking paths and a well-maintained dirt road that visitors can walk along, though they must share it with mules and other pack animals.

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Friday, August 26, 2016

Errachidia Defies the Tourism Slump


22,870 tourist arrivals were recorded in four months, generating 30,939 overnight stays. The figures from the Provincial Tourism Delegation are a clear indication that Errachidia is having a bumper summer season

The city of Errachidia (Arabic: الرشيدية‎‎, ar-Rachīdīya) is located in the province of Errachidia, in the region of Drâa-Tafilalet. Its name is derived from the tribe which inhabited the city. It was formerly known as "Ksar es-Souk".

The tourism potentials of the province of Errachidia are rich and varied with a high concentration of activity at of Erfoud-Merzouga axis with large numbers of tourists visiting while doing a circuit to or from Marrakech, the sand dunes in Merzouga and Fez.

Errachidia now has very good quality accommodation

Errachidia has seen a clear progress during the first four months of 2016, led by strong growth in overnight stays and tourist arrivals.

A total of 22,870 tourist arrivals were recorded in four months in the province, generating 30,939 overnight stays, an increase of respectively 48 and 46% compared to the same period in 2015.

According to a breakdown by nationality, statistics from the Provincial Delegation highlight that non-resident tourists have accumulated 20,563 overnight stays from January to April 2016, and of that total, the Spaniards topped the list with 4,096 nights, closely followed by German tourists (3.953 overnight stays).

For domestic tourists, the number of overnight stays amounted to 10,376.

While 2016 is looking good, it is also an improvement on 2015 when accommodation establishments in the province posted a 38% drop in arrivals and 36% in overnight stays compared to 2014.

Tourist arrivals were about 53,194 in 2015 (86,469 in 2014) and 75,718 overnight stays, against 117,654 in 2014.

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

The Errachidia Oasis Under Threat


Tucked away in Morocco's high Atlas mountains the vast oasis of Errachidia, among the most beautiful in the south of the country, is today threatened by bad management. Omar Brouksy, writing on Iol Scitech, tells the story.


A stone's throw from the tarred road that crosses the oasis of Goulmima, near Errachdia, a well closely guarded by the M'barek family supplies a small maize field with the help of a water pump.

“The water level has dropped a lot. God alone knows why,” said Moha M'barek, a farmer in his 80s who was born in the oasis, where he owns a small plot of land.

“I dug four wells before finding water. Around me, the neighbours have no water. Before, there was water everywhere. That's the will of God,” M'barek added, staring down at the stream carrying well water to the fields.

For centuries the sharing out of water in the oasis, now threatened with drying out, was managed in the “khattara” tradition, whereby water towers were used and distribution took place according to need, in line with ancestral Berber rites.

This system made it possible to maintain a regular flow of water all year round.

But more recent exploitation of the oasis illustrates the risk of misusing the planet's water resources, which was an issue on the agenda of the Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development.

From the 1970s, farmers have introduced water pumps, leading to the progressive depletion of the water table. Fields, once steadily cultivated and green, are now wasteland abandoned by the oasis dwellers.

“The outlines of the fields, you can see how big they are. Look, one, two, three, four meters wide. They are big, so that means there was lots of water,” said Lahcen Kabiri, professor of environmental geosciences at the University of Errachidia.

“Little by little, the farmers opted for individual wells, which they fitted with water pumps. Thousands of wells were dug, and in a few years the water had dried up,” added the academic, pointing to an immense tract of land bordered by a few ailing palm trees.

Kabiri said the situation “could turn into a real catastrophe in light of the role of oases in the struggle against desertification.

“If the water runs out, then everything that depends on it will be in a dramatic situation. We will be up against an unprecedented ecological disaster.”

Residents and local authorities have become increasingly aware of the threat to the oasis, which is one of the largest in the north African country.

In the small palm grove of Izilf at the heart of Errachidia, several farmers have got together to take a joint approach to the problem.

“We have set up a cooperative to manage the water supply collectively,” said Moha Bousseta, the president of the cooperative. “Otherwise, everything that you see will no longer exist. There'll be nothing left, everything will be dead, dried out.”

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Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Charles and Camilla to Visit Fez


HRH The Prince of Wales and his wife Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall, will include Fez in their Spring Tour itinerary. Helen Ranger reports.


The British royals will be visiting Portugal, Spain and Morocco from 28 March to 6 April, and will be guests of HRH Mohammed VI in Rabat. The BBC reports that the main themes of the tour will be trade and investment promotion, as well as climate change and the construction of low carbon economies.

With protests still ongoing in much of the Arab world, Clarence House has said security arrangements for the royal couple would be monitored "closely".

The Guardian reports that the long-planned three day visit is going ahead on Foreign Office advice in a bid to improve trade and cultural links. Britain exports £300m of goods to the country each year. It will also be welcomed by the Moroccan authorities as an endorsement of the recent constitutional changes announced by HM King Mohammed VI.

Prince Charles and Camilla will also be visiting an environmental project at the Errachidia oasis. And in Fez, the Prince will discuss inter-faith dialogue. The View from Fez wonders if the visit will be a prelude to Prince Charles attending the Fez Festival of World Sacred Music in which Prince Charles has long had an interest.