We left Granada early this morning-well, early by Spanish standards... The drive south to Algeciras went through hills of olive groves. The port city was not quite as picturesque. The ship rocked heavily on the way across the straight, but the trip only took 45 minutes or so.
My first question in Morocco was, "Where are all the women?" In the small towns we went through on the way to Tanger, men sat lazily outside cafes or walked leisurely along the street, but seeing a woman was a rarity. It was almost like Michigan Tech as a country, except that I knew there were more women somewhere.
We have arrived in Morocco at the tail end of Ramadan,
We headed to a restaurant at a more leisurely pace, and for the first time in my life, I broke the fast-well, technically I hadn't been fasting, but I was hungry enough to feel as though I had been. So I had the traditional Moroccan breakfast-dates, a hard boiled egg with salt and cumin sprinkled on it, a slightly spicy tomato-noodle soup, some deep fried bread-like sweet things, and an avocado banana smoothie. After breakfast I had a cup of tea, grean tea with fresh mint leaves in it. It had a pleasantly sweet minty flavor. "Berber whiskey," my assistant director said and winked at me across the table.
Your comparison of Morocco to Tech made me laugh pretty hard... and I became thoroughly depressed shortly after. I'm lovin the blog! Sounds like you're having a great time:)
ReplyDeleteI, too, am loving "Michigan Tech as a country"...hilarious! I am all about your food descriptions, too. Of your extensive travels, this, I can see, will always be the one that makes me green with envy. So awesome! Keep rocking the blog!
ReplyDeleteI wanted to comment on the "Michigan Tech as a country," but looks like it was covered. That was hilarious. Berber whiskey, ha! Good stuff.
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