Amsa village and Moroccan seaside resorts

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Abderrahmen looks at Amsa beach from above

This is the part of Amsa known as Amsa beach. It is where I am staying, and is over a mile from the village centre. You can see the coast road coming round the headland from Azla at the top of the photo. There are no hotels, just a few apartment blocks and café restaurants, as well as a couple of ‘open all hours’ shops. One café has an outdoor pool table. At the far end is a camp site, but that is currently closed.

Amsa beach in the early morning

This is the beach in the early morning. Just visible are closed parasols suitable spaced. If you bring your own, at present you have to put it right beside one of those provided (for free). Beaches in Morocco are currently only open from 10 am to 8 pm. Almost all the beach is covered by about ten lifeguards. There is a small police post and an area of small fishing boats (which I have failed to take a photo of as yet). Most days the locals put a large net in the sea and many men and youths haul it in with two ropes, a bit like a couple of tug of war teams, though they are parallel to each other. I gather than anyone who helps, gets a share of the haul of fish. Just before 8 pm the police start to walk slowly along the water line telling people to go home, and whistling at anyone still in the water.

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With Arwa, Janette and Soufiane

All the resorts along the Mediterranean are really only used by Moroccans on holiday. I would not have felt comfortable at Amsa being the only adult female in a swimsuit, so I adapted my cycling gear. As you can see the beach slopes steeply as soon as you are in the water. Even at midday, the sand is too hot to walk on comfortably, so it is a relief to get in the water.

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This display (from a shop in Oued Laou) has 4 examples of suitable swimming attire for Muslim ladies

In fact at Amsa, few adult women venture far into the sea; paddling is about their limit. Some women are more adventurous at the larger resorts.

Fishery Research

National Institute of Fishery Research

This building fronts the beach and was built 3 or 4 years ago with the aid of the Japanese. I think the structure on the left is a water tower, as there is a tank at the top. This was taken from the track that runs parallel to the river towards the village centre.

The Oued Amsa ‘reaches’ the sea at the eastern end of the beach.

Oued Amsa at the sea

The river is actually seasonal, and in summer does not reach the sea. This chap had taken it upon himself to dig an outlet channel from the large pond immediately behind the beach. The beach here is shingle, with wonderful skimming stones. A few days later there was no trace left of his hard work.

Beyond this the beach is left for people to use as they see fit, with no life guards. As there are rocky outcrops in the sea, it is not the best place to swim.

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The large pond

Between the beach and the village centre, the river disappears underground at this time of year. This year the water table is quite high, so it has managed to reappear in places.

The shortest route from the house to the village is along the main road, signed as the ‘Rocade Mediterrané’ (Mediterranean Ring Road). It obviously cannot run all around the Mediterranean at present, so the title seems to be an aspiration. The part from Tétouan east to Oudja (around 300 miles) has been transformed in recent years by a major project funded jointly by the EU, China, Japan and Morocco. It is still only one lane in each direction, with crawler lanes on some of the really steep bits. It swoops up and down very difficult terrain indeed, and in places must have been a severe test of the road engineers. Apart from weekend evenings when the day trippers return to Tétouan from the resorts to the east, it is very quiet indeed. For a couple of hours on a weekend evening it can take over 5 minutes to cross the road though.

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The long trudge to the village, without a moving vehicle in sight

There is housing (some quite upmarket), with an occasional small shop or café, all the way. Behind the houses are a mixture of houses and small farms. There is so little traffic most of the time that it is not unusual to see someone leading 2 sheep on ropes across the road, with 2 more just following.

haystack & donkey

Donkey and haystack

This donkey is tethered, and is grazing only feet from the road.

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Cow in the shade

This cow is usually tethered here, again just yards from the road.

main village street

Old Road in the village centre

When the road was re-engineered, a new bridge was built, and the traffic no longer goes through the actual village. This the old road before the upgrade. There is not much in the village : some cafés, a small pharmacy, a post office, a small school, a couple of butchers, some small agricultural needs dealers and some stalls set up daily for other fresh produce.It has everything needed for the small scale farming in the area though.

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The road is now so quiet that this little egret was in no danger from the traffic while waiting for a treat from the fishmonger. There is a cat watching him from under the table.

Amsa old bridge

View of the old bridge from the new

The village straggles up the valley, and there is a road that leads up a side valley for 5 miles or so, where it comes to a dead end. Water flows at this point, but disappears again if you walk farther up stream.

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Donkey ‘parked’ in the village – the owner is probably in the nearby café with the dark blue canopy.

The Moroccan Mediterranean resorts have only started to develop in the last 20 years or so. Before that only a very few Moroccan families could afford a holiday and facilities, where they existed, were minimal. Azla, the next village to the west, is now large, with a corniche (promenade), and many, many cafés and apartment blocks. Like the other larger resorts I have seen along the coast, it offers nothing much apart from sea, sand and sun. In some there are a few all weather pitches on the promenade, but actual entertainment is completely lacking. They probably resemble the very earliest stages of the development of Victoria seaside resorts in the UK. One difference to the UK is due to the climate. They are relatively quiet during the day, but in the evening, people (including very young children) will be still be strolling on the promenade and in the cafés past midnight. The shops will also still be open. I have been from Tétouan in the west to a few miles east of the village of Oued Laou about 20 miles to the east. Where a valley that meets the sea is narrow, there will be little except a beach, but where a larger valley opens out, there is now a large resort.

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Havsa at Oued Lauo

She was hoping to walk barefoot on the sand, but the sand was too hot to bear, though it was still well before lunch time. In a normal year, the beach would have been busy. Note the lampposts; every resort has a variation of them.

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Oued Lauo from the coast road

Building continues apace. There is actually a very large fertile valley inland, known for its fruit orchards. It may be threatened by plans to build a dam higher up the river Lauo.

Targha

Targha, just along the coast east of Oued Laou

There is virtually nothing except a car park at Targha.

Aouchtam

Aouchtam (pronounced approximately as ‘Ooch Tam’)

The road takes a big sweep up and down here. The village is small, built into the hillside, and there is little scope for expansion.

Near Tétouan (which is up river) I have briefly visited Martil and M’Diq. These are very large flashy resorts, with upmarket restaurants and ice cream parlours. Being so near Tétouan they, no doubt, get many day trippers – which in Morocco will include evening visits. There was little evidence of much by way of entertainment though.

My next post will definitely be about the celebration of Big Eid. As I forecast last time, the family is going ‘over the top’. We currently have 6 large rams here awaiting their turn to be sacrificed next Friday.

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New arrival ‘Billy’

This chap has just arrived this morning and is the lucky one. He is going to join the family flock of goats, and have a good life for at least another year.

 

 

Posted by Victoria Doran

I have been retired since 2010 and have decided to go travelling the world for 18 months from January 2020.

My home is in West Kirby, Wirral, England

6 thoughts on “Amsa village and Moroccan seaside resorts”

  1. Hi Victoria
    Well reading your account I feel as if I am visiting there myself and soaking up the interesting details of flora and fauna in Morocco. I like your bathing suit adaptation and glad you got in for a dip, bet you were so pleased to cool down! The water looks very clear and healthy, any signs of plastic waste? I hope not.
    Our younger son Laurie has been back staying with us for 4 weeks from London and returning there today so the house will seem quiet as he is working from home which means many meetings with the sounds of speakers from all over the world will cease as will and plenty of guitar practice too !!!
    Rob and I went to look after our grand daughter last Thursday in Stockport as she had managed to secure a hairdressing appointment!! She is a delight, now walking everywhere and dropping down into a fast crawl when needs must!
    Hoylake and Meols are looking great with our mixture of rain and sunshine being a good combination for vigorous growth. I hope that Jan may have sent you some photos? A new landlord has taken over the lease, or bought? the Row in Hoylake so we will see what that leads to. One of the tenants of a new beer bar there has offered to put a tap in for us which will be very helpful, rather than carting it from Holy Trinity church etc.
    I will look forward to your next post about the Big Eid. Take care, Debbie

  2. Your last 2 posts remind me so much of when we lived in rural Portugal. I feel quite homesick! However seeing the picture of you i your designer swimwear with the children has cheered me up again. I’m so glad you are enjoying your adventures.
    I have just had 2 grandsons to stay – Ist people in the house since mid March -quite a treat!

  3. Glad to see you’re getting out & about, enjoying the coast & different areas and adding to your stockpile of photos for your scrapbook (or travel guide!)! Hope you’re managing to cope with the heat too! (Here am I, inside the house, escaping from a mere 20 degrees or so!!) Keep enjoying such an interesting and different culture! Rose

  4. Eid Mubarak Victoria and to your adopted family.
    I have loved reading all your posts you are obviously making the most of your stay.

  5. What an interesting time you are having! Your trip so far is not the one you had planned, but you’re having a unique chance to share the lives and culture of your Moroccan family which you otherwise would not have had. Maybe some good has come from Covid19! It’s great to see all your photos showing us just what all the different places are like. Hope Big Eid goes well and that you survive the slaughter of the goats! Moira.

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