Siroua Mountain

Siroua The saffron mountain :

winter  treks

Following the sun to some of Morocco’s most startling mountain- desert scenery,the Anti-Atlas range and sub-Saharan hinterland hugging its southern flanks is an austerely beautiful region of sinuous canyons and lush oases. Tafraoute lies at the heart of the Anti-Atlas The long, winding ascent past flat-roofed villages, and groves of almond and olive-like argan trees brings one to a sentinel over a long valley splashed with mustard-yellow and poppy-red. This region is known for its hillocks of weirdly-eroded sandstone. Looming over the surrounding valleys and nearby lie a beautiful area, especially when late afternoon sun fires the peculiar landscape amber and bronze.

Ameln and oumnast valleys whose many odd tranquil villages are dwarfed by the mauve and lilac crags of the djebel el kest whose flanks teem with new colourful homes hugging the valley floor. There are displays of grinders for argan oil, pots, daggers and ceremonial babouches or slippers. One can lounge in their salon sipping ‘Berber whisky’ (mint tea, alas) and dipping bread in amlou, a nutritious blend of argan, almond paste and honey.

A handful of villages, are linked by an unbroken ribbon of palms and tiny fields. The stretch between these valleys and the mouth of canyons is flat and fairly open and host some fantastic geological wonders and prehistoric rock paintings near some villages, but the wild scenery and utter stillness alone justify the trip.

The agadir, or fortified granary, dotting the anti atlas remains amongst morocco’s best-preserved. These granaries - a Berber tradition - were designed to protect food stores and valuables. Skillfully built from rocks and wood, and perched on a knoll, its four deep courtyards are honeycombed with around two hundred storage chambers. Turning south for Tata, cool oases carpet the valley and stand on the fringes of the desert, its climate hotter, its people darker. There’s a more negroid cast to many local faces, a legacy of the slave trade when caravans toiled from mauritania and niger. Here they set up a stunning cluster of ancient kasbahs and settlements emerging almost organically from the earth.

Around Siroua :

Some of the southern slopes to the high Atlas are host to great winter walks . The Safron mountains offer spectacular range and very rewarding treks amongst sheepfolds, pastures and enriching tribal encounters. further inland occasional snow covered peaks add to the beauty and serenity of this forgotten heights facing the country`s highest tops of the Atlas and the widest open ergs ahead of the Sahara.

  • day 1 : Taliouine- Akhfamane
  • day 2 : Akhfamane-Mazwad-Ti Nidor
  • day 3 : Tinidor - Guiliz
  • day 4 : Guiliz- Tegragra
  • day 5 : Tegragra -Jebel Siroua summit - Tizgui
  • day 6 : Tizgui-Tagyouam -Tizlit
  • day 7 : Tizlit -Ifrane-Tinfat
  • day 8 : Tinfat-Miggarn –Akhfamane.

Details :

lamp info shoe home medium level
Comfort:
basic to comfortable
None Activities
walking
Accommodation:
guest houses, hotels
Grading:
easy to moderate
climat tent air plan car time
Weather:
cold to hot
wild camping Joining:
Marrakech
Transport:
bus or 4x4/ mules
Period:
September/ June

The blossom valley :

This small massif is a link between the Toubkal area and the extreme oriental side of the anti Atlas. Sirwa stands as a volcanic range made up of basalt and granite terrain, contrasting with the bushy and steppe-like vegetations dominating the wide-open spaces in the lowlands .

Itinerary :

  • day 1 : tamlakout/ ait tigga
  • day 2 : ait tigga-azib
  • day 3 : azib(2700m) /siroua foothills.
  • day 4 : djebel guiliz-tizzgui -ait oubial -tisslit valley.
  • day 5 : ifrane.

Details :

lamp info shoe home medium level
Comfort:
basic to comfortable
None Activities:
walking
Accommodation:
guest houses, hotels
Grading:
easy to moderate
climat tent air plan car time
Weather:
cold to hot
wild camping Joining:
Marrakech
Transport:
bus or 4x4/ mules
Period:
September/ June