You’ll cross wild mountain passes from Marrakech to Fes, wander ancient kasbahs like Ait Ben Haddou, ride camels at sunset in Merzouga’s Sahara dunes, and sleep under stars in a desert camp with Berber music drifting through the night air. Even after you leave Morocco behind, those moments linger somewhere just out of reach.
The first thing I noticed leaving Marrakech was how quickly the city noise faded. It’s almost like someone turned down the volume as we climbed toward the Tizi n’Tichka Pass. Our driver, Hassan, pointed out Berber villages tucked into the hills — little clusters of red clay that almost disappeared into the landscape if you weren’t looking. We stopped for coffee in Kelaat Mgouna (the Roses Valley), and I swear I could still smell those sweet petals on my jacket hours later. There’s this moment when you realize you’re really out here — no turning back to Marrakech until you’ve crossed half of Morocco.
Ait Ben Haddou looks almost unreal up close, all mudbrick towers stacked against a blue sky. Our guide told us about movie crews that come here but honestly, it was the old man selling dates who stuck with me more — he handed me one without a word and just smiled. The road after that winds through valleys and kasbahs, and by evening we reached Tinghir where dinner was this slow-cooked tagine that tasted like it had been simmering since sunrise. I couldn’t finish it (portion sizes are no joke), but nobody seemed to mind.
The next day is when “Marrakech to Fes Sahara Desert Tour” really means something. The sand in Merzouga is fine as flour — gets everywhere, but somehow you stop caring once you’re on a camel at sunset. The silence out there is thick; even the guides lower their voices. That night under the tent, there were Berber songs around a fire and I tried drumming along (badly). Lying back on the sand later, watching stars spill across the sky — I still think about that view when city life gets too loud.
Morning comes early in the desert. Riding back as dawn breaks over Erg Chebbi feels unreal — your shadow stretches forever on golden dunes. After breakfast (strong mint tea, bread warm from a fire), we drove past Rissani’s palm groves and through cedar forests near Azrou where monkeys darted across the road like they owned it. By late afternoon Fes appeared ahead — all green tiles and winding streets — and suddenly three days felt both long and much too short.
The tour takes 3 days and ends in Fes by early evening on day three.
Yes, a camel trek at sunset and sunrise in Erg Chebbi near Merzouga is included.
Dinner and breakfast are included each night; lunch is not mentioned.
Yes, hotel pickup is included at the start of your trip from Marrakech.
You’ll spend one night in a nomad tent at a desert camp in Merzouga.
You’ll see Ait Ben Haddou, Ouarzazate area, Tinghir/Todra Gorges, Merzouga/Erg Chebbi dunes, Rissani, Ziz Valley, Azrou cedar forest before reaching Fes.
The tour includes sand-boarding in Erg Chebbi as well as walking through Todra oasis and gorges.
Yes; infants can ride in strollers or sit on an adult’s lap; specialized infant seats are available.
Your journey includes hotel pickup from Marrakech, all transportation by air-conditioned vehicle across mountain passes and valleys, a camel trek at sunset and sunrise in Merzouga’s Erg Chebbi dunes with sand-boarding available if you want it, overnight stays including one night in a nomad tent under Saharan stars with dinner and breakfast each day before arriving at your accommodation or drop-off point in Fes.
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