Eighteen journeys, one country.
Every trip we run, in one place. Twelve guests at most, named regional guides, departures held to the months when each region is at its best. Choose by region, by pace, or by what time you have.
Every trip we run, in one place. Twelve guests at most, named regional guides, departures held to the months when each region is at its best. Choose by region, by pace, or by what time you have.
Seven nights in one city. Two nights in Fès before any other city — the Talâa Kbira at the pace of noticing, Chouara at six in the morning before the bus tours, a full day on Volubilis and Meknès, an afternoon at the Sidi Hrazem thermal spring. One night in Chefchaouen on the way back. The founder's home city, taught the way it should be taught.
Most popular
Casablanca, Rabat, Meknès, three nights in Fès, Chefchaouen, three nights in Marrakech. The classic, paced at ten nights so each city gets the time it needs. The point is not to add a city; the point is to remove the rush.
Tangier-start variant. Two nights at Chefchaouen — not as a photo stop but as a place to stay. Three nights in Fès, with Meknès and Volubilis on the way down to Casablanca. For travellers arriving by ferry from Spain, or for anyone who wants Morocco from the top.
Once yearly
Built around the annual Festival of Sufi Culture in Fès, with seats reserved months in advance and conversations arranged with the artists. Five nights centred on the festival programme — concerts, sema circles, the academic talks at the Batha Museum. Fixed dates each June.
Marrakech south over the Tizi n'Tichka, a morning at Aït Benhaddou before the buses, three nights in palmery guesthouses down the Drâa Valley, two nights at Erg Chigaga — the dunes most travellers picture when they picture the Sahara. Return via Todra and Dades. The Sahara most travellers ask for, done patiently.
Twelve nights for a second Morocco trip, or a milestone. Marrakech, into the Anti-Atlas, two nights at Tafraoute among the painted rocks, the Aït Mansour palmery, then west to Erg Chigaga — reached by 4×4, mobile camp set up by our long-standing local network. Tata, Taroudannt, return Marrakech.
Imlil base, ascent staged over four days with mules and family guesthouses, descent through the Azzaden valley. Hassan as named lead guide — twelve years with us, regional specialism on Toubkal. Honest about altitude, weather, and what the walking is actually like.
No peak, no summit. The Happy Valley over nine nights, walking between named family houses, no day longer than the last. Lower altitude than Toubkal, longer in the country. The trip for a walker who isn't climbing.
A point-to-point traverse across the M'Goun massif. Eleven nights from Aït Bouguemmaz over the high passes to the Tessaout Valley. No summit attempt — distance and altitude are the trip. Mules carry the camp; named guide for the full traverse.
One night in Marrakech, two at a working family house in the Atlas foothills walking the argan-tree country, four nights in Essaouira proper — the medina at the speed of the wind, the working port at six, an afternoon learning thuya woodwork. The new fifth theme.
Casablanca briefly, two nights at El Jadida — the Portuguese cistern, the working port, the coast almost no foreign visitor sees. Two nights at Oualidia for the lagoon and the oysters, three in Essaouira, two south at Sidi Kaouki or Taghazout. The Atlantic line, north to south, ending at Agadir.
Fourteen nights, the imperial cities then south to the Sahara. Casablanca, Rabat, Meknès, three nights in Fès, over the Atlas to Aït Benhaddou, two nights in the Drâa, two at Erg Chigaga, return via Marrakech. The single Morocco trip for travellers who want both worlds.
Three nights in Marrakech, three in Essaouira, then north by high-speed train to three nights in Fès, ending in Casablanca. Culture and coast, no desert. For multi-generational families where the youngest is a teenager and the eldest approaching eighty.
Three nights in Marrakech learning from Najat at the Amal Association. Two nights at an Atlas family kitchen with Khadija. Three nights in Fès with Hicham, the chef whose tasting menu has been written about. One night in Casablanca for the market and the seafood. Cooking, not watching cooking.
A women-only journey through Marrakech, the High Atlas, and Fès, with a female lead guide and female regional guides at every stop. Time with the women of an Atlas weaving cooperative. An afternoon at the Amal Association in Marrakech. Twice a year.
Three nights in Marrakech, three at an Atlas family house where the host's children play with the visiting children, three in Essaouira for the beach, the boats, and the wind. Adjoining rooms, mixed-age pacing, fewer activities per day. The standards do not change.
Seven days on horseback through the rural north — Mount Zalagh above Fès, the hot springs at Moulay Yacoub, the cork pine valleys of Menzah. A wellness and saddle week designed for capable riders. Switch between horse and on foot at any point.
Twelve days listening to the country as much as looking at it. Sufi sema in Moulay Idriss, Gnawa lila in a Fès riad, Jajouka rhythms on Mount Zalagh, Andalusian and Sephardic music in the Marrakech Mellah. Real ceremonies, named musicians, by introduction.
Music of Morocco is a twelve-day journey structured around music traditions that still exist as living practice, not folklore. The Tariqa Boutchichia and Tijani brotherhoods convene sema circles in Moulay Idriss and Fès where outsiders a…
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If the trip in your head isn't on this page, tell us about it. Most of our set departures started as one phone call from a traveller who wanted something specific. Bespoke journeys carry the same twelve-guest cap and the same named guides.