MOROCCO ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฆ | WHAT NOT TO DO When Visiting โŒ | Do's, Don'ts, Advice & Travel Tips

Author Avatar

Chris Kermis

Joined: May 2024
Spread the love


MOROCCO ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฆ | WHAT NOT TO DO When Visiting โŒ | Do's, Don'ts, Advice & Travel Tips


Are you visiting Morocco for the first time? Then this video will help you with what you shouldnโ€™t do and conversely what you should do.

Wherever youโ€™re going on your vacation to Morroco, these Morroco travel tips and pieces of advice will be invaluable in Marrakech, Fes, Casablanca, Rabat, Chefchaouen (the blue city), Tangier,…

source

Reviews

0 %

User Score

0 ratings
Rate This

Sharing

Leave your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

48 Comments

  1. As a woman, it is important to dress modestly, covering the shoulders and the knees. Women dressed with exposed knees and shoulders were glared at and some comments and cat calls, made. Also, as a woman, it took some time to get used to being ignored when ordering food and coffee. It is a little thing, but annoying. Also, negotiating when shopping was a bit of a grind because the vendor was almost always male, and there was usually a condescending and patronizing attitude. So be patient with that, and if you can speak French, do so, I found that people were more accommodating when I spoke French. Taking pictures of local women is really frowned upon, and were told not to do it at all. Patience is required in many situations as I found that most people did one task at a time, rather than take two or three requests. Again patience was key. If you can be patient, the people are very nice.

  2. Just the way it is its their culture wereas if we banned muslims from our churches you would never hear the end of it…islam offended by everything ashamed of nothing..

  3. Well Morocco is definitely not for the faint hearted

    I am sitting in a Ryan Air flight to Marakech and it's 2 hours late and counting… They also changed our airplane. In the 2nd plane the Pilot announced that ''We don't have enough fuel to get to Marakech๐Ÿ˜…'' so now we are waiting for a fuel tanker… ๐Ÿ˜ข

  4. The cleaners at the Casablanca airport persistently harassed me and my colleague when we transited through to Banjul. On our return, one of them asked for money before giving us the WiFi password. Not a nice experience

  5. ja, but I think that what you said about taxis is not right.
    there are petit (small) taxis vor small distances, mainly in the city or near the city which you take alone or with a/friend(s)/family
    and then there are grand (big) taxis (for example old Mercedes) for long distance rides between one city to another. Of course you can take this taxi alone but then you would have to pay a lot, so usually to safe money you share it with other people and the price will be split between 4 or even 6 people. Usually the ride will start when the taxi is full so you will wait for a while.

  6. as a local guy , let me add one tip for people who doesn't like long rides ,
    We have 3 types of Taxi in Morocco , 2 for the inside of the city , one is cheap but taking time to get all places full before going on , the other is fast but charges more , the 3rd Taxi is for outside the city
    it's pretty fast and the best option if you want to arrive fast.for womans don't worry the local people will be with you also the police number is 19 save it.

  7. as someone who lived in the fesi medina, try all the food, i think the fountains are fine for you, but i hear some foreign people get sick from the wall fountains. however i hear from my cousins that they shut the fountains down so i do not know if you can still use them.

  8. I visited 6 times Morocco everywhere because my husband is from Rabat…and true the North is more openminded and so beautiful !!! I will also add yes don't be to provocative with your clothes and if you are overweight like me you will feel look at you because most of them are skinny as stick !!! And I am not that fat…but you feel judge.

  9. If you have to take the bus, try to take CTM, It is the best bus service by far, choose CTM premium if it is available, CTM premium goes from Casablanca to Marrakesh and a few other destinations.

  10. Nice video, really enjoyed it. I lived in Meknes and Rabat twenty years ago, so it was very interesting to hear about your recent experiences. Sad to hear that it's not as easy to find authentic Moroccan food! Cheers, keep the videos coming.

  11. Mosques are not closed to non Muslims as long as your thoughtful enough to at least make an attempt to participate rather ostracise yourself and ask silly questions and film like you privileges matter everywhere else you travel some people are just reserved like in the west no time for the bs

  12. I'm so lucky im married to mrcoon husband I've never had any problems with cards or at boarders i got married in rabbit i dresses well and respectful i always worn sunglasses ๐Ÿ•ถ i had fab time with the taxis ๐ŸŽ‰๐ŸŽ‰๐ŸŽ‰

  13. Hey. I take plenty of supplements, which I supposed I could do without, but also magnesium and melatonin which I cannot do without as they help me sleep. Whatโ€™s the story with bringing them into Morocco?

  14. I don't think Westerners would have issues showing respect to Islam, they bend over at every opportunity in their own countries. It's the foremost protected class in every Western nation. In general, good video. Detailed, to the point, and very helpful.

  15. I'm here for some impossible things. Because a Moroccan guy named Ahmed El Idrissi from your country stole our money and broke my peace, he cheated lots of money from us and insulted others. I've been trying to find a way to make him pay back everything he did, not yet. So maybe it's just a rant to feel better, but I hope his family got exactly same things he did to others ๐Ÿ™‚, maybe that's actually the best thing to wish for him and his parents and family

  16. I took the fast ferry to tangier from Spain a few years back ( just a day trip as we were touring Spain) and one of the Spanish guys told us to buy duty free cigarettes on the ferry to use as tips , sound advice as it turned out . We hired an official government guide at the docks ( they carry a government ID badge with their name and details ) he spoke excellent English and arranged a taxi took us to some points of interest around the city. After this he took us on a tour of the city souks and to a cafe where. We had and excellent unhurried lunch of delicious Moroccan food and very inexpensive , about 15 euros for all three of us . All in all about 4 and half hours . He then took is back to the port where we found a huge Queue waiting for the ferry , probably 300 people. Fortunately our guide ushered us straight past the queue shouting move aside ! move aside ! V I P s coming through ! straight to customs where he advised us quietly to give him a carton of cigarettes which he passed to the customs guy our passports were stamped immediately and hey presto we were on the ferry . The cost for the guide was 20 euros , he was very polite informative and had eased our passage so much and I thought that was too little offered him 30 he refused saying the price was fixed by the government and he couldnโ€™t take more . I felt a bit guilty so gave gave him another carton of cigarettes which he accepted ( they were American and amazingly cheap on the ferry ) .

  17. Avoid Morocco. Full of gangsters and no hygiene. Food is shit and everything is shit. You get the feeling that everyone wants to kill you or your money. Probably both.