Most Inspirational Moment
100 metres from the summit of Mount Toubkal, guide Mohammed stepped back and ushered the group forward to complete the last steps by ourselves.
Thoughts on Group Leader
Our group leader was Mohammed. Mohammed is a great leader and guide worthy of respect. I can't fault Mohammed, it was a privilidge for us as Exodus customers to be guided by him and I feel we received something more as a consequence of his leadership. Mohammed could read the group amazingly well. He knew when he could drive us along and pick up the speed and conversely when anyone needed to slow down he accomodated that without pressure or question.
Advice for Potential Travellers
If you travel during the summer do not underestimate the heat. The trip notes do mention that it can be hot in the lower valleys during July and August, they are not kiddding. On our first day of hiking during early August I measured 41C. I struggled badly in this heat which in turn lead to cramp due to sweat/fluid loss. Be ready for it or avoid it. Things do cool down the higher you get but even during the second day it was at times over 30C. A couple days later I measured 18C in the early hours of the morning when we began our summit climb and on the summit I measured 9C, I was wearing shorts and t-shirt by this point. Mobile network coverage is often patchy or non existant in the mountains but if you do want to stay connected, I was advised by Mohammed that the best SIM/Network to opt for is "INWI". I bought an "Orange" SIM card at the airport and it was borderline useless in the mountains. There was reception at the base camp, in the vicinity of the refuges but even then I had to get myself in a favourable location for reception. Not so for the people using Inwi. The Moroccan Dirham is a closed currency, so not easy to obtain as holiday money in the UK. You might obtain your Dirhams from one of the large and prominient exchange counters in the baggage reclaim hall at Marrakech airport. I was given all my Dirhams as 200 and 100 notes. These are far too large to spend in the mountains and often in the city too. Ask the cashier to mostly give you 20 and 50 Dirham notes, these are much more convenient values in Morocco for the kind of spending we are likely to do. A 1.5L bottle of water in the mountains was 10 and 15 Dirhams, a can of Pepsi about 15 too. In the city my first evening meal, chicken skewers and a cola was 61 Dirhams.