Monday 7 March 2016

My thank you party

On my last day of volunteering with Moroccan children's trust the staff threw a thank you party(hefla) for me and a welcome to some new moroccan voluteers from Taroudannt university....
mmmm- yummy cake!


Zachary carrying in the really delicious
Pastilla


Zayna and Lazara spent all day cleaning and setting up the volunteer house
and preparing the meal


Youssef(my arabic culture teacher) and Meryam (one of the MCT social workers)

Abdellah Lamine playing the oud

Thursday 3 March 2016

trekking into the high Atlas mountains

On our last day in Taroudannt, Shane & I went trekking into the high Atlas mountains with a lovely guide called Said. We drove up through Berber villages into the mountains, left the car and hiked up a stoney path to a ridge that looked down one side onto the plains of the Souss massa valley and beyond to Taroudant; on the other the peaks with a dusting of snow...



the rocky road back down! 



Said preparing a fire for our BBQ picnic


looking over the peaks

Shane holding on to an argan tree

view from the ridge back towards Taroudant

hob-nobbing with the moroccan royal family!

we shared a delicious lunch at the  volunteer house
One Saturday we had a visit from one of the trustees of MCT  who happens to be related to
the king of Morocco! She is sitting second from the left.

Saturday 27 February 2016

A trip to a berber village

On Thursday afternoon Shane and Kevin (my husband and brother-in-law) arrived in Taroudant from Marrakech...it was really good to see them!
On Friday I took the day off from my voluntary work to join a tour to a berber village not very far from Taroudant. We walked around the village looking at trees, plants & herbs and what the berber people use them for eg: some very fragrant basil used as decoration at a wedding for good luck but not for eating.
home made organic soap made by the berber women
this woman is trying to shoo the cat away before demonstrating how to make flat bread-
delicious with argan honey-mmmm!
the bread was cooked in this earth oven
Our vegetable tagine lunch- bezzaf!
The men in the village make simple pottery like tagine pots and little animal sculptures sun dried and then fired in an open earth kiln and the women make soap. A cooperative from Pembrokeshire handed over the recipe to the berber women. The soap is organic and made from olive oil, argan oil, soda and lavender.
The women helped us to arrange our head scarves berber-style
Then we took a tour around the village
this man was making tagine pots using a foot-operated wheel
This is the open firing kiln
various hand built items for sale
could I squeeze one of these in my suitcase?!
a typical berber kitchen



My berber-style headscarf!




Wednesday 24 February 2016

Working at the orphanage

Working at Lalla Amina orphanage has been more fun this week:) I was having difficulties last week with knowing how to relate to the staff and other volunteers; also, not knowing if I was doing my job as a volunteer in the best way....but after a bit of a 'heart to heart' with Oliver the volunteer coordinator, who told me that any attention and love these babies and children receive is good as they have been so badly neglected up until now.
I have got to know the staff and other volunteers much better now and realise that, like most good organisations, team work is essential! So here are a few pics of some of the team who work at the orphanage...
it was a sunny afternoon so we took the toddlers outside to play on the slide and football

Friday 19 February 2016

This afternoon I helped with the women's project-
3 students from Taroudannt university came up with an idea
to use recycled plastic bags to make attractive items from cut and woven strips.
The idea is to sell these items. We finished the session with moroccan tea and cake - a nice way to end the week.

Wednesday 17 February 2016

This afternoon I planned and led an Arts & Crafts
activity with the children at the MCT centre; it went very well-
we made space rockets from recycled material -amazing what you can do
with a few loo roll tubes and some empty plastic bottles -look how colourful they are!
The children really enjoyed making them and I really enjoyed myself too-it was great fun!

This is me at my favourite cafe near the Berber souk
The cafe au lait costs 6 dhs (0.42p) - try buying a coffee that cheap
in England!