
For one thing, camels don’t take a lot of fuel to go many miles. For another, you don’t need to pack spare tires; their feet are leathery pads with two toes that spread out on the sand, easily overflowing a standard dinner plate. Unlike other four-footed animals, camels move both feet on the same side forward when they walk so riding one is like sitting astride an overturned kayak on a sometimes stormy sea. Camels have huge doe-shaped eyes with long lashes that either make you think they are the ‘soulful’ animals of Lonely Planet’s musings on the 'Desert of Dreams', or remind you of some cartoon. Camels seem to be a bit self-centered and stubborn to me, but they eventually follow the lead of the camel herder and provide the function they have provided for millennia – taking wanderers across the great expanse of the mother of all deserts – the Sahara.
When I headed to Morocco, I already knew I would miss the Royal Cities to the north, choosing instead the wide open barren spaces to the south. I have an addiction to wide open spaces having lived in the USA’s Desert Southwest for nearly 35 years. If the choice is between desert and city, I’ll most always opt for desert. And that is where I headed, the day after my plane landed in Marrakech.

As my hosts and I traveled from Tanghir even further southeast into the desert, the hamada became even more sparse and empty. We saw camel herds and camel herders on the hills. My hosts pointed out what looked very much like the top of ancient kivas but turned out to be underground watering holes (think ‘rest stops’) for the Amazigh (Berbers) living their nomadic lives in this dry, inhospitable country. The further south we drove, the smaller the villages became; autos often replaced by all manner of wagons and carriages drawn by donkeys and horses.

This trip was supposed to end up with a 4WD ride up and over
the dunes to a Amazigh encampment for two days but because of the real threat
of a sandstorm (even the camel herder who sleeps with the camels in a small
shack mentioned that sandstorms are the least favorite part of his job), an
overnight stay in this beautiful hotel with a sunset camel ride and walk into
the dunes was Plan B. Not a bad Plan B at all.
After settling in and having tea (you are always offered
‘tea’ here in Morocco and you should always accept – it’s just polite and the cookies are generally quite good), we met
our camel herder in back of the hotel at the base of the Erg. I wasn’t too
concerned about mounting the camel. The camel was cushed (lying down) and my
camel was the smaller of the two. To mount a camel, you literally throw
one leg over the saddle and pull yourself up onto it. The saddle has no
stirrups but does offer a smallish ‘rod’ tied in the middle to the saddle
directly behind the camel’s rather large head. This operates as your ‘saddle
horn’ and believe me, you are going to use it as a drowning man hangs on to his life ring buoy.
The camel herder then shouts camel-type commands to the
camel, the camel responds in kind (although it seemed my camel was saying “nope
it’s late and I’m staying right here jerk”) and this continues until the camel
herder wins. Or at least mine did.
Remember that little rod? It is going to keep you from
tumbling over the camel’s head when the giant beast pushes off the ground with
his back legs to stand up. Your entire body is suddenly vertical to the ground
and your feet are desperately hunting for the afore-mentioned missing stirrups.
But in the end, you are up in a pretty comfortable saddle feeling pretty good
about not making a complete fool of yourself. Until you realize your legs are
further apart than they ever were when you birthed your firstborn.
The camel's front end goes up a bit easier; this movement will
bring the saddle parallel to the ground, a much more comfortable position. And then, your ‘ship of the desert’ (called so because of the
rocking motion of your camel as it moves both legs on one side forward) begins
its slow plod up and into the erg.
A camel going up into the dunes isn’t too bad. The camel’s
giant dinner-plate feet are perfectly designed for walking in sand. I could
feel my core muscles moving and reflected on how much more fun this was than
pilates. Yet, once up a dune, the other side usually goes down. This means that
occasionally a camel has to go down too. Once more I had the notion of
impending tumbling over the camel’s head-except from a higher plane. I
tightened my grip on the rod and gripped with my inner thighs, inwardly
thanking my fitness trainer for those thigh strengthening exercises using one
of those inflatable exercise balls.
After riding the camel for what was all too short a time, we were several
dunes back into the Erg and ready to climb up to the tallest dune around for
the sunset. Getting off a camel is pretty much the reverse of getting on one.
Same feeling of insecurity, same sense of the imminent foolishness of tumbling
over the camel’s head onto the soft, forgiving (thank god) sand.
Climbing your way up
a dune entails a good amount of work. But once on top, we could see the massive
Erg Chebbi with its continuous flow of dunes all the way to the horizon in three
directions. I nearly cried. I had asked my host to leave time for me to give
thanks to the Maker and closed my eyes so I could affect a graceful and grateful posture and
listen to the sound of the sand constantly shifting around us.
Almost before I had enough time to express my gratitude,
sand started providing me an unwanted microdermabrasion. Fortunately, my host
had stopped in at a roadside ‘strip center’ in order for us to purchase the
necessary length of cloth from which to make a Berber turban.
Following his
instructions, I had wound my turban around my head, leaving a ‘tail’ I could
tuck into my turban’s folds in case the sand got there before we got down from
the dune. That ‘tail’ quickly found its way across my face.
There is something incredibly unique and mystical about
sitting on top of a giant dune at the very beginning of a sandstorm. We stayed
just a bit longer, watching the orange-red Sahara sun slide slowly down over the hamada to the west, until the camel herder and my host felt we really needed
to leave because of the blowing sand. It is quite easy to lose
your sense of direction in a sandstorm. But if you are ever provided an
opportunity to safely experience the swirl of sand around you on a darkening
dune before riding your camel back to civilization, it is an experience that I can
truly say might just be once in a lifetime.