Fez Morocco
Fez Morocco
Fez is the third largest city in Morocco, after Casablanca and Rabat. It seems that the city of Fez is still lingering back in the Middle Ages. As you arrive in the city and begin to walk around your senses are torn between beautiful sights, intricate sounds and colourful smells. Much of the city still is still holding on to its French roots. Thus around 200000 of Fez's inhabitants stay in the city of Fez el Bali. Staying a few days in Fez el Bali will make you recognize that it's hard to avoid the paradox of the place. Fez el Bali is a place with a constant source of interest.
You can either stay in the modern hotels of Ville Nouvelle with a reliable water supply, or in the basic hotels of Medina in Fes el Bali and Fes el Djedid. There is frequently a shortage of hotel space so be sure to book well in advance. A small number of the better hotels have swimming pools and also offer advantages with their restaurants and pubs.
Things to See & Do
Fez has enough sights to keep you busy for three to four days. The streets are filled with mosques, medersas, fondouks and monuments.
The Merenid tombs on the rim of the valley, gives you a spectacular overview of the city.
The Boujeloud Gardens is a real haven with an open air cafe and many picnic spots.
Evening roost at Fez makes a spectacular sight for bird watching. The skies appear to swarm with literally thousands of alpine swifts, in search of insects for their young in nests in the city walls.
Ville Nouvelle is the centre for most of the cities restaurants, bars, cafes, bookshops and other facilities. Fes el Bali and Fes el Djedid have no bars and a few Palace-Restaurants, which are very basic and only open for lunch and mainly caters for tourists.
Cafe's and bars are scattered throughout the streets of Ville Nouvelle and are very popular with locals and tourists. The bars in Fez range from non-alcoholic to serious morocco-drinking style, with pool tables and a huge crowd of regulars. The hotel bars are safe and suited for the tourist who just wants sit and have a quiet drink. There are plenty small cafe's all over the Medina. The cafe's here are very clean and friendly and sell fabulous breakfasts and lunch.
Getting Around
By Train
The train station is situated in the Ville Nouvelle, ten minutes walk from all the hotels around town. From the train station, the buses pass the main bus station, the airport and the outlying suburbs.
By Bus
Coming in by bus is rather confusing seeing that there are three terminals, the Ville Nouvelle, the Medina, and the main bus station. If you're coming from Taza and the east, the buses stop at the Medina's southeast gate, Bab Ftouh, before they continue to the main bus station.
By Grand Taxi
Like buses, the grand taxis mostly operate from three or four points. The rank opposite the CTM office, the rank at the train station, the rank southeast of Place de la Resistance and Bab Ftouth.
By Air
Fez's new airport is 15km south of the city center, off the N8. From here you can reach town by bus or by grand taxis - ranks are outside the terminal building to your left.
By Car
If you come by car there is a small car park south of Bab Boujeloud, just a few minutes walk from the old Medina and some of the hotels, where you can leave your car.
Guides
Getting a guide is fairly easy since they are outside the more up market hotels and youth hostels.
A half-a-day tour from a good guide will be a useful introduction to Fes el Bali. The downside of getting a guide is that they walk a few meters in front of you, so they don't look that they are at your service, thus you don't get much information about a place this way.
The basic layout of Fez el Bali is very simple, with a Moroccan Medina that separates the two cities: Fez el Bali (old Fez) and Fez el Djedid (new Fez), and a French-built Ville Nouvelle. Fez el Djedid is a beautiful place with a vast enclosure of royal palaces and fabulous gardens. Fez el Bali, however is an incredible intricate city with many confusing lanes, souks and blind alleys, you may want to get yourself a guide just to show you the main sights and layouts. The learning of Fez el Bali is not very straightforward as all the street signs are in Arabic only. Transportation in Fez consists out of trains, buses, grand taxis, cars or by air.
Contact us now for more information on Morocco.....
Fez is the third largest city in Morocco, after Casablanca and Rabat. It seems that the city of Fez is still lingering back in the Middle Ages. As you arrive in the city and begin to walk around your senses are torn between beautiful sights, intricate sounds and colourful smells. Much of the city still is still holding on to its French roots. Thus around 200000 of Fez's inhabitants stay in the city of Fez el Bali. Staying a few days in Fez el Bali will make you recognize that it's hard to avoid the paradox of the place. Fez el Bali is a place with a constant source of interest.
You can either stay in the modern hotels of Ville Nouvelle with a reliable water supply, or in the basic hotels of Medina in Fes el Bali and Fes el Djedid. There is frequently a shortage of hotel space so be sure to book well in advance. A small number of the better hotels have swimming pools and also offer advantages with their restaurants and pubs.
Things to See & Do
Fez has enough sights to keep you busy for three to four days. The streets are filled with mosques, medersas, fondouks and monuments.
The Merenid tombs on the rim of the valley, gives you a spectacular overview of the city.
The Boujeloud Gardens is a real haven with an open air cafe and many picnic spots.
Evening roost at Fez makes a spectacular sight for bird watching. The skies appear to swarm with literally thousands of alpine swifts, in search of insects for their young in nests in the city walls.
Ville Nouvelle is the centre for most of the cities restaurants, bars, cafes, bookshops and other facilities. Fes el Bali and Fes el Djedid have no bars and a few Palace-Restaurants, which are very basic and only open for lunch and mainly caters for tourists.
Cafe's and bars are scattered throughout the streets of Ville Nouvelle and are very popular with locals and tourists. The bars in Fez range from non-alcoholic to serious morocco-drinking style, with pool tables and a huge crowd of regulars. The hotel bars are safe and suited for the tourist who just wants sit and have a quiet drink. There are plenty small cafe's all over the Medina. The cafe's here are very clean and friendly and sell fabulous breakfasts and lunch.
Getting Around
By Train
The train station is situated in the Ville Nouvelle, ten minutes walk from all the hotels around town. From the train station, the buses pass the main bus station, the airport and the outlying suburbs.
By Bus
Coming in by bus is rather confusing seeing that there are three terminals, the Ville Nouvelle, the Medina, and the main bus station. If you're coming from Taza and the east, the buses stop at the Medina's southeast gate, Bab Ftouh, before they continue to the main bus station.
By Grand Taxi
Like buses, the grand taxis mostly operate from three or four points. The rank opposite the CTM office, the rank at the train station, the rank southeast of Place de la Resistance and Bab Ftouth.
By Air
Fez's new airport is 15km south of the city center, off the N8. From here you can reach town by bus or by grand taxis - ranks are outside the terminal building to your left.
By Car
If you come by car there is a small car park south of Bab Boujeloud, just a few minutes walk from the old Medina and some of the hotels, where you can leave your car.
Guides
Getting a guide is fairly easy since they are outside the more up market hotels and youth hostels.
A half-a-day tour from a good guide will be a useful introduction to Fes el Bali. The downside of getting a guide is that they walk a few meters in front of you, so they don't look that they are at your service, thus you don't get much information about a place this way.
The basic layout of Fez el Bali is very simple, with a Moroccan Medina that separates the two cities: Fez el Bali (old Fez) and Fez el Djedid (new Fez), and a French-built Ville Nouvelle. Fez el Djedid is a beautiful place with a vast enclosure of royal palaces and fabulous gardens. Fez el Bali, however is an incredible intricate city with many confusing lanes, souks and blind alleys, you may want to get yourself a guide just to show you the main sights and layouts. The learning of Fez el Bali is not very straightforward as all the street signs are in Arabic only. Transportation in Fez consists out of trains, buses, grand taxis, cars or by air.
Contact us now for more information on Morocco.....
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