Actividad

Jebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007

Descarga

Fotos de la ruta

Foto deJebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007 Foto deJebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007 Foto deJebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007

Autor

Estadísticas de la ruta

Distancia
102,75 km
Desnivel positivo
3.455 m
Dificultad técnica
Difícil
Desnivel negativo
3.129 m
Altitud máxima
2.578 m
TrailRank 
25
Altitud mínima
1.254 m
Tipo de ruta
Solo ida
Coordenadas
1245
Fecha de subida
21 de noviembre de 2008
Fecha de realización
noviembre 2008
Sé el primero en aplaudir
5 comentarios
Comparte

cerca de Aït Lahsene, Souss-Massa-Drâa (Morocco)

Vista 7928 veces, descargada 266 veces

Fotos de la ruta

Foto deJebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007 Foto deJebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007 Foto deJebel Saghro, Morocco 7 - 13/4/2007

Descripción del itinerario

the Jebel Saghro: a seven day walk between the High and Anti Atlas in the South of Morocco

Ver más external

Puntos de interés

IconoCamping Altitud 1.700 m

day 1

day one camp

IconoCamping Altitud 1.723 m

day 2

day 2 camp

IconoCamping Altitud 1.255 m

day 3

camp day 3

IconoCamping Altitud 1.392 m

day 4

camp day 4

IconoCamping Altitud 1.710 m

day 5

camp day 5

IconoCamping Altitud 2.251 m

day 6

camp day 6

IconoRefugio Altitud 1.601 m

Assaka

IconoPanorámica Altitud 1.530 m

BabnAli

IconoRefugio libre Altitud 1.678 m

Gite

IconoRefugio Altitud 1.300 m

Irgazhoum

Comentarios  (5)

  • Foto de jgysenbergs
  • Foto de wypieprz
    wypieprz 6 may 2014

    1) Was the trip organized by a company a or did you do it on your own?
    2) Are there any villages on the route so that you can replenish supplies (water, basic food) ?

    btw. impressive walk

  • Foto de jgysenbergs
    jgysenbergs 7 may 2014

    @1 Yes, this was an organized trip by a Belgian tour operator (AndersReizen). More details are over here:
    http://gysenbergs.be/tag/jebel-saghro/ (in Dutch] and here:
    http://gysenbergs.eu/gallery2/v/saghro/

    @2 Biggest problem is water. Local people know where to find it. There is the Assaka village but at the time there was no shop. There is a shop in Irgazhoum where I saw some sacs (corn?) and Coke bottles (!).

  • Foto de wypieprz
    wypieprz 7 may 2014

    @2 "Local people know where to find it" Could you please elaborate more on this? Is there any stream / brook so that I could treat the water? Was the shop at Assaka closed permanently?

    3) How many hours did you walk a day (more or less) ? I am trying to estimate a time required to walk the entire route.
    4) Is there any public transport nearby the area, i.e. CTM buses?

    btw. really appreciate your answers, thanks a lot !

  • Foto de jgysenbergs
    jgysenbergs 7 may 2014

    About water: difficult to say because we were told water locations changed all the time. We always spent the night at a place where there was some water, sometimes plenty, sometimes barely enough. The small orange flags on the Google map indicate these places. To clean water, we used Micropur tablets, laced with half a vitamin C tablet for better taste.

    At the time, there was no shop at all in Assaka, but people there were very friendly and I think they will sell some food if they have any to spare.

    We walked about 15 kms each day for 7 days for a total of about 100 kms. If you download the route and import it in some route program you will find the exact distance.

    Don't know about public transport, we took taxis from the Kasbah Itran: http://www.kasbahitran.com/

Si quieres, puedes o esta ruta