Yesterday, we ventured out to swim with the whales. Months ago, we booked a half-day tour that promised us the experience of a lifetime. We weren’t disappointed! Over a period of five hours, we swam with the whales on three separate occasions. Each encounter was truly spectacular.
Friday, September 05, 2025
A whale of a time
Yesterday, we ventured out to swim with the whales. Months ago, we booked a half-day tour that promised us the experience of a lifetime. We weren’t disappointed! Over a period of five hours, we swam with the whales on three separate occasions. Each encounter was truly spectacular.
Wednesday, September 03, 2025
Tongatapu stopover
The tombs were also off limits. However, we’d unexpectedly timed our holiday well. The tombs have been undergoing extensive restoration and until a week ago had then totally obscured by hoardings as new fencing and footpaths were being constructed around its perimeter. Interestingly, the works have been funded by Chinese Government grant. Just as we’d seen in Samoa last year, the Chinese really are actively pursuing soft power influence throughout the Pacific.
Opposite the Royal Tombs we came across the dramatic, ruined Centennial Church of the Free Church of Tonga. It was built in 1885 to commemorate the arrival of Christianity in Tonga by King George Tupou I. The building is an architectural masterpiece, blending traditional Tongan design and materials with European elements. This includes prominent red conical spires reminiscent of medieval churches, walls clad in local coral stone and traditional Tongan-style thatched roof.
It was badly damaged by Cyclone Gita in 2018. Its roof was torn off, and windows were blown out including its stained glass rose window. The structure is currently undergoing repairs, albeit at a slow pace, as funds allow. Its interior was filled with scaffolding as we passed by.
Sunday, August 24, 2025
Tongan countdown
The following Tuesday we fly to Ha’apai, an island atoll 170km to the north. Here we’ll spend nine days living off the grid in a simple beachside fale (hut) at Matafonua Lodge. We’ve been warned that electricity and internet access are only available in the lodge’s central services building. We’ll also be sharing a central bathroom and amenities block with other guests along the beach.
On 10 September we’ll catch a flight back to Tongatapu to lie by the pool at the capital’s largest hotel for a final three days. I’ve also booked us a private tour of the island on our penultimate day in Tonga. My grandfather served in Tonga during the Second World War so I’m hoping we’ll visit a few wartime locations along the way.
Saturday, August 23, 2025
Meknes for a day
After 2.5 days in Fez, Dean and I were keen to head for a new destination. We had UK Working Holiday Visas that had to be endorsed within six months of being issued. As a result, we had to arrive in the UK by 25 October. We’d arrived in Morocco on 7 October and thus had two weeks remaining. Before time ran out, we wanted to see more of Morocco, visit Paris and explore the Netherlands.
However, we soon discovered our English friends were operating on a different timetable. They weren’t in a hurry to go anywhere. We decided to leave them at a campground in Fez and travel by train to Meknes, one of Morocco's four Imperial cities, before returning to Spain.
Water sellers once provided fresh water for local residents before the advent of modern plumbing. You’d find them in public squares and markets loaded with goatskin water bags and brass containers, dishing out a measure of water using brass cups. The brass implements, accompanied by bells, were often hung in a fashion that caused them to jangle as they walked, thus announcing their presence. These days, they’re simply a tourist attraction.
Our final night in Morocco was spent sleeping (sort of) on an overnight train to Tangiers. The train was crowded, and the seats (if you could get one) were little more than rows of timber benches. Most of us sat on our luggage or on the floor, resting against the carriage walls. In many respects, this noisy and chaotic carriage was the closest we ever got to experiencing real daily life in Morocco.
The following morning, 11 October, we caught the ferry back to Spain. Yes, that's my actual ferry ticket above. As we backpacked through Europe, instead of buying bulky and impractical souvenirs, I kept some of the tickets and receipts we collected along the way. While researching this post, I discovered that the ferry no longer docks in Tangier. These days, its final destination is a massive new international port built approximately 40km along the coast.
For example, we’d jokingly decided early on that the first English words every Moroccan child learns are “Hello, my friend”. However, we soon discovered that their language skills morphed dramatically when we refused to buy their trinkets. Smiles were rapidly replaced by anger and a string of graphic profanities in English and Moroccan, which quickly drew a crowd. This often included older boys who'd harass and intimidate us as we walked along the street. It was another valuable lesson about the situational lack of power experienced by cultural minorities.
Cultural encounters
I spent five days in Morocco while backpacking in Europe in October 1990. At the time, I was travelling with Dean, a sheep farmer from Victoria. The excursion was an eleventh-hour addition to our itinerary while touring Andalusia and Gibraltar. We arrived by train in Algeciras, a port city overlooking the Mediterranean, on Saturday, 6 October. The remainder of the day was spent exploring the Rock before setting down for the night at a local hostel. I’ll share more about Gibraltar in a separate post.
Early the following morning, we crossed back over the Spanish border and made our way to port in Algeciras. On the advice of fellow backpackers, we repacked a couple of day packs with enough clothing and essentials to last a week, before storing our primary backpacks in coin lockers at the ferry terminal. I must confess that we blithely ignored signs warning that the lockers would be emptied after 48 hours if their contents weren’t collected.
For example, we met an English backpacker coming off the ferry who told us he’d been robbed in Morocco, driven to the port, given money for a ferry ticket and told never to return. As I recall, he’d met a group of young men one evening who’d offered him hashish and a good time. However, a good time soon morphed into a robbery and pseudo-kidnapping. Dean and I decided hashish wouldn’t be added to our bucket list of travel experiences.
The ferry to Tangier took less than two hours to cross the Strait. However, during that time, we also crossed an unanticipated cultural divide. I distinctly recall feeling uneasy on board. At first, I couldn’t work out why until the realisation struck home. Dean and I were an ethnic minority. Except for two English couples we ran into, we were the only Caucasians on board, and among the only English-speaking passengers. Everyone else was a dark-haired, tanned Arab, or appeared to be of that origin.
Until that moment, at the age of 25, I’d never found myself in a situation where I was an ethnic minority. For the first time in my life, I suddenly understood, in some small way, what it felt like to be part of a minority group. I’ll never forget the sense of vulnerability and the perceived loss of situational power I felt on that boat. It was one of those life-defining moments that only travel can deliver.
Fez is a truly remarkable place. It’s been called the "Mecca of the West" and the "Athens of Africa". It is also considered the spiritual and cultural capital of Morocco. It has the world’s largest intact medieval city, with a pedestrian-only medina (old city) covering 2.2 square km.
The next two days were a blur of cultural and sensory overload. We all chipped in and hired a local guide to take us through the best of Fes. We’d all heard horror stories of tourists getting lost in the medina’s sprawling labyrinth of laneways and enclosed cul-de-sacs. Our first day was spent exploring the modern city and Fes el-Jdid, its “new medina”. New, of course, is a relative term. Fes el-Jdid was founded in 1276. Our second day was spent in Fes el-Bali, the oldest and original ancient city, founded between 789 and 808.
We begged our guide not to take us to a selection of cliché tourist traps. We also made it clear that we didn’t want to spend our time visiting an endless stream of handicraft workshops. By and large, our guide delivered. We got to explore and see the best of Fes and its mind-blowing medina, visiting only one Persian rug showroom during our two days with our guide.
The sights, sounds and smells of Fes are hard to describe. This was also my first encounter with truly non-European culture, making the contrast uniquely memorable. Until then, my travels had been limited to the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, plus my recent adventures in Western and Eastern Europe. Take the image above. We encountered these three children in the medina, carefully chiselling ceramic tiles into an array of mosaic shapes.
In the words of one travel writer, “the process is medieval and will challenge both your olfactory nerves and attitude to voyeuristic tourism.” I couldn’t agree more. For example, in the foreground of the image above is a pungent pile of rotting hides. These were the rejects from earlier batches, casually discarded and simply left to decay. It’s hard to fathom that animal hides have been cured and prepared this manner, in this location, for almost a thousand years.
By the mid-16th century, the Jewish quarter in Fes had an estimated population of 4000, and by the end of the 19th century, it had some 15 active synagogues. However, these days the cemetery is little more than a memorial to a community that has long since vanished. By 1997, there were reportedly only 150 Jews living in all of Fez, and no functioning synagogues remained. Travel really does broaden the mind.
On 10 October, we left Fez and began retracing our steps back towards Spain. We farewelled our new English friends and headed for the nearby city of Meknes. Follow this link to learn more about our brief stop in this equally ancient city.