Ok cool thanks for the info, what do you mean when you say 'we have seen more mines...'?
I've read that it's ok there so I'm just getting conflicting information. I was just wondering where you got your info from? |
Going Maure - Algeria - Tunisia wouldnt count as a crossing of anything. really.
From Morocco you cant get anywhere except north and south. Let's speculate. How about Mauretania - Algeria - Niger - Chad - Sudan? Impossible, of course, but take it bit by bit and analyze it. Supposing you have all the visas arranged. Make a route with suitable distance between water holes. Figure out where to get camels and guides. Only five countries ;) Is it possible to cross from Mauretania to Algeria? If not, why not? From In Guezzam to Agadez you would need an escort. Then probably another escort from Agadez eastwards. Hugely exepensive, if at all possible. Is it possible to get into Chad from Niger these days? Why would it be impossible to cross Chad, even with the mines, if you find the proper guides? Can you cross inte northern Sudan from Chad? Once in Sudan you should be ok I think. "Almost there". The answer to the questions is "probably not" but we dont really know, since noone has done it and noone has asked. Paula Constant might have made it, if there hadnt been a tuareg uprising in Niger. Diplomatic Niger… | Paula Constant And then there was the Arab Spring and everything that followed. |
Thanks for your post priffe.
Yeah I hear what you're saying, basically unless I'm part of the special forces I won't be able to do it, at least not in the current climate. Closed boarders etc etc, yet in other posts people are openly talking about how they're crossing boarders and the most annoying thing is the time it takes. I've sort of let go of the 'big crossing' since delving into my research. Now I'm thinking Atlantic to Mediterranean. Seriously looking at boarders, guides etc. Surely there must be a way to walk with some friggin camels from one point to the next! I've learnt a lot in a week thanks to the help of everyone, I'll make it happen! Please keep posting with any info... |
Did we say that the Morocco/Algeria border has been closed for 20 years? Only registered nomads are allowed thru the border. The only way to cross for us is to go thru Spain but I doubt a camel is allowed on the ferry ;-) And if you think you can smuggle your way in, then be aware that a very long trench has been dug along the border )on both sides) and that they have outposts every few kilometers with night vision equipment etc to check smugglers. Got caught there myself for 6 hours in an army truck in a sand storm because I got too close, while the map showed no border line. That was East of Tendrara... ;-)
OP - If your goal is to lose yourself in the rocky desert or in the mountains to appreciate the value of life, don't worry, Morrocco has plenty for you to do that. If you are into a survivalist mood, go there in July. ;-) The trenches. http://www.chanvre-info.ch/info/ne/l...enne-c0685.png http://i68.servimg.com/u/f68/19/36/62/18/fronti10.jpg |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_feral_camel |
mines and UXO s
« what do you mean when you say 'we have seen more mines...'? »
I have not seen mines but wrecked cars and UXO s on our trip from Gueltat Zemmour to Foum Zguid. We used the old Spanish Road, asked local people whenever it was possible, drove only on pistes with fresh tracks, made even camp in the middle of the road - in any case there was nobody else on the way but us. So one could say it is safe when you stay on the road – but with a camel caravan ? with grass and acacias left and right of the piste ? A few years later a car hit a mine between Zag and Assa, a piste where we had passed before. (confirmed by Landmine Monitor and UN Mine Action) The German Demining Troups report 12 accidents with 14 wounded and 13 killed in 2015 http://www.einsatz.bundeswehr.de/portal/a/einsatzbw/!ut/p/c4/LYvBCoMwEET_KGugYukt4qW30ku1F1nNIktjIulaQfz4JuAMDM w8Bt6Q7PHHEwoHjw5a6Ea-DZsaNks9sf-i7KniR1Zy7pxIdoJXPltSY_AkOYW8cMopooSolhDFZbLGmIhiC 12hm1pXl-KUPkxZmUdbXnVzr5-wzLP5A4V2vFY!/ Read also http://removethewall.org/the-un-secretary-general-landmines-and-other-explosive-remnants-of-war-continued-to-endanger-the-lives-of-local-and-nomadic-populations-in-western-sahara/ http://www.the-monitor.org/en-gb/reports/2016/western-sahara/casualties-and-victim-assistance.aspx |
As I understood it, Paula Constant even gave up on crossing Australia with camels because of 'being utterly fed up with bureacratic issues"
Still alive, sorry! | Paula Constant |
Yeah that is a big trench, I was aware the border with Morocco is closed, so was thinking of heading in via mauri. I've read Algeria has basically closed all it's borders, you need permission get through.
I'm going to do a search of this forum regarding crossing borders and maybe create a more specific thread later on, as clearly an e/w Sahara trip is sort of impossible nowadays. Yeah I do want to go on a long journey through the desert, off the tourist path, and my gut feeling is that it can be done. It's exciting finding out more info. |
You could try to get on a camel train from Timbuktu to the salt mines at Taoudenni and back. Its a well worn route so you are not going to feel like you are exploring new tracks, but it might more than satisfy your interest in camels - personally Id rather ride a Penny Farthing without a saddle - or a KTM :)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ1eQ99Triw Security wise Timbuktu has had some issues and a couple of kidnappings, make sure you are up to speed with AQIM activity, but its not as sketchy as some of your other ideas ;) good luck! |
Timbuktu would be nice, but it's to far east for me. I think camel riding will be kept to a minimum as well, I'll be walking them mostly I imagine.
Yeah I've had some pretty crazy ideas about the crossing, but the more people I speak to the more it feels like it's doable. Everyone is being so amazingly helpful, and realistic too which is what is so good. Thanks for the youtube vid too, those guys work hard... |
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Your first point of research should be the UK Foreign Office travel website (or an equivalent in another country) to check out the conditions in the various countries. Five minutes research should be enough to convince anyone that it's a non-starter. An unbridled optimism isn't the best attribute for this type of adventure travel. |
I would take that UK website info with a grain of salt. Pe exemple, Morocco and Tunisia seems to have been treated with two very different standards. Morocco having received the UK's seal of approval in term of safety, while one should only travel to Tunisia in absolutely necessary... Really? My two previous experiences in Tunisia have proven very safe. They have terrorist shootings in Tunisia? Yes. Two or three of them in the past two years... But much less people died than in the US where mass shooting is a weekly occurence. How is the US treated in term of safety for travel? Should France also be on the list of countries not to visit? After all, they had the Bataclan attack where 130 people died, and 80 more people died in Nice last month.
I am sorry if I offend some people, but things aren't always what they seem. |
Thanks Tim and Massive Lee,
Tim yeah I've checked out the government safety warnings, the Aus one basically says avoid the whole of North Africa. I don't think it is unbridled optimism, I am researching this carefully and in terms of what I'm reading it's about 50/50, some people say avoid it like the plague, some people say they found it fun and felt safe. I think it's far to great an opportunity to let slip just because of 'terrorism', granted though that Westerns do stick out a bit more there. I hear your point too Massive Lee, in terms of safety statistically the US is worse, regarding the tragedy of common mass shootings there (I'm sorry to all the US readers, but that's really all the news we hear about the US, that and Trump). However I love the States and have visited many times and feel safe there. I think because we hear about kidnappings and bombs from these countries that's all we associate with them, statistically though I'm more likely to be eaten by a shark when swimming at my local beach. It's because we feel we have no control over the situation, and that it's an unfamiliar situation that we fear it. Families, cultural events, universities, tourists, commerce, development all happens in these countries, they're just very rough around the edges (literally, at the borders). I do take safety seriously and I acknowledge there's risk in everything. |
FCO warnings
As Sir Humphrey once said, the Official Secrets Act is not there to protect secrets, but to protect officials. Similarly the FCO travel warnings serve the prime purpose of being able to say "I told you so" should something actually happen. The warnings are far too general and outdated (and sometimes outright ignorant) to serve as any practical guidance for the real situation on the ground.
Many of the countries in question are huge with vastly differing regions, different ethnicities, and correspondingly different security situation. Case point Chad, where some of the safest regions in the North of the country are marked red, while others which I would consider much more dodgier from experience are marked "only" yellow. This being said, to be able to judge the actual risks and overall situation requires local knowledge and much experience, in absence of either it is not a bad idea to adhere to the FCO advice. |
first step
Mauritania – Algeria – Tunisia
What about talking what you need to cross the borders the legal and official way? (for the illegal one you better ask the smugglers J - Mauritanian visa on arrival at the airport for Australians, visitors not holding return/onward tickets could be refused entry - get the permissions in Nouakchott to travel from Atar to Chegga - get a guide who dares to escort you there - get the Visa for Algeria : condition - a Travel Agency has to ask for the ok in Algier for the planned track, probably they can/must provide guides to escort you all the time up to Tunisia - from Chenachen, Algeria, where would you cross the Sahara to pass the tunisian border ? - visa : Australians can stay in Tunisia for 3 month and dont need one (as far as I know) I hope you are aware that on this route you will meet all kind of armed people, particularly at the water points in the triangel Mauritania/Mali/Algeria. Step by step – its a looooong way before you can start… |
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