First off the bat, yes, there really are goats in trees in Morocco. In the sparsely vegetated landscape between Agadir and Essaouira, there isn't much going on the ground food-wise, so the goats have learned how to climb argan trees and eat yummy argan fruit. Do you need to see it to believe it? Well, too bad because I haven't taken a picture of a tree full of goats here, among many other wondrous things in Morocco that I haven't captured on film (here's a link to someone else's picture of goats in trees http://www.journeybeyondtravel.com/news/morocco-travel/trees-morocco-nature.html.)
Yesterday we were driving through argan country with my mom in the backseat. Sure enough, there were several trees with goats in them along the side of road. I pointed them out to my fellow travelers but didn't even feel a twinge to grab my camera. "That could be something in my next blog post," I thought to myself. But then I realized that I don't have any pictures of goats in trees. My dad has some great ones from the first time he visited, and my mom got some of her standing in front of a goat laden tree three years ago, why in the world don't I have any? Because I live here.
I'm white. So white that I practically glow in the dark. This makes it difficult for me to blend in with Moroccans. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, except that Morocco has so many tourists that I'm usually mistaken for one of them rather than a slightly seasoned resident. It's discouraging to try fairly hard to adjust to life in a foreign country for five years and then be offered a toy camel for ten times its normal price. This makes me do what I can to distance myself from the habits of the tourist. This means that when I'm out and about alone I put on a grumpy, disinterested expression (most Moroccan women do this to discourage harassment) and I don't carry around my camera. No camera means no pictures.
I'm also a great tour guide. This means that while my parents are clicking away at the camels, I'm haggling over how much to pay the camel owner for the pleasure of taking their picture. Being a tour guide often means missing out on my own photo opportunities.
I'm not complaining about not having pictures. It's my fault, really. I just needed a venue to work out why in the world my family members have pictures of things in Morocco that I see all the time and have never captured. So, what would I take pictures of here if I weren't concerned with looking local? Mostly, it would be people. There are so many times that I see and an old man or woman doing impossibly difficult physical labor and I want to take a picture of them, Or the trucks that bring women home in the evening after a long day of working in factories. And there are cute kids doing silly things in the street. These, of course, are people who probably wouldn't want a well-to-do American gawking at them and taking their picture, and I don't want to upset anyne because I live here and might see them again.
The things that I do take pictures of are usually the beach and pretty places (see previous post,) the baby, things at home, and the in-laws during the two big holidays. Now that I have this blog, I suppose I'll try to take some more, because they really do say a lot more than my ramblings.
Yesterday we were driving through argan country with my mom in the backseat. Sure enough, there were several trees with goats in them along the side of road. I pointed them out to my fellow travelers but didn't even feel a twinge to grab my camera. "That could be something in my next blog post," I thought to myself. But then I realized that I don't have any pictures of goats in trees. My dad has some great ones from the first time he visited, and my mom got some of her standing in front of a goat laden tree three years ago, why in the world don't I have any? Because I live here.
I'm white. So white that I practically glow in the dark. This makes it difficult for me to blend in with Moroccans. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, except that Morocco has so many tourists that I'm usually mistaken for one of them rather than a slightly seasoned resident. It's discouraging to try fairly hard to adjust to life in a foreign country for five years and then be offered a toy camel for ten times its normal price. This makes me do what I can to distance myself from the habits of the tourist. This means that when I'm out and about alone I put on a grumpy, disinterested expression (most Moroccan women do this to discourage harassment) and I don't carry around my camera. No camera means no pictures.
I'm also a great tour guide. This means that while my parents are clicking away at the camels, I'm haggling over how much to pay the camel owner for the pleasure of taking their picture. Being a tour guide often means missing out on my own photo opportunities.
I'm not complaining about not having pictures. It's my fault, really. I just needed a venue to work out why in the world my family members have pictures of things in Morocco that I see all the time and have never captured. So, what would I take pictures of here if I weren't concerned with looking local? Mostly, it would be people. There are so many times that I see and an old man or woman doing impossibly difficult physical labor and I want to take a picture of them, Or the trucks that bring women home in the evening after a long day of working in factories. And there are cute kids doing silly things in the street. These, of course, are people who probably wouldn't want a well-to-do American gawking at them and taking their picture, and I don't want to upset anyne because I live here and might see them again.
| Flowers at home, not a problem |
The things that I do take pictures of are usually the beach and pretty places (see previous post,) the baby, things at home, and the in-laws during the two big holidays. Now that I have this blog, I suppose I'll try to take some more, because they really do say a lot more than my ramblings.