student travel
For students studying abroad or racking up miles on a summer break, there are many student-friendly cities that you simply must visit.
Are Trains in Morocco Kid-Friendly? by Morocco Family Vacation
Traveling with kids often means rethinking everything you take for granted as an adult from transport to meals to pacing. On our family trip to Morocco, one question kept coming up: Are trains in Morocco kid-friendly?
By Ariel Cohenabout 7 hours ago in Wander
Can I Drink the Tap Water in Morocco? By Morocco Family Vacation
One of the first questions travelers ask after landing in Morocco is a practical one: Can I drink the tap water here? The short answer is simple: most travelers should not drink tap water in Morocco, even though locals often do.
By Ariel Cohen8 days ago in Wander
Morocco Weather in May: Warm Days, Long Evenings, and a Perfect Travel Rhythm
The country feels warmer, more social, and more confident — without tipping into the intense heat of summer. For many travelers, May ends up being the moment when Morocco feels most alive and easiest to enjoy.
By Ariel Cohen11 days ago in Wander
Morocco Weather in April: When the Country Starts to Breathe Again
After the cooler winter months, the air softens, the sun becomes warmer without being overwhelming, and travel suddenly feels easier. When people ask me when Morocco feels most balanced, April is often the first month that comes to mind.
By Ariel Cohen11 days ago in Wander
When the Sky Decides: The Invisible Power of Weather. AI-Generated.
Every day begins with a simple habit: checking the weather. Whether through a phone app, a glance out the window, or a morning news update, météo quietly guides our decisions before we even realize it. We choose our clothes, plan our journeys, and set expectations for the day based on what the sky promises. Yet weather is far more than a practical concern—it is an invisible power that influences how we live, feel, and adapt to a changing world.
By Sajida Sikandar14 days ago in Wander
Snow in Morocco: A Side of the Country Most Travelers Don’t Expect
When most people think of Morocco, they imagine warm deserts, sunlit medinas, and palm trees swaying under a blue sky. Snow rarely comes to mind. Yet every winter, parts of the country quietly shift into a completely different landscape one shaped by cold air, white mountain peaks, and villages wrapped in silence after snowfall.
By Ariel Cohen14 days ago in Wander
Rissani Morocco Souk History
I didn’t arrive in Rissani expecting much. After days of driving through southeastern Morocco, it felt like just another quiet town near the desert. No crowds, no souvenir shops, no signs pointing to “must-see attractions.” But the moment I stepped into the souk, I realized I had walked into something far older and more meaningful than I anticipated.
By Ariel Cohen17 days ago in Wander
Family Morocco Tour Packages: What to Expect When Traveling Together
Traveling through Morocco with family changed the way I think about group travel. It wasn’t the destinations themselves that stood out the most it was how the experience shifted when everyone’s comfort, patience, and energy mattered equally.
By Ariel Cohen17 days ago in Wander
Alnif, Morocco: Fossils, Desert Silence, and Life Shaped by Time
Alnif is not a destination that shouts for attention. It sits quietly in southeastern Morocco, surrounded by rocky plains and desert horizons, known less for monuments and more for what lies beneath its soil. For travelers who pass through, Alnif often feels understated at first—but its story reaches back hundreds of millions of years.
By Ariel Cohen19 days ago in Wander

