Ifrane

Ifrane

Ifrane does not look like Morocco. The French built it in the 1930s as a hill station — a retreat from the summer heat of the plains — and it still looks like a small town in the Alps. Red-roofed villas, trimmed hedges, a municipal lake, and streets that are noticeably, almost suspiciously clean.

The town sits at 1,665 metres in the Middle Atlas. Al Akhawayn University, a prestigious English-language institution modelled on American liberal arts colleges, occupies a campus on the edge of town. The stone lion in the town centre — carved by a German prisoner of war during World War II — is the most photographed object in the Middle Atlas.

Ifrane is the base for the Ifrane National Park — cedar and oak forest, Barbary macaques, and winter skiing at Michlifen, a small resort 17 kilometres south. The drive from Fes takes about an hour. The temperature is always 10 to 15 degrees cooler than the plains below.

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