Braving the souks of Marrakesh, with children

In Morocco, visiting the Marrakesh souks with children is challenging. But if done right, it gives the kids an experience that sticks in the memory.

From Jemaa al-Fnaa to the souks

β€œAre you going to do haggling, Daddy?”

A visit to the souks of Marrakesh is stressful enough without this sort of pressure. We’d already run the gauntlet of Jemaa el-Fnaa, the city’s infamous main square. La shukrans were liberally dispensed to the would-be guides, men holding snakes and women threatening henna tattoos. Fresh fruit juices from the giant, colourful carts had been liberally guzzled. But now the girls wanted flamboyance, performance and theatre.

Quality control at the Marrakesh souks

In some respects, the souks of Marrakesh in Morocco are monstrously overrated. You very quickly realise that the same things reappear every few stalls. Those leather bags and beautifully-pattern ceramics are both far too cheap and far too ubiquitous to be genuinely hand-made and exclusive.

You may come out with some souvenirs that you’re happy with, but coming out with something of properly good quality? Well, that’s highly questionable.

The crucial point, however, is that it’s not about what ends up in your bag at the end of the day. A visit to the Marrakesh souks is all about the blizzard of stimuli, getting merrily lost and immersing yourself in the game.

Haggling tactics in Marrakesh

Our mission was to get a couple of presents for Mother’s Day. I had briefed the girls on the basics beforehand in the hope they’d play along. Never look too interested in a product. Prepare for everyone to sound insulted by the price proposed or offered. Walk away to coax out a lower offer. That sort of thing.

We’d even set a code word for when they saw something they thought Mum really would want. We were prepared. But the Marrakesh souk experience with children was still utterly chaotic.

This is partly because the Marrakesh souks are chaotic, full stop. Motorbikes buzz through narrow lanes with scarcely a thought for anyone else using them. Stallholders fight for your attention and, sometimes, with each other. At one point a seven man brawl erupted next to us, and we never quite understood why.

Keeping children safe in the souks

At first, there was disappointment. The girls didn’t like walking away from purses and drinks coasters that, ultimately, weren’t quite right. They weren’t prepared for the haggling to result in no deal, even though I explained that learning the price one stallholder won’t drop to is helpful for learning the real baseline price.

Then there’s the herding. Keeping two kids who are ridiculously easily lured by shiny things together is a tricky task. The intensity of the souks is magnified considerably when you are trying to keep an eye on two mini shoppers sauntering off in different directions.

Playing along and perfume blocks

But after a while, we started to get in the swing of things. The girls realised that we don’t have to get everything from every stall, and they began to play along in the barter process. β€œLook at this little face,” I said at one point, accompanied by pitch perfect doe eyes. β€œAll she wants is a present for her mummy, surely you don’t want to disappoint her?”

It also became a learning experience. At one stall, the girls were entranced by all the spices. The stallholder invited us into the back to see more and smell them all individually. He also went through a series of perfumed blocks that can be rubbed on the skin or used as room fragrances. The wafts of jasmine, amber and musk were met with fierce debate over which is best.

Spices in the souks of Marrakesh.
Spices in the souks of Marrakesh. Photo by David Whitley.

I ended up overpaying for a couple of those perfume blocks, but I wasn’t really paying for the blocks. I was paying for the time and thought invested in guiding two girls through a magical world of smells.

Advice for visiting the Marrakesh souks with children

My top advice for anyone tackling the Marrakesh souks with children is to go for a short burst. There’s so much to take in that, if you push it for more than two hours, tired brains and tired legs are going to kick in. There comes a point where you accept whatever haul you’ve accumulated, then try to find your way out of the maze. Then, it’s just a case of hoping the kids remember the perfume stalls and playing at haggling rather than the psychotic motorcyclists.

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