Saturday, May 30, 2026
Walking in Old Town Casablanca
Friday, May 29, 2026
Slowly Catching Up to the Time Zone
Day 02 - Jay and I went to sleep before 21:30 last night but didn't manage to get out of bed until nearly 09:00 this morning! It was a fitful sleep, but it helped us to advance to a time zone that's eight hours ahead of home. We ate a slow, excellent breakfast downstairs in the Ibis Casablanca City Center Hotel. We've stayed at Ibis chain while in Germany, Poland and even Singapore: they have never disappointed in their breakfast buffets.
Tram #3 is just outside, so we paid around 1.20 CAD to travel to the end of the line just to see city scenes from the a/c comfort of the nicely maintained equipment. The temperatures for the day this week reach around 23C but the sun is bright and helps make it seem warmer. Eventually, we got off at the end as it was next to a huge hypermarket called Marjane. It carried more than just food. Who doesn't need to pick up a TV along with some cheap lentils? We had to pay again to return back to the Casa Port Station and our hotel.
We had a rather long nap this afternoon but as it doesn't get dark until late we but we walked around seven and a half kilometers when out before dinner and on our way back after it. Still a lot is closed because this is the last day of the Eid holiday and many folks will be returning from trips home this weekend. It did feel a little more lively than yesteday. But many shops are still closed. We had tangine again at one of the few large restaurants open. We watched the people watching the people out for early evening strolls. Perhaps a quick train to Rabat tomorrow just to spend a few hours in the capital city.
Just like many cities around the Mediterranean, even though Casablanca has on the Atlantic, it is been designated a 'cat city' by Jay. That means they come to lounge around city parks and accept food and affection if offered.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Arrival in Casablanca
Day 01: We got into Montreal fourty-five minutes late. However, we were one-hour and fifteen minutes late leaving to Casablanca. The sun was setting over Montreal at the time. However we got here in around seven hours! We did have to wait for what seemed like forever, or at least one hour, for our bags to come out, but we still beat half the folks to the exit. It took very little time to have three months entry stamped into our passports. We plan on just using one of them.
The train station is right at the airport and we took it to the historic center. The train wasn't really fast and it took about an hour to the Casa Port Station. Before leaving the station, we bought our train tickets to Tangier for June 1st. Our Ibis hotel is just across the street and it'll be home for three more nights after tonight.
As this is Eid here in Morocco, most folks are visiting home and many businesses are closed. We ended up sleeping for much of the afternoon but just returned from dinner at a restaurant. near the hotel.
It's light late here but we walked back to the hotel room and although it's only about 8:30 pm, we are resting again. We can catch up on sleep and we will have two complete days to see some of the city.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
Live from YUL!
We departed YVR at 9:05 this morning, embarking on the first leg of our journey to Morocco with a connecting flight through Montreal. When global aviation authorities mandated three-letter identifiers in the 1930s, Canada took the path of least bureaucratic resistance by simply slapping a "Y" onto its existing two-letter railway and telegraph codes. The prefix originally stood for "Yes," pragmatically indicating that the airstrip possessed a functioning weather reporting station. It was delightfully lazy. The YUL designation follows this exact logic, appending the national "Y" to the area's former Royal Air Force radio beacon, which historically broadcasted as "UL."
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Life is Not a Vlog
Monday, May 25, 2026
48,000 Photos and Not a Single Yellowed Corner
Sunday, May 24, 2026
The Great Off-The-Cuff Catastrophe
It seems we've had an untimely casualty in the travel gear department. Just yesterday, the upper-arm, all-in-one blood pressure monitor which Jay and I have come to rely on suddenly lost its will to inflate. The convenient cuff has officially given up the ghost.
We truly loved that little unit. It fit neatly into a small box and was absolutely brilliant when packing. To have it fail after just a bit more than a year and a half is definitely disappointing. Still, looking on the bright side, I suppose I should feel lucky that it didn't decide to stop functioning two days into our month in Morocco, which kicks off this Wednesday!
After striking out at Walmart and one pharmacy, we finally picked up a new unit at London Drugs. The Bios-labeled device is smaller than most standard options out there, but still not as compact or easy to store since we're back to dealing with a tube. It'll have to do. Jay and I are quite religious about taking our morning and evening readings. In fact, I have the statistics to prove it: at least a decade's worth of data that I've dutifully logged into my Android app. Let's just hope this new machine keeps the metrics flowing without developing any inflation drama.
Saturday, May 23, 2026
Our Hyack Multicultural Parade

































