A green oasis in a sea of apricot
Few places in the world seem as otherworldly and inhospitable as the vast expanses of the Mauritanian Sahara, yet a holiday there is ideal for a family and need not be expensive
Ihear shrill ululating cries from inside a windowless stone room, then frenzied drumming. Following it inside, I’m startled to see a woman lying on the ground, her head entirely shrouded and her hands tied in plastic bags. I’m relieved to learn that all the noise is in preparation for a wedding, and this is the bride: traditionally she covers her face for three days before the ceremony, and her hands have just been hennaed.
The room is in a tiny village among oases near Chinguetti, central Mauritania. We (my husband and I, and our sons, aged two and four) are travelling around its boundlessly rising butterscotch-blond dunes in the Adrar region, staying in ancient caravan towns.
Hard-pushed to pinpoint Mauritania on a map? You’re not alone. It’s south of Western Sahara and north of Senegal, on the West African coast. And it’s enormous — nearly twice the size of France. Years previously I’d travelled across the Niger Sahara with a salt caravan, and the allure of it never left me. Then I was footloose and fancy-free; now I have two children. We often stared at maps together and I’d wonder about the huge, empty expanse of Mauritania west of Niger. I imagined it to be similar. I was right.
This is a country where you can explore the Sahara without breaking the bank, by camping and staying in guesthouses. If you have a head for adventure, it makes the ideal family holiday: the spaces are huge and there’s no malaria in the central Adrar region. I organised the trip using local travel agent Chinguitty Voyages, which sorted us out with a car, a driver, an English-speaking guide and a cook.
Nouakchott, the capital, is a sprawl of low-rise, candy-coloured buildings that seem to grow haphazardly out of the desert. We spend our first night at Auberge Diaguili, a six-bedroom riad (a traditional Moroccan house) owned by a French-Mauritanian couple. It’s on a quiet street and full of colourful furniture, with a haima (Moorish tent) in the courtyard, which our children love. Outside, the pavement is a sea of sand. Here the desert is like an overbearing mother, never quite letting go. Swaths of sand sweep in everywhere.
The country is immediately exotic, with men dressed in sky-blue boubous billowing in the ever-present wind, their eyes peering from beneath tur- bans. The golden and creamy white sand of the desert is pure and silky to the touch. There are no scraggy bushes or even footprints; it curves up into huge peaks, carved into troughs by the wind.
The culture remains vehemently nomadic, with tents plonked in the middle of the city and camels wandering about.
I ask for directions to a particular building. “There are no fixed addresses. We’re not one for cities,” Mohamedou, our guide, replies. “In the late 1950s, Nouakchott was little more than a fishing village. But recently it has grown fast, people driven here by droughts killing their animals.”
Donkeys trot by, pulling carts. A long stretch of road is lined with tents, where people come to drink camel milk and eat barbecued goat. In the early evening, the camels are being milked and drinking water from old baths.
Nouakchott spreads along the coast between the Atlantic Ocean and the desert. Down on the shore, the sun glints on boldly painted pirogues bobbing on surfing-sized waves. Men sing as they haul colossal fish on to the sand. “The seas are some of the world’s richest,” Mohamedou says.
Tourism, though, has suffered here in recent years. In 2008, the Dakar Rally, which passes through Mauritania, was cancelled because of terror threats — it has been held in South America ever since — and the foreign office advises against travel here. Yet we meet foreigners working here who assure us it is not dangerous, the Spanish embassy recently lifted its ban, and we certainly feel safe.
One thing does dismay my husband, however. Arriving at midnight, after flights with two young children, he is looking forward, perhaps naively, to a drink. But his clandestine duty-free bottle is instantly confiscated. This Muslim country is strictly dry.
Next day we drive out into the desert proper, heading north past weather-battered villages and brightly patterned tents. Most of the country looks as if it could pack up and move at any moment. The tarmac road quickly turns to sand. We stop for lunch — delicious chicken with dates and rice — in a mud house with mats on the floor while a sandstorm whips up outside.
Food is eaten sitting cross-legged on the ground, using our hands. Chatter and laughter fill the room as Mohamedou, Mohamed Lemine, our driver, and Saliq, our cook, play with our boys.
Back in the car, we see no one for miles, just wide savannah with acacia trees, alternating with flat, treeless expanse. One tent is in such a remote spot it’s staggering that the family living here survives. We drive past t o w e r i n g c l i f f s a n d me s a s a n d through rocky desert to the deep Amogjar canyon, which is reminiscent of Utah.
Mauritania was an important crossroads for camel trains carrying dates and salt across the desert, and Chinguetti is one of four surviving ksours (fortified trading villages), along with Ouadane, Tichit and Oualata. Now Unesco-listed, they grew to be prosperous towns in