Moulay Bouzerktoun, a small village of fishermen and surfers (a major international surfing competition is organized every year), located on the west Atlantic coast in the province of Essaouira, 25km north of Essaouira.
Essaouira (called Mogador in the days of Portuguese colonization) is a port city in southeastern Morocco, on the Atlantic Ocean between Agadir and Safi.
The Essaouira region boasts significant forest areas home to rare trees such as the thuja and argan, and olive trees are also very common.
However, we’d like to talk about another tree here.
A broad-leaved tree with a gnarled trunk, resistant to drought, and whose many benefits should convince you to consume it daily.
If we mention the carob tree; Morocco’s heritage tree, although much less publicized than the argan tree and its liquid gold, it is because it nevertheless has a bright future ahead of it and deserves special attention.