So to recap briefy, we've driven Plage Blanche down to the Western Sahara, Smara, then across to the Coast at Boujdor, north to Laayoune and are currently 10km of the R101 between Smara and Tan Tan with electrical problems..............
Whilst drinking beer and waiting for gaffa tape to cure the electrical problems, we had established some theories why everything was closed
- Aliens had stolen all the fuel forcing the fuel stations to close
- Eid Al Adha - big religious festival
- Unicorns
- Industrial Action by the Moroccan Fuel Pump Workers Collective
We also prayed to the God Max Ellory and requested aid in our time of need. This didn't get us very far as the Australians don't believe in indexes and we were worried about the Unicorns.
After a sound nights sleep rocked by gentle desert winds and soft suspension Dawn woke us, we told dawn to f-off and had another hours kip. This was followed by strong coffee brewed in my trusty Kelly Kettle fuelled by camel
sh@t (much better than goat) and decisions were needed a quick vote revealed that the group preferred option 2 Eid Al Adha for the mysterious lack of open fuel stations. I still think Unicorns had something to do with it, they're shifty buggers.
Morning also revealed gaffa tape had failed to cure my electrical problem and we decided on no charge from the alternator. What next well the nearest Toyota Dealer was back in Agadir, a full days drive north, but I had no charge. We did have 4 batteries between us so we set off north, stopping in Tan Tan to look for a mechanic with no luck. The drive was slow with my batteries running down every our or so but with cycling batteries around between the 2 trucks we got to Toyota Agadir about 4pm to find it shut. The nice security guard told us to come back in the morning.
We decided to stay at the campsite in the middle of town. Not the best in the world full of French Camper vans no hot water and definitely past its prime. This was my first time staying in Agadir and I don't think I'll be back in a hurry. Its modern clean, has a macdonalds etc but no character. We ended up here for 3 days trying to get repairs.
We visited Toyota the next day where they confirmed it was indeed a big religious festival and they weren't sure what a Unicorn is so discounted that. Downside no mechanic for over a week, ok what about a new alternator, yes they said but none in Morocco it'd have to come from Europe - 1 week - feck. They could get a voltage regulator so we ordered that not knowing if this would fix the problem or not. We then spent the day trying to find somewhere else to get repairs or a new alternator even asking a random French chap working on a rally 80 series. He was a waste of space blowing the 100amp fuse but said come back tomorrow and he'd get an auto electrician to have a look.
Time for some beer and internet searches establishing there's a huge scrap yard just outside town. Next morning we trundled off to the scrap yard and sourced a 2nd hand alternator for £160 (special tourist stuck in a religious festival price. Got this fitted and every thing worked
