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All aboard the Marrakech Express

With a psychedelic pop soundtrack playing in our heads, my wife and I board the train Marrakech from Casablanca.

With a psychedelic pop soundtrack playing in our heads, my wife and I board the train Marrakech from Casablanca.

In three-and-a-half hour we'll see if Morocco's interior oasis city lives up to the melodic promises made famous by Crosby, Stills and Nash in the 1969 hit "Marrakech Express."

As the song promises, will there be "charming snakes in the square" and "striped djellebas we can wear?"

Graham Nash penned the tune after a 1966 visit to Morocco and taking the train from Casablanca to Marrakech to party.

He bought a first-class ticket, but gravitated to third-class because it had a more interesting cast of characters, from those on the hippie trail experimenting with mind-altering drugs to North Africans travelling with their chickens and cooking on make-shift stoves.

My wife and I remained ensconced in first-class.

We had arrived into Morocco a few days earlier staying in Casablanca.

We take in The White City's four greatest hits: camel rides on the beach, the massive Hassan II Mosque, souks (markets) in the Medina of the Old City and Rick's Cafe, the restaurant inspired by the 1942 Oscar-winning movie Casablanca.

But Marrakech beckoned.

We won't indulge in any psychedelic substances while in Marrakech, but we will discover why it's the exotic, bucket-list hotspot for an international torrent of tourists from backpacking university students and hipsters to well-heeled families and baby boomers.

As Nash recounted, there are still snake charmers in the square, the square being the famous Jemaa-el-Fnaa.

The massive square is also home to monkeys in diapers, an endless array of food stalls, criss-crossing motorcycles, stray cats and aggressive vendors selling everything from pointed slippers to djellebas, the simple Arabic robe worn by both men and women.

It's a cacophony of sights, sounds and smells that both scares and enchants us and will bring us back time and again to Jemma-el-Fnaa.

The rest of our stay in Marrakech will be more tranquil and befitting of the baby boomers we are.

The Red City, so called for the earthy ochre colour of most of the low-slung buildings, is well known for the 500 small riad hotels in the walled Medina of the Old City.

Riad is traditionally a grand house with a courtyard.

When converted to a hotel, the results are spectacular.

We stayed at Marrakech's first, and best, riad hotel, the one that started the trend 20 years ago, La Maison Arabe.

Owned by Prince Fabrizio Ruspoli of Italy, La Maison Arabe is actually six side-by-side riads with stables transformed into a luxury, boutique hotel with 26 rooms and suites.

The result is a network of accommodations, hallways, stairs, courtyards, a cozy piano bar, a spectacular pool surrounded by a restaurant and even a cooking school and country club annex just out of town with pool, gardens and a patio restaurant.

We're upgraded to the Royal Suite, a three-level townhouse with main floor living room, second-floor bedroom and rooftop terrace.

We hide away in the luxury as much as possible, but there's more of Marrakech and Morocco to see.

A day-trip with guide-and-driver Youssef Aitmizan of Oubihi Trans, arranged through La Maison Arabe, to the nearby Atlas Mountains is breathtaking.

In the Berber village of Imlil, everyone seems to be riding a donkey, which is known as the Berber 4x4.

Indeed, these beasts of burden can be mounted to ascend the steep and rocky trail to Kasbah du Toubkal, the mountaintop hotel with National Geographic Unique Lodges of the World designation.

Instead, we hike the 15 minutes with guide Hussein to have a lunch of traditional Moroccan lamb tangine stew on Kasbah's rooftop.

We're awed to be on top of the world.

Back at La Maison Arabe, we'll learn how to make our own tangine, this time with chicken, at the riad's cooking school, the first and most sought after in all of Marrakech.

Chef Ayada shows us how the dish, cooked in a clay tangine pot, is all about her secret mix of 27 North African spices.

We feast on the results in the cooking school's sun-dappled courtyard, declaring ourselves talented chefs, while sipping a glass of Moroccan Domaine de Sahari rose wine and listening to live santer guitar.

Check out AirCanada.com, LaMaisonArabe.com and VisitMorocco.com.