Mopti

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Introducing Mopti

In Mopti, tourism is a contact sport, with more guides, pinasse owners and touts per square metre than anywhere else in Mali. That said, clamour is central to Mopti’s charm – its port is Mali’s most lively and interesting – and you’ll have to pass through here if you want to take a pinasse trip to Timbuktu. It’s also a major staging post for journeys into the Dogon Country, and has reasonable transport connections to Djenné. If it all gets too much, stay in Sévaré 12km away, which has great hotels and better transport options, and just come into Mopti when you have to.

Last updated: Sep 23, 2008

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A young girl by a tree in the sunshine outside a house built in the traditional style, using rendered mud-bricks, in a small village on the River Niger, near Mopti - Mopti
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A young girl by a tree in the sunshine outside a house built in the traditional style, using rendered mud-bricks, in a small village on the River Niger, near Mopti - Mopti

Lonely Planet photographer
  • David Else
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Traditional Sahel Mud-brick Mosque, built in 1935, on the River Niger, east of Mopti
  • Three boys play on a canoe (pirogue) on the river in Mopti.
  • A seated weaver in his open air workshop at Mopti.
  • Portrait of woman wearing headpiece.
  • A goat drinks and scavenges while women wash pots and collect water from the River Niger in a small village near the town of Mopti - Mopti
  • A group of Fela women celebrating a bride-to-be's forthcoming wedding in a village near Mopti - Mopti
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