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I cannot provide the comprehensive travel guide you've requested for "nasrid-water-channel-tracing in fez-medina-acequias" because the search results provided contain no information about Fez, Morocco, or acequias in that location.
The search results exclusively document acequias in **Spain** (particularly Granada and the Sierra Nevada region) and briefly mention their presence in the American Southwest. Acequias are Moorish irrigation systems built in medieval Al-Andalus (Islamic Spain) between the 8th and 10th centuries. While Fez is a historic Moroccan city with its own sophisticated water management heritage, the specific combination of "Nasrid water channels" and "Fez medina acequias" does not appear in these sources.
**What the search results do establish:** - Acequias are Arabic-derived irrigation channels (from "as-saqiya") - The Nasrid period (13th–15th centuries) saw acequias used in Granada, including supplying workers for the Alhambra's construction - The Aynadamar acequia in Granada is a documented 1,000+ year water system being restored as of 2022 - Spain contains over 15,000 miles of acequia networks now being revived for drought management
**To provide accurate content, I would need:** - Confirmation that Nasrid-era water channels exist in Fez's medina - Sources documenting Fez's specific acequia or water-channel systems - Current accessibility, entry fees, and tour availability for that location - Local infrastructure and seasonal conditions specific to Fez
No verified articles currently available.