I've been several times during the hotter months and it's really hot at lower altitudes. I was trekking in the High Atlas in June 2003 and even at 9000+ feet it reached 90F by 10am. The mountains are definitely cooler but you will be horrified how hot it gets as you descend. It feels like walking into a blast oven.
Your problems will be dehydration and heat stroke. You will need to drink *many* litres of water each day. On the bike you won't be aware how much water your body is shedding and over several days you can become more dehydrated. On this year's biking trip in May I got the rigours through what I believe was dehydration.
Your best technique would be to rise before dawn, ride in the morning, rest up with lots of water from 11am to 3pm, then ride again in the late afternoon.
Take battery powered fans (from Marks and Sparks). In fact buy lots of them and use them for barter. When you stop you'll want to remove your helmet, so another essential is a very large floppy hat to protect your head.
Tim
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"For sheer delight there is nothing like altitude; it gives one the thrill of adventure
and enlarges the world in which you live," Irving Mather (1892-1966)
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