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View Article  FOOD IN LA PAZ


It's hard to have a bad meal in La Paz, especially if you stick to seafood.  In fact, if you stick to seafood (and avoid the Burger King and Applebee's) it's hard not to stumble upon some of the best meals of your life, just about anywhere.

The fanciest place we ate at in La Paz was the Bermejo, the restaurant at Los Arcos, our hotel, but we didn't pay fancy prices there because we dined on fish we'd caught ourselves (an experience I'll write about in a later post.)  The hotel, which caters to fishermen, is happy to prepare fish you supply yourself, and to freeze any of it you want to carry home with you.



The simplest place we ate at was the Super Tacos de Baja California Hermanos Gonzáles, an outdoor stand with a big terrace that's an outgrowth of a sidewalk stand that got so popular it had to expand.  My sister Lee had some stupendous fish ceviche there, Harry and I shared some equally stupendous octopus and clam tacos.  (Nora isn't a seafood fanatic and often had quesadillas of one sort or another.)  We never ate better or cheaper food anywhere in Baja California.  One wall of the place had cool murals (above.)



One evening we took a lengthy walk along the marinas to the south of the malecón to a medium-priced restaurant called the La Costa, palapa-roofed, right next to the water.  We had super-fresh seafood there and Harry felt moved to record the crab dinner he ate.  "A lot of work," he said, "but worth it."



The Bismark is a rarity -- an indoor seafood restaurant back several blocks from the
malecón.  The seafood was terrific and the decor was even better:



Harry and I had dinner one evening at the Bismark II, which the clerk at our hotel recommended.  It's right across the street from the
malecón, with seating on a terrace or back under a high palapa roof.  A charming place with the same great seafood as its parent establishment.

The only bad experience we had dining out in La Paz was at a place right on the
malecón, the Kiwi.  Lee and I had fine smoked marlin tacos and Harry had a wonderful pescado entero -- a whole fish fried quickly in super-hot oil and then served whole (but with olives replacing the fried eyes), which Harry also felt moved to record (see the images at the beginning and end of this post.)  But Nora ordered fish and chips and the fish had gone bad -- very bad.  There's just no excuse for this in a restaurant within spitting distance of the ocean, in a town where fresh seafood is so ubiquitous and so cheap.  Foisting a small bit of bad fish on a child might have saved the restaurant as much as fifty cents, I suspect, but it lost our goodwill forever.

La Paz is a seafood lover's paradise, not just because there's so much and such a great variety of it, and not just because it's so fresh, but because of the simple, perfect ways it's cooked and served.  You feel you're eating the same food the chef would make for himself or herself, or for their families, prepared with the same unpretentious care and respect.



For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  LAND'S END


I was leery of visiting Cabo San Lucas, reputed to be an outpost of Orange County, but El Arco is there, the rock arch (above) that marks the bottom of the Baja California peninsula, and it seemed unthinkable to have driven most of the length of the peninsula and not visit its terminal point, where the waters of the Pacific meet with the waters of the Mar de Cortés.

We decided to make a beeline for land's end, see the cape, and head straight back to La Paz.  This turned out to be easier than expected because there's a new road to Cabo San Lucas from La Paz which runs down the Pacific side of the peninsula.  (Mexico 1, formerly the only paved route from La Paz to the cape, runs down the eastern shore of the peninsula and is a bit longer.)

The new road on the Pacific side is in superb shape, allowing for faster speeds than normal, and we made it to Cabo San Lucas well before noon.  The town of Cabo San Lucas still has some charm, but it's ringed about by hideous condo compounds -- enclaves for people who want the views but don't want to live among Mexicans, in anything resembling Mexican culture.  In forty years the whole of Baja California will probably be encrusted with these compounds, as the Pacific coast above Ensenada already is.  Go see it now, before the yuppie stain grows insupportable.



The tip of the cape can only be visited by sea, unless you're an expert rock climber.  We rented places in one of the glass-bottom superpangas that take tourists out for a look.  Fortunately the other passengers were one large extended Mexican family, cheerful and friendly and good company.

As we motored out of the harbor we were greeted by the strange and nauseating sight of huge party boats filled with tourists drinking and listening to bad pop music from live bands blaring their sounds out over huge amplifiers.  "We're having an experience -- we're having fun now!" was the message.  Not.  "We might as well be in Las Vegas!" was more like it.

El Arco looks as though it might have been designed for dramatic effect and beauty by some 19-Century landscape artist like Frederick Law Olmstead.  It's a most appropriate and theatrical punctuation mark at the end of the great peninsula.  Just beyond it you can actually see the light green water of the Mar de Cortés mix with the deeper blue of the Pacific.



The captain of our panga had his wife and kids and father on board -- his oldest son took the helm on the ride back to the docks.  His father beamed at him and made sure we all saw how well he was doing.

We decided not to tarry in Cabo San Lucas but headed back towards La Paz and stopped about halfway there at Todos Santos for lunch.  Todos Santos is a lovely little town that's become something of an artists' colony.  We looked forward to visiting the galleries there, but they were all closed, because we came on a Sunday.  You would think that Sunday would be the one day of the week most likely to bring tourists into the galleries, but there is obviously a higher law at work here -- the Lord's day, and the day of rest, trumping commercial concerns.



We did have a fine lunch at the Hotel California, a charming place that is often visited by Americans on the mistaken assumption that it has some connection with the Eagles' song.  Harry had the Mexican equivalent of surf 'n' turf -- a plate of shrimp and carne asada tacos.



We got back to La Paz before dark, in time for drinks at sunset on the terrace of the Hotel Perla.



We were happy we'd visited Cabo San Lucas, and land's end -- even happier that we didn't have to spend the night there.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  ESPIRITU SANTO


The early Spanish explorers of Mexico, who almost always traveled with priests, had a habit of giving religious names to the places they "discovered" -- which was fortuitous with respect to the region of the Mar de Cortés, which has an unearthly, supernatural beauty.  It's hard to imagine talking about, even thinking about, the Isla Espíritu Santo, Holy Spirit Island, under some more prosaic name.

It's a severe, haunted, sublime place.  When the Spanish first arrived there were about 300 Indians living there -- they must have been hard, solitary folk.  Disease or some other European-borne catastrophe left the island unpopulated until a French entrepreneur set up a camp there for pearl fishing around the time of the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution.  Disease again intervened, wiping out the pearl-oyster beds throughout the Mar de Cortés between 1936 and 1941.

Today there are a few shacks used by local fishermen (with solar panels on their roofs for electricity) and a luxury tent camp for wealthy tourists.

There is something shocking, even frightening about the landscape of Espíritu Santo.  It's a place for gods and monsters, not people.  I kept thinking that when blind Homer imagined the settings of The Odyssey in his mind's eye, they probably often resembled the Isla Espíritu Santo.



We rented a panga, with a captain, at Pichilingue beach for a cruise to the island.



It was a magical journey -- we flew like the wind across miles of open sea to reach the island, then circumnavigated it slowly, pausing to marvel at many wonders.



The captain took us at speed through rock-bound channels barely wider than his boat, into caves and along the seemingly endless curves of totally empty beaches, running the boat close in to the shore for dramatic effect.



We stopped to snorkel at a small island populated by hundreds of braying sea lions, who swam close to us when we were in the water, eying us ironically.  "You don't really think you can pass muster as an aquatic mammal?" they seemed to say.



We stopped to look at what appears to be a mask carved into the rock face of the island.  That seemed like an ironic gesture by nature itself, vaguely threatening.

Finally we came ashore at a lovely beach.  The captain set up a table under an umbrella and produced lunch -- ham and cheese sandwiches, exceptionally fine fish ceviche and picked marlin.  We swam and ate and felt utterly elated.



It was good to go to the island, and good to leave it -- it didn't seem like a place that wanted to be visited for too long by the children of men.  All the same it might be interesting to camp out on it for a night -- like spending a night in a haunted house.  I imagine one would hear exceedingly strange voices in the wind.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  BEACHES


The beach along the malecón in La Paz is narrow and the water is shallow -- not good for swimming.  But within 20 minutes of the town are beaches of greater charm and a few of magical splendor.  The first one we visited was Pichilingue -- not a spectacular beach in itself but featuring a big palapa-roofed restaurant next to the water with sublime seafood.  I had some stuffed clams there that were memorable -- Nora gave a very high rating to the piñadas.



Adults can sit in the shade of the palapa roof, eating and drinking exceptionally well, while their kids frolic in the ocean, which makes for a pleasant afternoon.  Harry and Nora went kayaking and Lee made friends with a panga captain who offered to take us on a tour of Espíritu Santo island for a price far lower than we'd pay if we arranged the trip in La Paz.  We checked on this back in La Paz, found he was right, and came back the next day to sign up for the cruise.



On a different day we spent an afternoon at Balandra beach, which was truly breathtaking.  It curves around a shallow bay, which you can walk across to visit the famous mushroom rock, an iconic landmark of the area.


 
There's a reproduction of it in the central square of La Paz, across from the cathedral:



Smaller reproductions can be bought as souvenirs, though I really can't imagine who would buy such a thing:



Some American tourists in La Paz told us that the rock had actually toppled off its stem a few years ago and had to be bolted back together -- which turned out to be true.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Original photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  LA PAZ


Mexico 1 leaves the coast of the Mar de Cortés just south of Loreto and cuts back into the interior of the peninsula before veering east again and doubling back to the great sea at the Bahía de La Paz.  The city of La Paz, nestled in the wide curve of the bay, was our main destination on this trip and Harry recorded the attitudes of the passengers at the moment we arrived there.







Here's John Steinbeck on La Paz, as it was back in the 1940s:

La Paz grew in fascination as we approached.  The square, iron-shuttered colonial houses stood up right in back of the beach with rows of beautiful trees in front of them.  It is a lovely place.  There is a broad promenade along the water lined with benches, named for dead residents of the city, where one may rest oneself . . .  [A] cloud of delight hangs over the distant city from the time when it was the great pearl center of the world . . .  Guyamas is busier, they say, and Mazatlán gayer, but La Paz is antigua.

We didn't approach La Paz from the water, as Steinbeck did, and it has changed plenty since his time, but a cloud of delight still hangs over it, purely Mexican, not fueled by American tourist dollars, and it it still antigua, old and wise.  It's a tourist town, but it caters to Mexican tourists, and so is graceful and slow in its rhythms, without the frenzied party-til-you-puke atmosphere of Cabo San Lucas or the Pacific coast above Ensenada.

There is nothing spectacular about the place, its allure is quiet . . . but powerful.  After a day there I never wanted to leave, and I wish I was there right now.

I thought it would be good to stay for at least a night or two at the Hotel Perla, the first "destination hotel" in La Paz, built in the 1940s, which for a short time, into the 50s, was host to Hollywood and literary celebrities, a kind of proto Cabo San Lucas -- but the Perla was full, which led us happily to the second destination hotel built in La Paz, not long after the Perla, the Los Arcos.  The rooms in the main building were too pricey for us, but we got fine rooms in a more recent extension of the hotel across the street, the Cabañas de Los Arcos.



The main hotel was full of American fishermen, the cabañas were full of Mexican families and so pleasant that, after a couple of days spent searching for even cheaper accommodations, we sent my sister Lee forth to negotiate a lower rate for an extended stay at the Los Arcos.  This she accomplished, and when we checked out we discovered that they had applied the rate retroactively to our first days there as well.

This rate was cheaper than you'd expect to find at a Holiday Inn next to an ugly Interstate off-ramp in the United States, though the big rooms had views of the Mar de Cortés, the service was superb and the hotel was located on the malecón, the broad promenade along the water that Steinbeck mentions and that is the heart of La Paz's daily public life, especially after dark.



I felt I had come home.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  MAR DE CORTES


There is just no way to describe the coast and the islands of the Mar de Cortés.  Parts of it remind you of stretches along the coast of Alta California as it must have been in frontier times.  Most parts of it seem like a landscape from another planet, or like our own earth reduced to its purest elements -- sea, land, no frills.

Every mile of Mexico 1 that takes you within sight of the Mar de Cortés is beautiful and inspiring.



Driving east from San Ignacio we hit the Mar de Cortés just north of Santa Rosalía.  Then we drove south in a state of enchantment to Mulegé, a town built next to a palm-lined estuary, and stopped for lunch at Dony's taquería, where we had some fine shrimp and carne asada tacos at a sidewalk counter.  Then we followed the road down the coast to Loreto, where we spent the night.

Loreto is rumored to be the "next cool place" in Baja California, which means that developers are building fancy condo compounds near it.  The town itself is pleasant enough, though a bit touristy.  It's a famous place from which to set out on the Mar de Cortés for fishing, and we found that American fishermen tended to be the most objectionable tourists in Baja California -- mostly white, middle-aged men with loud voices pretending to be Ernest Hemingway and behaving as though Mexico was a country populated entirely by domestic servants.  (We eventually became fishermen ourselves, however, and met some very nice pescadores among the blowhards.)



The La Pinta inn we stayed at in Loreto was the shabbiest one we encountered on our trip but it had a big pool right next to the ocean with an island in the middle of it that thrilled Harry and Nora.  Nora also had her first piñada here, a pineapple smoothie.  She became an afficionada of the concoction and had them everywhere, rating their qualities.  The ones with a cherry and a pineapple slice included always rated highest, especially if they were served in a large frosted-glass goblet.

Lee had her first fish ceviche at the restaurant at the inn, which became an obsession of hers for the rest of the trip.  All of it was good, but the best was a ceviche made from a trigger fish I caught myself . . . but that's a tale for another time.



On the Mar de Cortés, sunsets like the one above, at Loreto,
which look unreal at first, quickly begin to seem routine -- I guess because they are.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go
here.


[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  MEXICO 1


Traveling by car down the Baja California peninsula is one of the world's great drives.  You pass through ever-shifting landscapes of the most extreme, surreal beauty -- from high desert to low, from mountain to plain, from the shores of the Pacific Ocean to the shores of the Mar de Cortés.

The surface of the two-lane highway is very well maintained these days -- the era of the lethal potholes is over.  Gas supplies are plentiful at the government-owned Pemex stations along the way, though you'll have trouble finding premium gas, if that's what your car prefers, between El Rosario and Santa Rosalia.  (Stations do run out of gas from time to time, mostly depending on how many big campers pass through them in any given week, but if you fill up wherever possible whenever your tank drops below three-quarters full you'll never get into any serious trouble.)

Mexico 1 is a marvel of engineering but most of it leaves you little to no margin for error.  Shoulders are rare, especially on stretches which snake through high mountain passes with terrifying drop-offs just inches from the edge of the road.  At every blind curve on such stretches you just have to pray that oncoming vehicles, especially the big trucks, will stay in their lanes and leave you enough room to live.  It's on stretches like this that you want to be thinking about Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe and not about the drop-offs, though this is difficult sometimes because of road signs reminding you of the present hazards with icons of tall trucks flying off the edge of the mountain.  Often you really do need supernatural aid to maintain your nerve -- as the trucker below, with his Jesus and Mary mudflaps, clearly knows:



Even when the road cuts straight through level desert it's usually built up on a high causeway with steep sides, no shoulders and few turn-outs.  If you had to veer off the pavement suddenly, even here, you'd probably roll your vehicle, though the roll probably wouldn't end in flaming death, as it certainly would in the high mountain passes.  And this is not to mention the livestock that occasionally decides to share the road with you.



This is a road you never want to travel at night, or at speeds much above the 80kph limit.  I mean, don't even think about it.



The road from San Ignacio to Santa Rosalia on the east coast of the peninsula is one of the most hair-raising stretches of Mexico 1.  But you're more than rewarded near the end of it by your first sight of the Mar de Cortés, which is less like a real sea than a sea out of some
ancient legendary tale.  It enchants everything.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  DATE PALMS


On our third day in Mexico we drove from Catavina, in the center of the Baja California peninsula, to Guerrero Negro, on the Pacific coast, where we grabbed some lunch.  Guerrero Negro is a fairly charmless town whose principal industries are harvesting sea salt and servicing the tourists who come to whale-watch in the nearby Laguna Ojo de Liebre.  (Whale-watching was out of season while we were in Mexico.)  The town has some good restaurants, however, and we had some great seafood at one of the better of them, the Malarrimo.

Just north of Guerrero Negro is the boundary line between Baja California and Baja California Sur, where the magic of the peninsula really begins.  We drove that day only as far as San Ignacio, back in the center of the peninsula on the way to the Mar de Cortés, because we were told that the last stretch of mountain road leading down to the east coast of the peninsula was challenging and not to be driven when tired.  That proved to be an understatement.



San Ignacio grew up around a freshwater lagoon, which the Spanish missionaries tapped for irrigation.  What they planted, in great abundance, were date palms, and so San Ignacio is a most improbable palm-shaded oasis in the middle of the desert.  The town's once-famous dates have been undercut on the Mexican market by cheaper dates from abroad, so the town has a sleepy, vaguely depressed air, though it's still extremely charming, with a central square planted with tall shade trees and one of the most beautiful missions on the peninsula.



We ate our first lobster at an old restaurant in town that looked as though it had seen better days -- lobster tacos for me and a whole lobster for Harry.



The lobster in both forms was a bit over-cooked and over-priced but still delightful.



We stayed at yet another La Pinta inn, one of the few choices for accommodation in San Ignacio.



When we got to the town it was being spruced up for its annual date festival, to be held the following week, but there were no dates for sale anywhere we could find . . . because, we were told, "the date harvest isn't until October."  The mystery of this only added to the slightly unreal loveliness of the place.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  TOGETHER


In Mexico, whenever anyone asked where my sister Lee and her kids were from she always said Alta California.  This delighted Mexicans, who probably think all Americans believe there is only one California, the U. S. state.  In fact there are two others, Baja California and Baja California Sur, both Mexican states located in the Baja California peninsula.  Mexicali is the administrative center of Baja California, to the north, and La Paz is the administrative center of Baja California Sur.

At the La Pinta inn in Catavina my sister ran into a Mexican woman who had lived in Los Angeles but had moved back because she didn't have "the right papers" and didn't feel good about it.  My sister remarked on how unfortunate it was that papers could keep the Californias apart.  "I know God meant us to be together," the woman said, "but something has gone wrong with it."  "Maybe we'll all be one California again," my sister suggested.  "I think it will happen," the woman said, without much conviction.

The woman seemed a bit puzzled about why someone from Alta California would choose to visit the poorer Californias to the south.  "Because it's so beautiful," my sister said, " and the people are so wonderful."  The woman nodded dubiously.



I suppose it's not surprising that the Mexicans' envy of American prosperity should cause them to be defensive about their own country, but I don't think money is the root of the issue.  It's more about children and the future.  Mexicans worship children -- their eyes light up with almost supernatural joy at the sight of niños, even gringo
niños.  The poorest of Mexicans will introduce you to their children as though presenting movie stars.  I think when they head north, to endure the humiliations and hardships of life in El Norte, it's not to get flat-screen TVs for themselves but a better future for their kids.

The poverty of Mexico, at least in Baja California, south of the tourist zone, rarely seems ugly or degrading -- the everyday culture of the nation is rich and humane.  But it's so often frozen where it is -- economic progress is coming but coming slowly.  Looking into the eyes of their niños, many Mexicans may feel that don't have time to wait for it.



They may not realize how much they stand to lose up north.  The idea of making grueling sacrifices for one's children is losing currency in America, and many Americans no longer believe that their children will have better lives than they've had.  The ragged Mexican man walking miles through the desert country of the borderlands to get a back-breaking, low-paying job in the United States probably has a picture of some children in his pocket.  If you're tempted to fear and despise him, think of that.  He may have more to give us than we have to give him.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  FROM THE PACIFIC COAST TO THE HIGH DESERT


The first time I visited Ensenada (above) in the late Sixties it was a small, dusty tourist town.  Now it's a big, sprawling tourist town but still has some charm.  Above Ensenada on the Pacific coast, yuppie scum, mostly from Alta California, the world headquarters of yuppie scum, has turned the region into into a nightmare of condos, tourist traps and perverted, groveling commercialism.  This is where you see the true face of Alta California, "The Wellness State".  The influence of the Great Satan begins to wear away the further south you go -- only to flare up again like a festering boil at Cabo San Lucas at the tip of the peninsula.



On our first full day in Mexico we made it as far as Catavina, a tiny town in a bizarre high-desert setting in the middle of the peninsula.  (Mexico 1, the only road that goes all the way down to Cabo San Lucas, zig-zags back and forth across Baja California, from one coast to the other.)  The desert around Catavina is covered in gigantic, car-sized boulders and tall cactus -- like much of Baja California its landscape is surreal in the extreme, with an effect on the psyche that can't be evoked by photographs.

In Catavina we stayed at a La Pinta inn.  These are dotted along Mexico 1, are run by the government and are very pleasant, with a cantina and restaurant surrounding a small courtyard fountain and rooms surrounding a larger courtyard with a pool.  Mexicans pay about $57 (American) a night there -- rates for tourists can rise up over $100 a night, but my sister quickly discovered that Mexican hotel clerks love to bargain, especially if the negotiation is conducted with humor, so we paid well under the tourist rate wherever we stayed.  The clerks always seemed genuinely delighted when Lee managed to talk them into lowering their rate, as though they were appreciating a clever goal from an unlikely player in a soccer game.



The terrace behind the restaurant at the Catavina La Pinta looks out over the mystical desert and has a shrine dedicated to Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, which puts everything into perspective.  When driving the roads of Baja California you want constant assurances that La Morenita is with you, and you want a chance to thank her for getting you to wherever it is you've gotten.  This is psychologically sound, whatever you think of the theology of it, because it reminds you to never, ever take Mexico 1 for granted.  It's full of surprises, most delightful but some hair-raising.  I'll write more about Mexico 1 in a later post.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi & Lloyd Fonvielle]
View Article  LA FRONTERA


On the first day of our drive to Baja California we got off to a late start -- a miscalculation that led to us having to spend our first night in Blythe, in Alta California.  I'm not sure what the deal with Blythe is, but it seemed like a depressed and hopeless sort of place.  We stayed in a lousy, overpriced motel and were happy to be on our way again in the morning.  Above is a picture of a rooster on top of a cafe in Vidal Junction, Alta California, on the road to Blythe.  The cafe was closed and the only restrooms we could find in Vidal Junction were some dirty Porta-Potties behind a gas station, which was also closed.  The sight of a new moon behind the rooster cheered us up immeasurably.

If you drop more or less straight down from Las Vegas you hit the Mexican border at Mexicali, but we'd been told that crossing at the smaller town of Tecate was quicker and easier, so we veered off westward at El Centro on the I-8, then dropped down to a smaller road that skirts the border on its way to Tecate.  (Tecate is where the great Mexican beer of the same name originated, though it's now brewed in other places in Mexico as well.)

It was fascinating to drive through the Imperial Valley of Alta California, past the huge Sahara-like sandscape of Imperial Dunes and through the lush cultivated fields beyond them.  The water that irrigates the Imperial Valley, and makes it one of the most productive agricultural regions in the world, comes from the Colorado River, which used to empty into the top of the Mar de Cortés.  Now only a trickle of it arrives at the apex of the great sea and the rich delta that used to be there is more or less a wasteland.

The land above the border on the road to Tecate is well-watered, too, and very beautiful.  We passed four U. S. Border Patrol cars along the road before crossing quickly and easily into Mexico at Tecate.  You need a Mexican tourist visa if you plan to travel south of the "tourist zone", or more than about 20 miles into Mexico.  Lee had gotten hers and her kids' in Los Angeles but the Mexican consulate in Las Vegas doesn't issue them.  I got one on the Mexican side of the border in about 20 minutes, with no trouble at all.  The Mexican border officials were friendly and efficient.



Somehow we managed to find our way through the teeming streets of Tecate onto Mexico 3, which cuts across the top of Baja California and hits Mexico 1, and the Pacific, at Ensenada.  The road passes through high valleys where grapes are cultivated and wine made.  We stopped at the largest of the Baja California wineries, L. A. Cetto, a lovely establishment surrounded by a sea of green vines.



Lee and I sampled and bought some good, cheap wines there . . .



The kids were diverted by a pen that held burros . . .



. . . and peacocks . . .



At Ensenada we headed straight for the city's fish market, with its extraordinary displays of seafood arranged in elaborate, artful piles.  We had some indifferent seafood tacos at one of the small stalls lining one side of the market, then cast about for a place to stay for the night.



We lucked into El Rey Sol, a pleasant motel-like place with a protected parking lot, a great little bar and a good pool for the kids.  While the kids swam, Lee and I washed away the dust of the road with beers and margaritas, talking to a cheerful bartender who recommended good seafood stands in Baja California Sur, and to other travelers, including a surfer who'd explored the undiscovered breaks of the peninsula in his youth and was now revisiting the region with his young family.



After the motel disaster in Blythe, Lee and I had discussed the dehumanization of roadside inns in America, contrasting them with the rich inn culture of Dickens' time, when inns always offered inviting public rooms where travelers could meet and exchange tales of the road.  All the Mexican hotels and motels we stayed at had such public rooms, and they were always in use -- just one of the many areas in which Mexican culture reveals its humane genius and outshines its "richer" neighbor to the north.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  MEXICO: PARANOIA AND PREJUDICE


Before setting off on our drive down the Baja California peninsula my sister Lee and I did a lot of research about traveling there -- online, in books and in conversations with acquaintances who've visited the region by car.  In the wake of our own journey it's clear that there's a lot of misinformation floating around about automobile travel by foreigners in Mexico.

With respect to Baja California itself, a lot of this is just residual mythology from the time when driving down Mexico 1 to Cabo San Lucas was a wilderness adventure.  The road wasn't paved the whole way to the cape until 1974 -- a fact that thwarted my own first attempt to drive down the peninsula in the late Sixties in a car with insufficiently robust shock-absorbers.  For years after the road was paved it wasn't maintained scrupulously and supplies of gasoline along the way couldn't be depended upon.  All of that has changed.

But some of the misinformation is undoubtedly due to plain old paranoia and prejudice.

In the whole course of our journey we were only accosted once by an aggressive and vaguely threatening beggar.  We only encountered one incompetent and indifferent hotel or motel clerk.  We only found ourselves once in rooms with seriously malfunctioning air-conditioners -- rooms whose temperatures were recorded at 99 degrees on the room thermostats and whose wall units were unfitted to reduce this temperature very much.

All these things happened in Blythe, California, in the Imperial Valley, before we even crossed the border.



In Mexico itself we encountered nothing but cheerful hospitality, casual but efficient and friendly service and good deals.  In La Paz, we stayed in large, cool, comfortable rooms with pleasant sea views, at one of the best hotels in town, for five dollars a night less than we paid for the grubby sweatboxes in Blythe.



We were careful about drinking tap water but were extremely adventurous about where and what we ate.  (My nephew Harry, just shy of his 14th birthday on the trip, ate so many strange but delicious things in Mexico that he kept a photographic record of them, starting with the bowl of grilled octopus, above, that he ate con mucho gusto in Guerrero Negro on the trip down to La Paz.)  Each of us experienced brief, mild bouts of intestinal distress but nothing that could have been the result of anything more than entering a new microbial environment -- something you might encounter just by visiting a different part of the United States.

When we got back to Las Vegas we were all jonesing for cheeseburgers and went out to an upscale burger joint here to indulge ourselves.  I barfed it all up later that night -- something that never happened to me in Mexico.  I would say that you can get better, fresher and more delicious food in almost any roadside taquería in Mexico, however funky it may look on the outside, than you can find on almost any gleaming stretch of strip development in almost any American town.  We had really superb shrimp and carne asada tacos at the improvised diner below, in El Rosario -- a place we happened upon by chance:



It would make much more sense for Yankees to warn Mexicans about traveling here -- about the rude, uncaring service, bad deals and synthetic food -- than to listen to the warnings of fellow Yankees about traveling in Mexico.

For previous Baja California trip reports, go here.

[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]
View Article  THERE IS A WAY


Last month I started off on a road trip with my sister Lee and her two kids, Nora and Harry, down the length of the Baja California peninsula.  It was a journey of great adventures but surprisingly easy and trouble-free, contrary to some stories we'd been told about the hazards of driving in that part of Mexico.  We ascribe most of our good fortune to the Ghost (my trusty Lincoln Navigator) and to the kind ministrations of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe.



The Ghost is not a car for the 21st Century, due to its high consumption of fossil fuel, but it is in all other respects one of the most perfect machines for land travel ever created.  It transports four people and assorted luggage in extreme comfort and is as reliable as a burro, though far less truculent.



Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe is a lady for all ages.  The essence of Mexico's own peculiar understanding of Christianity, she also embodies the spirit of the nation.  There are improvised shrines to her everywhere -- the one above is just outside the public market in La Paz.  She is sometimes called La Reina de Mexico, the Queen of Mexico, and sometimes just La Morenita, the Little Darling.

Mexico has a deeply humane culture, made up of many grave and gracious courtesies between people.  Just recognizing, however crudely, that this system of courtesies exists is enough to open the heart of almost any Mexican to a stranger, even a gringo.

Things rarely work the way they're supposed to work in Mexico, but they work, by a complex system of improvisation and accommodation that can't be reasoned out, only intuited.  Traffic signs, for example, are never taken as anything more than suggestions.  But when you stop at a crosswalk, for example, to let someone cross the street, as the regulations require, the pedestrian will almost always pause and nod and salute you for your consideration, as though to acknowledge that you have not obeyed a law of man but of God, who asks people to treat each other with dignity and respect.

The lack of
apparent logic in the organization of things could easily drive a Yankee batty, but that's because he or she would have failed to realize that Our Lady of Guadalupe travels with them at all times in Mexico, ready at any impasse to lean in and whisper, "There is a way."

And there always is.



[Photos © 2007 Harry Rossi]