Sunday, December 31, 2017

Riding in Baja, Part II



I awoke at 6:30 but because of the cloud cover, no sunrise. No bugs of any kind, no snakes, no scorpions, just a dew covered tent. I made a large amount of coffee and drank it with a granola pourage. I hit the road, and again, slow going, low gears and nursing the right knee. It was a lot of work pushing the rig up the steep gravel road the night before and the arms felt it. I rode until a small almacen and bought canned corn and a small bottle of salsa and finished both. The road opened up more with small climbs and cacti and desert. Two Mexican cyclists, one from Chihuahua, one from North Baja, told me I had to make it to Pulmos. I would have to back track 40km, but I’ve never backtracked and have missed much. I took a road south and suddenly was sailing in a tailwind. My slow riding earlier must have been from the headwind. I rode through untouched desert until I saw the coast and was happy I would reach Pulmos in only 10km. But it turned to a white sanded ripio, as ugly as I’ve seen. The left rear rack had snapped that morning and I had repaired with zipties. It wasn’t meant for ripio and the water and food fell off the front rack and I had to load on to the rear rack to keep everything together. In two hours I made it into the small town and two American guys who had been riding all year asked me to camp and pointed me to a small place that served fish tacos and beer. I ate, bathed in the bathwater ocean, and camped by a fire and watched a rainfire of stars. The ocean and shore is untouched here and I had to win such place by the sacrifice of a sandy ripio. I backtracked north back to Los Barriles and then on my way to find Gustavo. It is pretty in these parts.





 A broken rear rack, repaired with two zipties. It held well but the bolts were very loose at the end of the journey--best to tighten rack bolts each day, an old rule.



 The Tropic of Cancer.
 The shrine at the Tropic of Cancer.


 A cyclist at the Tropic of Cancer.


 Cyclists who encouraged me to ride to Cabo Pulmos.



















 Mexcan ripio.






 Pushing in deep sand.




 Arriving at Cabo Pulmo.



 A small eatery in the pueblo.


 Camping with Zach and Sean, not the last time I would see these two caballeros.













 Two great men, morning breakfast.


















 The end of the ripio.



These wild horses were nearly as bad as the dogs. The one on the left charged me.

 Lunch at a pueblo.






 The kite surfing  town of Los Barriles.









 A contingency of kite surfers.