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Baja Bernie
`Normal` Nomad Correspondent
Posts: 2962
Registered: 8-31-2003
Location: Sunset Beach
Member Is Offline
Mood: Just dancing through life
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Morgaine7
Welcome--That has been going on for over 25 years and will never stop as long at the Mexican who can speak English earns more money--even in Baja.
My smidgen of a claim to fame is that I have had so many really good friends. By Bernie Swaim December 2007
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Pompano
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8194
Registered: 11-14-2004
Location: Bay of Conception and Up North
Member Is Offline
Mood: Optimistic
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I dread the first sign with the Golden Arches near Mulege.
I do what the voices in my tackle box tell me.
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Paulina
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3810
Registered: 8-31-2002
Location: BCN
Member Is Offline
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Quote: | Originally posted by Tucker
When people refer to it by initials, ie: TJ, GN, etc. Half the initialized towns posted here, I don't recognize, nor do I want to.
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Case in point, "BOLA".
\"Well behaved women rarely make history.\" Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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Mexray
Super Nomad
Posts: 1016
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: California Delta
Member Is Offline
Mood: Baja Time
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Initials for town names is a long standing tradition...
...in the Western regions of United States. Originating back in the Western Gold Rush era, many towns would paint or white-wash their town's
initials on a nearby hill, open to the view of travelers and passers-by.
Many of these town 'initials' in rural areas have been maintained as a matter of 'civic pride' and can still be seen in Small cities across the west.
We used to have some rural property in Northern Nevada near Battle Mountain - where you can still see the large, white-washed 'BM' on a nearby hill.
As you travel along I-80 through Nevada, you'll see a big 'L' for Lovelock, a 'W' for Winnimucca, and others - we've all seen them.
Here on Internet Boards, initials for common names and phrases have, rightly or wrongly, become the 'norm', as our language constantly undergoes
change...a good source of these 'acronyms' is at:
http://www.gaarde.org/acronyms/
I like to use a town's complete name when first posting comments, but also find it 'proper' to use only the initials later in the message, or when
posting a reply to an earlier message about the same subject.
According to my clock...anytime is \'BAJA TIME\' & as Jimmy Buffett says,
\"It doesn\'t use numbers or moving hands It always just says now...\"
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64537
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline
Mood: Have Baja Fever
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BOLA: bad (BOW-LAH?)
BdLA: good!
Bahia de L.A.: better!!
Bahia de los Angeles: best!!!
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surfer jim
Super Nomad
Posts: 1891
Registered: 8-29-2003
Location: high desert
Member Is Offline
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The correct answer is....CAPN.SHARKY got it..."a few dead dogs left in the road."........that was good.....
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Pompano
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8194
Registered: 11-14-2004
Location: Bay of Conception and Up North
Member Is Offline
Mood: Optimistic
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Dead critters on the road are okay..
Yup, capt. sharkey grasped a good concept and thought pattern that is paramount in Baja. Why not leave those dead and battered corpses just lay where
they may and feed the vultures and ravens? They are natures garbagemen...the ultimate cleanup crew.
Ideal scenario.....I can see this horse laying on the freeway heading into Beverly Hills or La Jolla. A sanitation squad in full contamination suits
would quandron off the area and all produce within a 5 mile radius would be destroyed. Brrr..what has progress cost us? Thus, I chose to live in
Baja and Up North Dakota (shhh)...although much of Baja is becoming alarmingly like La Jolla.
If your area is becoming a little 'too touristy', just drag one of these roadkills to a location near your home and ..viola...instant Old Baja!
I do what the voices in my tackle box tell me.
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Santiago
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3500
Registered: 8-27-2003
Member Is Offline
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My top 10 reasons when a Baja town is too 'touristy":
1. When my wife says she would visit that town. 2. When the thought first crosses my mind: "I wonder what a lot whould cost here?". 3. When the
kids don't stare at me in amazement and wonder. 4. When the full-time-retirees do stare at me in amazement and wonder. 5. When the menus are
printed in english. 6. When there are menus. 7. When my buddy and I want a lobster dinner but have forgotten the word for lobster so we both stand
up and prance around the table with our hands over our heads with our fingers pinching like claws and the young, nubile waitress says in perfect
english, "Would that be clams, crabs or lobsters?" 8. When the word "Market" OR "Mart" is bigger than the word "Tienda". 9. If the town advertizes
in the LA Times and the ads seem to indicate that if you visit, you'll likely get laid. 10. And if we're honest with ourselves, probably if we're
there.
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Skeet/Loreto
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4709
Registered: 9-2-2003
Member Is Offline
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PanhandleFishing is pretty good in all the lakes that have Water!!
Being able to see for miles out over the palo duro Canyon with no House to look at is just fine, Deer in the Yeard, Eagle and Falcon Around is O. K.
Battle Mountain Nev. --1969- Investigated an Accident there. Twin Cessna hit the mountain during a Storm. Very near to the Big "BM"
Only problem with leaving the dogs lyng is if they had been Posined with Strycnine. then it stays avaiable to other animals such as Cats. Bad Stuff.
The only real thing I miss about Loreto is the people!
Skeet/Loreto
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Pompano
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8194
Registered: 11-14-2004
Location: Bay of Conception and Up North
Member Is Offline
Mood: Optimistic
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other 'too touristy' signs....
Now I LOVE PIZZA!!...but perhaps it has become 'too touristy' when you can have an enterprising hombre deliver to your beach digs 20 miles away via
satellite phone. It's a different Baja in 2006 as compared to 'back in the good ol days'. Care to join us...we will have some pepperoni, some
Canadian bacon and pineapple chased down with cold Pacificos for dinner. Later we will open a chilled bottle of chardonnay, set out some patios de
paloma and turn on some Ravels' Bolero.
Now I say with possible, yet inevitable, foot-in-mouth that I am called a Mulegeian by my friends and fellow citizens of this village I have called
home for 35 years, but I am still actually a 'tourist'...pay no attention to our FM-1,2,3 and 'emmigrado' stuff...we are all 'tourists' on this
earth-bus.
[Edited on 2-13-2006 by Pompano]
I do what the voices in my tackle box tell me.
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Don Alley
Super Nomad
Posts: 1997
Registered: 12-4-2003
Location: Loreto
Member Is Offline
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Quote: | Originally posted by Santiago
My top 10 reasons when a Baja town is too 'touristy":
1. When my wife says she would visit that town. 2. When the thought first crosses my mind: "I wonder what a lot whould cost here?". 3. When the
kids don't stare at me in amazement and wonder. 4. When the full-time-retirees do stare at me in amazement and wonder. 5. When the menus are
printed in english. 6. When there are menus. 7. When my buddy and I want a lobster dinner but have forgotten the word for lobster so we both stand
up and prance around the table with our hands over our heads with our fingers pinching like claws and the young, nubile waitress says in perfect
english, "Would that be clams, crabs or lobsters?" 8. When the word "Market" OR "Mart" is bigger than the word "Tienda". 9. If the town advertizes
in the LA Times and the ads seem to indicate that if you visit, you'll likely get laid. 10. And if we're honest with ourselves, probably if we're
there. |
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capn.sharky
Senior Nomad
Posts: 686
Registered: 9-4-2003
Member Is Offline
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, some Nut builds a 3 million dollar Monstrosity next to your Palapa on the Beach, then wants to start an Association, close off the Beach so that the
Locals can no longer drive directly to the Cathouse"
So Skeeter, you saying you now can drive directly to the Cathouse in the Texas panhandle? You need not worry about anyone closing off the beach or
building something next to your palapa on the beach----there are no beaches in the panhandle. Speaking of monstrosities, you should see some of the
stuff the gringos (excuse me), the white folks (that doesn't sound right either somehow), the non-indeginous people (there, I think I got it right),
have built on the beach in Loreto.....clear up way past the old Penthouse. By the way, Beto said to tell you hello. Going back on the 26th. Feb.
25th is the wifes birthday and I thought it best to stay until after that. Hate to come home, but the doctors keep on checking this valve they put in
my heart. Happy trails Russ
If there is no fishing in heaven, I am not going
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capn.sharky
Senior Nomad
Posts: 686
Registered: 9-4-2003
Member Is Offline
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Don Alley
Your number one is soooooooo funny. Are they all like that. Mine is that way.
If there is no fishing in heaven, I am not going
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Skeet/Loreto
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4709
Registered: 9-2-2003
Member Is Offline
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Sharkey; Keep that Valve Popping!
Have they done anything at Doctors Point ?
Salute Beto Por Favor.
Not to many Cathouses in the Texas panhandle-Too many churches!
Lots of pretty girls wearing nothing but Chaps dancing away at the "Midnight Cowboy"!!
Have they started the "Comfort Inn"' up on the Highway Yet.. Salvat swore he would build it some Day.
Skeet/Loreto
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Mexray
Super Nomad
Posts: 1016
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: California Delta
Member Is Offline
Mood: Baja Time
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With apologies to Groucho Marx...
...I don't want to belong to any town that will accept me as a
member.
According to my clock...anytime is \'BAJA TIME\' & as Jimmy Buffett says,
\"It doesn\'t use numbers or moving hands It always just says now...\"
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The Sculpin
Nomad
Posts: 401
Registered: 9-3-2002
Location: Back in the Saddle
Member Is Offline
Mood: Riding into the Sunset, looking for a sunrise.
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It's too damn touristy when:
the well has water and the power is on for more than 2 hrs a day,
you don't have to negotiate with the fish co-op for ice,
the town mechanic no longer makes "house calls",
you go the the tienda rather than diving for your meals,
the "chief of police" no longer invites you to the c-ck fights,
the pangueros no longer care if you brought extra sparkplugs or rubber hose,
with horror, you realise that the latest trip report on the bajanomad site you're reading is your tiny spot of paradise!!!!!!!
:moon:
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The Sculpin
Nomad
Posts: 401
Registered: 9-3-2002
Location: Back in the Saddle
Member Is Offline
Mood: Riding into the Sunset, looking for a sunrise.
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c-ck fights?????
c-ckfights???
Are the NFL censors on this site?
Now I know how Mick Jagger feels?
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Pompano
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8194
Registered: 11-14-2004
Location: Bay of Conception and Up North
Member Is Offline
Mood: Optimistic
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I loved it when they once threw a dead c-ck up over the fence and it landed on my wifes shoes. I don't think she misses not seeing another
c-ckfight, which of course opens a Pandora's box for me going alone.
I do what the voices in my tackle box tell me.
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bajarich
Nomad
Posts: 463
Registered: 1-13-2005
Member Is Offline
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It's too touristy when:
1. You have to clearly explain the difference between your town and Cancun so that others will know.
2. the foreigners who moved there start compaining about all the other foreign languages they are starting to hear.
3. they want you to pay in dollars instead of pesos and all of the prices are in dollars.
4. the price of a Margaritta is $8.00 US.
5. most of the businesses in town are owned by Gringos who pay their help Mexican wages while charging US prices.
6. the airstrip is suddenly too small and needs to be expanded to acomodate international airlines. This is the beginning of the end for the nice
place.
7. the town started around tourism. It never was a Mexican town in the first place.
8. the local cop asks you if you want a girl.
9. the local ecomomy is based on sales of time-shares
10. tour companies bring people in to see an "authentic Mexican town".
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vgabndo
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3461
Registered: 12-8-2003
Location: Mt. Shasta, CA
Member Is Offline
Mood: Checking-off my bucket list.
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Pompano
Although I agree with Skeet about the poison problem, I think you are dead right about leaving the road kill for critters that need the food source.
Here in Siskiyou County CA, the fresh deer are, or used to be, taken to feed to prisoners in the County Jail. Likely cruel and unusual to feed them
venison these days. Hereabouts we get a lot of help from low-life truckers to make the roadsides less inviting to tourists. Every few hundred yards
there is a jug of pee they tossed out the window. It IS considered hazardous waste and costs a LOT of money to remove.
Hmmmm. If we jailed the truckers for contaminating the shoulders, we could make them clean it up, and feed them venison.
[Edited on 2-13-2006 by vgabndo]
Undoubtedly, there are people who cannot afford to give the anchor of sanity even the slightest tug. Sam Harris
"The situation is far too dire for pessimism."
Bill Kauth
Carl Sagan said, "We are a way for the cosmos to know itself."
PEACE, LOVE AND FISH TACOS
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