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Author: Subject: Camp, Jeep and Hike:Laguna Salada, Caņon Palomar & Mano, Sierra Juarez
Barry A.
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[*] posted on 11-28-2013 at 10:53 PM


Outstanding pics and video, Ken. Great trip, and report.

Thank you.

Barry
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David K
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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 09:44 AM


Nice Baja Jeep Trip Report!:bounce::bounce::bounce::cool:



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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 10:12 AM
Corral de Molina to Mano Canyon


Our group rolled up the winch cable and headed toward Canyon Isabel to see the big compound, but we never found it. Instead, we stopped for lunch, turned our Jeeps toward Cohabuzo Junction, and headed south from there.

One last look at Corral de Molina




We drove for about 2.5 hours before reaching the fence at lower Mano Canyon. We quickly set up camp and prepared for a 41 degree night in the desert. Cloud cover had disappeared, and the moon shone like a spotlight into our tents all night. For stargazers, this region is dark and views of the Milky Way are plentiful.

Our Baja Camp Jeep :yes:


The next morning, we reviewed our routes and promptly left camp at 9 AM. The Mano Canyon trail is extremely slow and rough on any vehicle. Extra care must be taken due to the narrow path and high elevations traveled. No mistakes can be made when crossing Mano Canyon.

8:45 AM Drivers Meeting






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Ken Cooke
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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 10:40 AM
Now we hit the >>HARDCORE Mano Canyon Trail




It turns out that this steep drop off wasn't so bad. Things got much, much worse the further we drove in. :o





Can you say >>OFF CAMBER!





After the chills and thrills, we found a safe place to park our Jeeps. The trail quickly became damp from the snowy winter soaking it received making us even more nervous behind the wheel.

Victor's LJ Rubicon on the Mano Canyon Trail


We quickly made it into La Sierra Juarez where the trail smoothed out considerably, placing us favorably near Ojos Negros and Ensenada.




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woody with a view
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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 11:57 AM


washout! a totota driver would have got the shovel out and ramped both sides down a little bit!

those boulders woulda made me turn around tho!




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Barry A.
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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 12:05 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by woody with a view
washout! a totota driver would have got the shovel out and ramped both sides down a little bit!

those boulders woulda made me turn around tho!


I will bet they, like me who also has a winch, will use any excuse to put those expensive tools into action---------it's called "justification", and it's all part of the adventure. :lol:

That was quite a hole Ken was in!!! and a great trip they were on.

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sad.gif posted on 11-29-2013 at 02:20 PM
Traveling North


The 4 day run is now over. Our Jeeps are in need of serious attention after the punishing terrain took its toll.

Victor - Air chuck irreparable - On-board air system non-functioning.

Ken - On-board Viair Extreme system stopped working,
- steel winch cable fell off of the drum while spooling it out below Mano Canyon (repaired in Tijuana).
- shimmy turned into a strong shimmy at speeds above 40 mph on Hwy 3 (partially repaired in Tijuana).

Vicki - No problems to speak of - She's ready for more Baja!:bounce:

Vicki in Sierra Juarez with her new (to her) garden shovel!


Once our group reached Ensenada, we had the Jeeps cleaned up and the salty mud hosed off.


Clean as a whistle!:yes:


Thank you for reading, and Thank You Baja Nomad for use of the bandwidth!




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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 03:40 PM


Wonderful Report Ken!

Mano canyon road looks like as much fun as it was 10 years ago... Fun driving from desert to pine forests, on a Baja dirt road! Hey, and that was the Baja 1000 race course of just a couple weeks ago!




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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 05:03 PM


Wow, there is no way my Scout II would have made it on your run. I tip my hat to you Jeep guys!
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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 06:08 PM


I see a great smile on you face here Ken... I know the feeling!






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[*] posted on 11-29-2013 at 10:46 PM
Trip report for JustRuns 4WD Club of San Diego, CA


On Saturday, November 23rd my Wife Leidys and I met up with two other parties driving well-equipped Jeep Wranglers for our 4 day "Pole Line Run." An early rainy season soaked the dry lake bed known as the Laguna Salada, leading our group to re-route the entire run - what we came up with exceeded everyone's expectations!

We first began our trip with a visit to Asadero Morlan #2 in the sleepy farming town of Progreso, just outside of Mexicali - minutes from the Calexico Point-of-entry. Asadero Morlan prepared some of the most amazing marinated Chicken and Carne Asada Tacos, Burritos and Tortas that set the tone for this great trip that we all enjoyed. After some incredible moments at the lunch table, we piloted our Jeeps to the Laguna Salada. What is normally a soft dirt path across miles of desert terrain was now a muddy pit that gradually sent our Jeeps sideways, begging for control as the mud packed in both our All-Terrain and Mud-Terrain tires without an ounce of mercy. We each carved wide arcs back to our point of origin, and with the help of the now out-of-print Baja Almanac Map book, we continued down the graded dirt road which follows the Sierra Juarez escarpment. With dark storm clouds billowing off in the distance, we knew that our run down the 1942 Pole Line Road was out of the question. Our destination would instead be the camping and hiking-friendly Caņon Palomar for two days and nights. Twenty four miles past Caņon de Guadalupe was El Corral de Molina, and from there, we were presented with a two-hour night-time run past semi-challenging rock gardens, around washed-out ditches, and past abandoned homesteads into the mouth of a spring-fed canyon featuring a cold water stream and a hot spring suitable for bathing.

With temperatures falling to the low 40s, and the occasional sprinkles our group set up camp, ate dinner, and quickly turned-in. Morning temperatures hovered in the low 50s, permitting attendees Tim and Vicki an opportunity to hike and climb some of the rocky peaks that surround Caņon Palomar. Victor eventually woke up, and after he saw how much fun they were having, began rock climbing himself! Leidys and I took it easy, strapping on our hiking boots and tracing the source of the hot spring that provides warm water to the man-made pool just below our camp site. The hiking possibilities lasted the entire time we stayed in this canyon, and it was really nice to relax in the Baja wilderness. Our second night was spent around our camp fire conversing with each other and warming up Vicki's shoes that she soaked while hiking with Tim earlier in the day.

On Monday morning, our driver's meeting was spent discussing route changes that would keep us out of the water-logged Laguna Salada and take us high above where we had camped into the Sierra Juarez - a region that had seen a dusting of snowfall, but would allow us an opportunity to make a speedy exit to Hwy 1 and later I-5 just past the Mexican border. We drove for six hours that day - spending about 2 of those hours playing on the 4 mile-long dirt access road that crossed rock gardens and lush palm groves back to Corral de Molina. We hunted for the luxurious desert compound tucked deep into Caņon Isabel - but, did not find it before eventually linking up with Cohabuzo Junction, and later the base of Caņon El Mano, where we camped our last night.

Our group hit the Caņon El Mano trail at 9 AM. What started as a rough, rocky dirt road developed into a cliff-hanger of a trail - complete with off-camber sections, wash-outs with 300+ ft. drop-offs, but views of the entire Laguna Salada region. Steep hill climbs presented sections where stair-steps covered in loose gravel gave us the challenges our Jeeps were engineered for. By 1:30 PM, our group had safely made it past this trail like no other, and through the Sierra Juarez where we were just a short distance from Ojos Negros - named for the numerous water springs that fill the Sierra Juarez with clean, drinkable water year-round. By 4 p.m., we entered Ensenada where our Jeeps were hand-washed (to avoid trouble at the border for the hardened mud which covered our under carriages), and then off for dinner at La Cocedora de Langosta (+52 646 178 3742) - adjacent to the Ensenada Fish Market. Near Tijuana, our group split up with Victor and Vicki's Jeeps heading toward the San Ysidro Point of Entry while Leidys and I stayed in Tijuana to have my bad steering shimmy remedied the next day by my Tijuana mechanic - Luis. Our JustRuns group had an incredible time camping, hiking, and 'wheeling along some of Baja's most challenging trails. In 2014, Leidys and I plan to do it again!




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[*] posted on 11-30-2013 at 06:58 PM


Great trip report!

Ken, do you have lockers in your jeep?




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[*] posted on 11-30-2013 at 09:09 PM


It's a Rubicon... but video showed front not locked. The lockers are selectable.



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[*] posted on 11-30-2013 at 10:19 PM


Great photos and trip report Ken. I had no idea you could head up that way to Ojos Negros.



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[*] posted on 12-1-2013 at 08:01 AM


Quote:
Originally posted by MexicoTed
Great photos and trip report Ken. I had no idea you could head up that way to Ojos Negros.


Our Pole Line Group followed the 2013 SCORE 1000 route from Cohabuzo Junction to an area right outside of Ojos Negros. That's how we knew where we were going. We followed those 'Wrong Way' placards through some serious terrain.




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[*] posted on 12-1-2013 at 08:15 AM






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[*] posted on 12-1-2013 at 08:38 AM






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[*] posted on 12-1-2013 at 04:10 PM


How warm/ hot was it where she is?



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[*] posted on 12-1-2013 at 06:22 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by David K
How warm/ hot was it where she is?


At the origin of the spring, the water was hot - about the temperature of a hot tub (~105 deg. F.). As the water worked its way downstream, its temperature dropped to about 95 deg. F. Where Leidys was standing, it produced steam. The water collects further downstream where it was about 90 degrees.

Hoses were in disarray, but cut have piped the water to the handmade pool near our campsite.

Standing water below the hotspring source




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[*] posted on 12-2-2013 at 09:22 AM
Polomar spring


Hiked all up to the water source. Here are a couple of pics from my album







And here are a couple of pics of the dry tubs near the shack



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