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Author: Subject: gates all over Baja
bajatrailrider
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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 09:29 AM


The only thing careless clueless are anything you write. Hiking in states worthless your scared in Baja . Great we dont need stupid people like you here. Thanks to ranchers giving me keys to gates so I dont need look at stupid . People like you you know nothing about Baja. Just garbage writer looked in room too scared to come out.
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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 10:16 AM


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
If you like public lands for hiking and exploring, the usa and canada are the place to be. Mexico has virtually no public lands so gates are what you got to deal with.
gringos go to mexico to shred private lands, because blm and forest service dont allow that in usa, and ejidos in baja are so sparsely populated they often cant stop gringos… but things are changing, narcos are doing rural pot farming, and ranchers finally are getting fed up with careless/destructive offroaders, so closing roads.


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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 11:03 AM


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
If you like public lands for hiking and exploring, the usa and canada are the place to be. Mexico has virtually no public lands so gates are what you got to deal with.
gringos go to mexico to shred private lands, because blm and forest service dont allow that in usa, and ejidos in baja are so sparsely populated they often cant stop gringos… but things are changing, narcos are doing rural pot farming, and ranchers finally are getting fed up with careless/destructive offroaders, so closing roads.


it's a little more complicated
but in general, you are right on




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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 12:51 PM


Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
Quote: Originally posted by Lee  
just last week I ignored a gate (on foot) and was escorted out by ranchers armed with rifles
we may have overstayed our welcome
. Harald's words.


in this case the road was in excellent condition
with recent tire tracks
meaning they lied to me
meaning they did not want me to go
I will not speculate on their motivation
who knows what they are growing out there (lotsa water)
no word of no trespassing or private property


Not a gate ... but a few years back I posted (& later retracted) a story about encountering a big stump randomly blocking the road. I dragged it off the road, and later came to understand why it had been put there: The road ended at a canyon with a big grow op in it. I figure they wanted to know if they were getting any visitors.





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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 12:55 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bajaboy  
Quote: Originally posted by geoffff  
This was a disappointing gate I encountered in 2019, when I was hoping to drive the San Cristobal / Puerto Nuevo loop on the Vizcaino (27.4068, -114.4749):




[Edited on 3-26-2022 by geoffff]


That's a simple fix. The Vigilancia will happily open the gate for you. There is no gate from the north. Awesome road that we travel often. There is also an arroyo just south that you can take to the beach. Via the beach you can connect to the road again.


Thank you Bajaboy for the tip! I will do one of those two things the next time I pass through that area.

Do you have any idea WHY the gate is there? To prevent fishing poachers from leaving the back way? I know there is a lot of worry about abalone poaching on the Vizcaino peninsula

-- Geoff

[Edited on 3-27-2022 by geoffff]




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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 07:35 PM


what I have learned in many years of driving Baja - a rock at the beginning of a road indicates a dead end. Could be a mile or 10. Rocks are rarely too big to pass over



DSC_7365 rock blocking road 800.jpg - 250kB



notice rock on road 800.jpg - 189kB




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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 08:12 PM


Quote: Originally posted by geoffff  
Quote: Originally posted by Bajaboy  
Quote: Originally posted by geoffff  
This was a disappointing gate I encountered in 2019, when I was hoping to drive the San Cristobal / Puerto Nuevo loop on the Vizcaino (27.4068, -114.4749):




[Edited on 3-26-2022 by geoffff]


That's a simple fix. The Vigilancia will happily open the gate for you. There is no gate from the north. Awesome road that we travel often. There is also an arroyo just south that you can take to the beach. Via the beach you can connect to the road again.


Thank you Bajaboy for the tip! I will do one of those two things the next time I pass through that area.

Do you have any idea WHY the gate is there? To prevent fishing poachers from leaving the back way? I know there is a lot of worry about abalone poaching on the Vizcaino peninsula

-- Geoff

[Edited on 3-27-2022 by geoffff]


For what it is worth, I drove those roads in November of 2021, and did not encounter any closed gates.

The icing on the cake was that every road I drove on the peninsula had been freshly graded. It was so recent, that the grader tire tracks were still visible!




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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 08:25 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Lee  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
If you like public lands for hiking and exploring, the usa and canada are the place to be. Mexico has virtually no public lands so gates are what you got to deal with.
gringos go to mexico to shred private lands, because blm and forest service dont allow that in usa, and ejidos in baja are so sparsely populated they often cant stop gringos… but things are changing, narcos are doing rural pot farming, and ranchers finally are getting fed up with careless/destructive offroaders, so closing roads.


X2


X3


[Edited on 3-28-2022 by pacificobob]
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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 08:50 PM


Quote: Originally posted by geoffff  
Quote: Originally posted by Bajaboy  
Quote: Originally posted by geoffff  
This was a disappointing gate I encountered in 2019, when I was hoping to drive the San Cristobal / Puerto Nuevo loop on the Vizcaino (27.4068, -114.4749):




[Edited on 3-26-2022 by geoffff]


That's a simple fix. The Vigilancia will happily open the gate for you. There is no gate from the north. Awesome road that we travel often. There is also an arroyo just south that you can take to the beach. Via the beach you can connect to the road again.


Thank you Bajaboy for the tip! I will do one of those two things the next time I pass through that area.

Do you have any idea WHY the gate is there? To prevent fishing poachers from leaving the back way? I know there is a lot of worry about abalone poaching on the Vizcaino peninsula

-- Geoff

[Edited on 3-27-2022 by geoffff]


Yes, the gate to the south is definitely there to prevent poachers. We love to camp at Tordillo, the beach just to the west, and the vigilancia always come out to say hi. If you are driving south on the road, there is a vigilancia outpost about a mile or two before the gate. Stop there and and ask if they can open it for you. We always offer some pesos for gas. The people out there are super welcoming as long as they know you are good people.




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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 10:47 PM


Harald, that rock thing! Dead end. I will start looking for it!



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[*] posted on 3-27-2022 at 11:46 PM


geoffff, the gates are to stop lobster poachers during the off season. I've traveled that road in February and the gates were unlocked.
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[*] posted on 3-28-2022 at 08:11 AM


Quote: Originally posted by pacificobob  
Quote: Originally posted by Lee  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
If you like public lands for hiking and exploring, the usa and canada are the place to be. Mexico has virtually no public lands so gates are what you got to deal with.
gringos go to mexico to shred private lands, because blm and forest service dont allow that in usa, and ejidos in baja are so sparsely populated they often cant stop gringos… but things are changing, narcos are doing rural pot farming, and ranchers finally are getting fed up with careless/destructive offroaders, so closing roads.


X2


X3


[Edited on 3-28-2022 by pacificobob]
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[*] posted on 3-28-2022 at 08:20 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Maderita  
Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
Quote: Originally posted by Lee  
A gate NOB means the same as a gate SOB. It means private property and owner wants to keep people out. Whether it's legal or not has no bearing. Maybe people need to see a sign that reads KEEP THE F' OUT!

If you don't know the owner or have permission to open the gate, it's called trespassing. That has to be a difficult concern for some gringoes.

Am I missing something?


yes, you are missing something
gates in Baja have several different functions
seasoned Baja travelers know that well


4x4abc has it correct. Most of BC and BCS is ejido land. Ejidatarios have use of their share of the communal land. Much of it is rugged wilderness. Also open-range, with cattle roaming for miles to get a half-full stomach. Most of the gates we are talking about are on rural dirt roads, and for the purpose of containing livestock. Some have steel gates with padlocks. Further from civilization, most gates are constructed of barbed wire strung across sticks, with a typical bailing wire loop closure, and no lock.

Unless there is a sign stating not to pass, my protocol is: open the gate, close the gate behind and properly tension, proceed slowly if there are livestock. If the road leads directly to a ranch house, 15 kph and no dust. Stop and ask permission to pass after introducing yourself, politely stating your purpose, and perhaps offering a cold beer or soda. The ranchers know the area and may tell you about interesting places to see, as well as, what to avoid - problem places, narcos, washouts, etc.

Of course, this advice does not apply to urban areas, private driveways, and gates obviously meant to protect dwellings/businesses/private property.

If you are interested in how much of the peninsula is covered by ejido land, take a look at this map. Ejidos are shaded in blue.
https://databasin.org/maps/new/#datasets=a5e789aa10fb4efbbd8...



There's a lot more to this story and the key point is to understand who these people are that are putting up those locked gates? It’s easy to blame the cartels but it is highly unlikely that more than 1% of them are directly connected to cartel activity. And even 1% is probably a high number.

Everybody here has heard the advice to run away from buying ejido land as it’s nearly impossible for an ejidatario to obtain his/her “Dominio Pleno” for their parcel in the ejido, as it required a unanimous vote by ALL ejido members - not just those present in any given meeting. At one point in time, that was probably sound advice as it was difficult if not impossible to get a 100% vote on anything without some serious negotiating and usually money changing hands. And quite often there are a LOT of hands in an ejido.

That ejido map you linked to is interesting to look at but really does not give an accurate portrayal of reality today, except to underscore their political clout..

For the last few decades they have been using that political clout, slowly pushing through a series of legal changes to the laws governing ejidos, their agrarian rights and more specifically – giving ejido leadership the ability to get around some of those 100% vote requirements. Those changes are now facilitating the transition of legal control over vast amounts of land down here from ejido management to an ejidatario’s private control. It’s hard to find an ejido today that isn’t currently dividing up and handing out certificates of Dominio Pleno to their ejido members. Do ejido politics come into play? Of course they do but it's in the best interests of the majority of the members to transition the control of the land. And they are doing just that.

The reason that map you linked to still shows all that land as ejido is because most of these new land owners are happy to just sit on their certificates of Dominio Pleno. Putting off registering the Dominio Pleno at the registrar’s office means that any taxes they pay remain at little to none. Seriously. They would of course need to record it in the event of a looming sale of the land and in most cases, that is exactly what they do.

Ejido land that been used for farming / cattle operations will likely continue that way for awhile and the incentive may not be there just yet to privatize.

But like it or not, a large portion of that ejido today is moving to private control and many of those new locked gates are coming from these new landowners. You’re foolish to believe that they don’t mind you crossing their property in finding a way around that locked gate and especially if they catch you cutting one of their padlocks. Some of them charge fees to cross and it's their right. I have had some tourists tell me stories of how they were "ripped off", paying 10 bucks to pass through a locked gate that used to be open, but that's just the new reality.

Times are changing and you'd better get used to it. Or consider wearing body armor.




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[*] posted on 3-28-2022 at 09:18 PM


Thank you BajaGringo for this window into why Baja land is the way it is, and how it is changing.



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[*] posted on 3-29-2022 at 08:48 AM


I am often amused by mention of cartel activity in baja.
Usually cited by gringos who have zero experience in the parts of Mexico where it conspicuously exists. I'd be willing to bet there is more cartel activity in alta California
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[*] posted on 3-29-2022 at 12:51 PM


26.904796, -112.402351

Locked metal gate on a road across the peninsula starting by the Guadalupe mission ruins west of Mulege.

Been looking for a way across for awhile now. This looked promising, until the gate!

Harald, I would like access to your data base for sure.




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[*] posted on 3-29-2022 at 01:06 PM


the gate is visible on Google Earth

gate.jpg - 126kB




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[*] posted on 3-29-2022 at 01:09 PM


Quote: Originally posted by DouglasP  
26.904796, -112.402351

Locked metal gate on a road across the peninsula starting by the Guadalupe mission ruins west of Mulege.

Been looking for a way across for awhile now. This looked promising, until the gate!

Harald, I would like access to your data base for sure.


I am looking for a way to share information in a way that is can't be copied.




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[*] posted on 3-29-2022 at 02:38 PM


Quote: Originally posted by lencho  
Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
I am looking for a way to share information in a way that is can't be copied.


Kind of a oxymarooon, isn't that? Seems like if you present it in a format that's actually useful to others, that would make it vulnerable to copying. :?:

How would that work?

Edit: "Oxymaroon"? Fer crissakes-- this sensoring software sometimes gets in the way of normal communications. :mad:



[Edited on 3-29-2022 by lencho]


I so appreciate that you understand my pain




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[*] posted on 3-29-2022 at 03:57 PM


Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
Quote: Originally posted by lencho  
Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
I am looking for a way to share information in a way that is can't be copied.


Kind of a oxymarooon, isn't that? Seems like if you present it in a format that's actually useful to others, that would make it vulnerable to copying. :?:

How would that work?

Edit: "Oxymaroon"? Fer crissakes-- this sensoring software sometimes gets in the way of normal communications. :mad:



[Edited on 3-29-2022 by lencho]


I so appreciate that you understand my pain


What software are using to create your database? I created a lot of databases over the years using Access and they have some pretty good tools that will probably make your tables as copy-proof as possible on a shared database.




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