BajaNomad

Tramo Puertecitos-Laguna Chapala

deanoid - 10-22-2009 at 09:46 PM

I was just down to my place near Punta Bufeo last week. Work on the road is progressing, but they're not as far as I predicted last Memorial Day. Presently, the pavement ends 9.1 miles south of where I used to mark my odometer, which was at the south end of Puertecitos, where the boat was on the roof. From there, the road bed was finished-graded for another 2.7 miles. You can haul ass on the finished graded part. I went about 45. From the end of the graded section, the present track came and went out of the old road bed. In places, an entire new route was cut as a detour, some of it roughly following the old-old (pre-87) track. An immense bridge is being constructed over a wash a couple miles north of El Huerfanito, right near what I call Pomo Hill, where a massive accumulation of pumice often lies. You still cross Pomo Hill, but all of that section there is in better condition that it was 4 months ago. I think the construction companies did some grading so as to not beat their trucks up too bad. After coming down Huerfanito Grade, the road detours to the west a bit. The new roadbed is being constructed roughly where the old one was, but is elevated. Bridges, culverts and flow diverters are being used instead of vados. Construction is happening for I'd say 3 or 4 miles south of Huerfanito. After that, it's the same rocky mess that it's been for the last 5 years. On the way back, we observed the road's latest victim: a fiberglass center counsel boat on a trailer. The axle on the trailer was sheared off. The other tire was gone, the motor was gone....it was weird. the boat looked too nice to abandon, but it sure looked abandoned to me. I took a couple pictures and left it alone. I hope the owner claims it.

David K - 10-23-2009 at 07:42 AM

Thank you for the report. The new section for Puertecitos south sounds like it is really being built to last... high standards.

I wonder if they will re-do the San Felipe to Puertecitos section which was made so poorly, just paving over the graded road of 1982 with sharp dips (vados) that come up without warning (except where a gringo painted the attention getting 'Oh Sh#! Dip' on the road).

Thanks again!

deanoid - 10-23-2009 at 10:30 AM

I agree on both counts. The new road is way better than the Puertecitos-San Felipe stretch, which, as you alluded, has numerous dips that I can usually anticipate, but pee my wife off when I don't quite nail it quite as good as she'd like.

I too am curious as to whether the Puertecitos Road will be upgraded. I highly doubt it. Personally, I would have preferred the new section not even be upgraded, just graded every year would have suited me fine. How this easy access will affect the area is subject to great speculation, but it can't be good to old-time residents like me. The thing we'll still have going for us is it's still a long way from the USA, has no infrastructure, and unlike San Felipe, severely limited water resources. I'm resigned to the thing now; not grading the old road since late 2004 made the trip pretty unpleasant the last few years, especially going over the mountains.

Corky1 - 10-23-2009 at 11:00 AM

The road is smooth compaired to years past!!!!






Corky:lol::lol::lol:

baitcast - 10-23-2009 at 11:05 AM

There is a road somewhere in there:lol:.....Last climb.

Bob H.

[Edited on 10-23-2009 by baitcast]

PabloS - 10-23-2009 at 01:08 PM

http://geocities.com/pts1_2000/images/threesistersw.jpg:spingrin:

http://corky1.smugmug.com/Motorcycles/Motorcycles/three-sist...

I guess you missed the copyright notice corky1:?:

PabloS AKA pts1_2000

TacoFeliz - 10-24-2009 at 09:46 AM

Sorry, PabloS, I visited your site on Geocities and missed it too. Is it hiding? Just yankin' ya...

Great photos, by the way.