BajaNomad

Racing into Baja history with Cameron Steele. On ABC TV Sept. 1, 2019

David K - 5-15-2019 at 11:09 PM

The first few posts here are from the road during the trip. The complete report with photos begins with the May 19 post. It will take a few days for it all to get posted, so please return to see it all.

Hello amigos,
Internet is sketchy so this is brief but I will be adding photos later!

I am in San Ignacio tonight, the end of day 4 of maybe 6 days doing recon for Trail of Missions 2019. That tour will be in June.

Day 1 was to San Felipe.
Day 2 was to Mulegé.
Day 3 was to Mission Guadalupe and San Borjitas cave.
Day 4 was to San Bruno colony site then to San Ignacio.
We saw also San Juan Londo, had lunch at Mark & Olivia's. I took the gang to Bob & Susan's, too. Then we went to the Tres Virgenes geothermal plant and eco-lodge.

My phone has limited Internet ability, so I will share more data later.

Let me just say, being a passenger in a Raptor driven by Curt LaDuc is so much fun!

So far, every site we wanted to see has worked out, perfectly.

The weather is outstanding, no wind on the gulf, either.

San Felipe to Laguna Chapala was rough and I think trailers should avoid.

Back online when I can!

*Day 5 is to San Francisco de la Sierra, Cueva del Raton, and the Visita de San Pablo.






[Edited on 9-12-2019 by David K]

mtgoat666 - 5-16-2019 at 06:32 AM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  


Let me just say, being a passenger in a Raptor driven by Curt LaDuc is so much fun!



His car has a magic fingers vibrating seat, eh?

fishbuck - 5-16-2019 at 09:27 AM

Way coool. I 'm getting a Raptor... I'll tag along... if I can keep up:cool:

fishbuck - 5-16-2019 at 02:48 PM

A quick peek into the used Raptor market finds they have not fallen below $20,000 yet.
I didn't bother to find out how much a new one is.

For $20000 I can bolt on a whole lot of whoopa$$ onto my F-350.
Which is already bigger than a Raptor from the showroom.
A real truck;)



[Edited on 5-16-2019 by fishbuck]

fishbuck - 5-16-2019 at 04:27 PM

Where is Team Raptor?

TMW - 5-16-2019 at 05:36 PM

Quote: Originally posted by fishbuck  
A quick peek into the used Raptor market finds they have not fallen below $20,000 yet.
I didn't bother to find out how much a new one is.

For $20000 I can bolt on a whole lot of whoopa$$ onto my F-350.
Which is already bigger than a Raptor from the showroom.
A real truck;)



[Edited on 5-16-2019 by fishbuck]


The suspension on a F350 doesn't even compare to an F150 for off road, you might as well be driving a dump truck. F350 are for hauling a cabover camper and old women.

4x4abc - 5-16-2019 at 07:33 PM

hauling old women?

fishbuck - 5-16-2019 at 09:14 PM

My F-350 rips. Gas V-8. Stripped "Fleet truck" super light.
I'm not serious about modifying my F-350.. My truck is for hauling my boat and building my house etc.
Working.

I'd love a Raptor. I see them everywhere.

[Edited on 5-17-2019 by fishbuck]

fishbuck - 5-16-2019 at 09:24 PM

http://fordauthority.com/2017/05/arizona-man-turning-ho-hum-...

http://fordauthority.com/2017/06/ford-raptor-super-duty-on-t...

[Edited on 5-17-2019 by fishbuck]

David K - 5-16-2019 at 11:26 PM

Ok guys, it is Thursday just short of midnight, Mountain Time.

Day 5:

Left San Ignacio and drove up to San Francisco de la Sierra. We arranged to see Cueva El Raton. Aquired permits and 4 guides for the 15 of us (1 per 4 people). The guides were all Arces, naturally. They lit up when I told them I knew Baja Bucko (Teddi), Trudi Angell, and Eve Ewing. Good times. There was some confusion about the costs with the lady who sells the permits up at the Hostel. I will elaborate more later.

Next, we drove to Vizcaino where we arranged for two guides to take us to the Visita de San Pablo. That was great!

It is a very rough road and took us 3 hours to get there! I have lots of photos.

Tonight we are in Guerrero Negro and will be on the road early.

I want to say that all 6 of the Ford Raptors performed flawlessly and no tire fails either (yet). Curt and the rest were doing around or over 100 mph on the wide graded Guillermo Prieto road today. What a trip! Then we were doing under 10 mph in San Pablo Canyon.

The trip is to check new locations for Trail of Missions as well filming some action scenes that are not easy to do with the family tour trips.

I will see you next, north of the border! Good night/ morning from Baja Sur.

fishbuck - 5-17-2019 at 07:44 AM

Nice!
I can not wait to hear about these Raptors. My guess is that they do the 100mph part good but slow speed rock crawling not as well.
Dave's in his element... having fun.
Well done DavidK

HeyMulegeScott - 5-17-2019 at 08:00 AM

Sounds like a fun trip. Looking forward to seeing the pics and maps.

fishbuck - 5-17-2019 at 08:11 AM

And my old F150 would do a 100 down a dirt road...
It had a normal V6 4.6l I believe with clutch.
It would do 70 towing a boat.

David K - 5-17-2019 at 10:42 AM

In San Felipe at 10:30 am. No blockage on Hwy 5 to Chapala as reported. Left Chapala at 8 am, Puertecitos at 9:30.

fishbuck - 5-17-2019 at 02:45 PM

Flyin' those trucks across the desert!

shari - 5-17-2019 at 03:14 PM

Lucky you....Curt is a cool guy!

David K - 5-17-2019 at 03:30 PM

All the folks with Cameron were fun. We got a lot of really great tv video done with such dramatic scenery. The road from Guadalupe mission down to San José de Magdalena was fantastic scenery. The San Borjitas road was great fun, too!

David K - 5-17-2019 at 03:32 PM

We got to Mexicali East at 1 pm with only a dozen cars in our lane.
In traffic on I-5 in Carlsbad now. Very tired. I am glad I am not driving.

mtgoat666 - 5-17-2019 at 03:37 PM

Quote: Originally posted by fishbuck  
Flyin' those trucks across the desert!


Drive it like you stole it!
Terrorize everyone else on the road!

:no:

David K - 5-17-2019 at 03:38 PM

Quote: Originally posted by Three2tango  
Sounds like a fun trip. Looking forward to seeing the pics and maps.

I will do my best to get them posted.
I have shared some on Instagram and Facebook while we are driving. I just learned how to use Instagram from Sasha, one of the camermen shooting the tv show. My Instagram name is Bajadavidkier.

fishbuck - 5-17-2019 at 03:42 PM

See how hard it is to report a trip "real time".
I did all mine with my phone.
Next trip I post my own pics too.

Everybody is waiting....

fishbuck - 5-17-2019 at 03:44 PM

And I did my own driving... ;)

fishbuck - 5-17-2019 at 03:46 PM

And then there was that dog...:D

DAY 1 & 2 (May 12, 13)

David K - 5-19-2019 at 09:34 AM

I drove to Cameron's shop (1 hour from my home) on Sunday, where my truck would be secure for the week and we were off about 2 pm with 3 Raptors. I was in the newest one, with only 1,800 miles on the odometer (it was well over 3,000 after 6 days). Jimmy Lee Cook drove... he is one of the cameramen and operates the drone, too. Jimmy has produced/ filmed at most of Cameron's tv shows as well as other tv shows, including NatGeo.

We picked up another cameraman (Sasha) along the way and made a beeline for Calexico where Curt LeDuc and another guest with a Raptor joined us.

Across the new Mexicali West border, several of us got FMMs, and then south to San Felipe, arriving as it got dark. We had rooms at a motel that (as I understand) was once part of the El Cortez, but got divided up into 3 smaller motels? It was right on the sand... Dinner was great.
We sat out under a palapa by the sea drinking and chatting before crashing.

The next morning we had breakfast at George's a few blocks inland from the motel. I had hotcakes and bacon. We then were off to Mulegé with stops at Guerrero Negro for tacos, San Ignacio for ice cream, the dirt road north of Santa Roslía for some action shots (the network wanted more off-road action in the show) and at Mulegé we did some filming with the drone along the river. El Patron was closed and Pancho Villa's was no longer there, either... so sad. We met Salvador to ask about logistics to see La Trinidad cave art, but we ended up passing on it. Salvador was very nice and Cameron offered to compensate him for meeting us.

We spent the next two nights at the Serenidad and ate dinners and breakfast there, too. I never saw Don Johnson but did see the nice memorial chapel for his wife, Nancy, who has died.

PHOTOS:

Sunday:

The truck I was in, the Monster Energy Raptor, near Calexico, still clean!


Following Cameron, riding in the Method Wheels Raptor, south of Mexicali.


San Felipe dinner.

Monday:

The ~10-mile detour between Km. 60 (Arroyo Matomí) and Km. 74.5 (Puertecitos).


Some of the highway south of Puertecitos since Oct. 1, 2018, looks like this.


Nearing El Huerfanito.




Las Arrastras, from the bridge on the new highway bypassing Coco's Corner.


Lunch at Guerrero Negro.


I had two fish tacos and a shrimp taco. They were great.




Coming into San Ignacio is spectacular.


The ice cream is great, too! This is on the left side of the plaza.


Cameron points towards the mission.


Founded in 1728, constructed between 1761 and 1786.








[Edited on 5-19-2019 by David K]

Udo - 5-19-2019 at 11:38 AM

Cool photos and reports. DK!

Mil Gracias!

fishbuck - 5-19-2019 at 12:55 PM

Nice.
Truck looks cool. Not your average Raptor.
Lots of taco stops;)

David K - 5-19-2019 at 01:03 PM

Tacos are Mexico's gift to the world!

bajamedic - 5-19-2019 at 02:25 PM

David, love the photos and trip report. Where did you eat in San Felipe, that Taco Tray looks fantastic. JH

David K - 5-19-2019 at 02:44 PM

That dinner was at the hotel. The food and guacamole was great. The tacos were carne asada, shrimp, and octopus. Plus, batter fried fish. I didn't catch the hotel name but it used to be part of the El Cortez we were told.

Day 3 Tuesday: Mission Guadalupe de Huasinapí

David K - 5-19-2019 at 08:39 PM

We had a good breakfast at the Serenidad and headed west, onto the Ice House Road and across the big valley, passing the signed roads to La Trinidad and climbing the hills...

The road north (signed for Ex-Misión de Guadalupe) from the Mulegé to La Ballena (San Juanico/Scorpion Bay) road is much better than when I drove it in 2017. We arrived at the gated and wired shut driveway up to the cinder block building, made lunch, then hiked up the arroyo as I did before and walked to the mission ruins (they are west/ uphill of the cinder-block building). In addition, we went further north to the spring surrounded by the palms before walking out to the main road at the La Presa sign and junction with the road up the hill that goes to San José de Magdalena. The road from there towards the mission is a better approach and there are no fences to go through other than the gate. This was my second time going to the 1720-1795 mission in the mountains.

The road to San José de Magdalena was destroyed in 2014 and reported reopened in late 2018. It is indeed repaired and a very dramatic and photogenic route. There is a very steep grade and for that reason, I suggest only 4WD vehicles attempt it (at least from the east).

Passing through San José de Magdalena, it appears to be a most interesting village with a cemetery of many old graves. Cameron doesn't like cemeteries so he didn't stop. I hope to return and have a better look.

Once on the highway, southbound to Palo Verde, there was a lot of discussion about going to the San Borjitas cave with the time we had left that afternoon. We stopped and had a pow-wow to discuss it and Cameron asked me if we should try the road. Salvador (in Mulegé) said it takes 3-hours to get there. I said we should at least try and see if the road is that bad as we still had daylight and the rest of the group also wanted to try.

Continued in the next post. First, the Day 3 photos to this point...

[Edited on 5-20-2019 by David K]

Photos

David K - 5-20-2019 at 08:32 AM


My Serenidad breakfast.


Getting ready.


Curt LeDuc shows Jimmy and I the ironwood craftsman shop who makes a turtle in just minutes for the rotor saw. This is near the gas station on the south of Mulegé, west side of highway.






The police pull up to Cameron and ask him for a sticker!!!


Jimmy and Curt LeDuc as Jimmy operated the drone for some action shots.


This is the wired shut gate one sees west of the sign for Ex-Misión de Guadalupe. It is just the way I found it almost two years ago. There is a big parking area here. We made lunch then walked to the mission, but not through here, we walked up the arroyo to the next road going west from the La Presa sign.


Sasha filming the mission wall up-close.


This was the inside of the mission church, looking north.


Looking southward, inside the mission church.


A güeribo tree. The reason for the Jesuits to come to this area. This kind of tree was used to build the first ship in California, in 1719, El Triunfo de la Cruz.


Cameron at the La Presa sign. Rancho La Presa is ahead, the mission is best accessed from the gated road to the left here (not a locked gate, always close gates you open), the road to Hwy. 1 south of Santa Rosalia goes uphill, to the right here.


That's me.


A narrow canyon drive on the road coming down from the mission.


A water crossing makes a good action scene.


Beautiful country!




San José de Magdalena cemetery... Only our truck stopped.

Next, we go to San Borjitas...




fishbuck - 5-20-2019 at 08:37 AM

Very cool, very classic.
Love the water crossing!

fishbuck - 5-20-2019 at 11:42 AM

I think Curt and I are cusins.
My paternal Grandma is a Le Pierre. Her mom full Potowatamie.
Curt is a legend at Crandon Wisconsin also.



"In 1994, the first Forest County Potawatomi Chairman’s Cup race was won in 1994 by desert racing veteran Curt LeDuc, driving a Ford 4×4 truck."

[Edited on 5-20-2019 by fishbuck]

HeyMulegeScott - 5-20-2019 at 11:43 AM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
That dinner was at the hotel. The food and guacamole was great. The tacos were carne asada, shrimp, and octopus. Plus, batter fried fish. I didn't catch the hotel name but it used to be part of the El Cortez we were told.


This one? https://www.stellasanfelipe.com/eat

DouglasP - 5-20-2019 at 11:53 AM

Yes, that is a big cemetery for such a little town.


OI000645.jpg - 90kB

4x4abc - 5-20-2019 at 12:11 PM

David, do you have a lat long for the wired gate

StuckSucks - 5-20-2019 at 01:03 PM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Ex-Misión de Guadalupe. It is just the way I found it almost two years ago. There is a big parking area here. We made lunch then walked to the mission, but not through here, we walked up the arroyo to the next road going west from the La Presa sign.


Page 62

David K - 5-20-2019 at 01:04 PM

Quote: Originally posted by Three2tango  
Quote: Originally posted by David K  
That dinner was at the hotel. The food and guacamole was great. The tacos were carne asada, shrimp, and octopus. Plus, batter fried fish. I didn't catch the hotel name but it used to be part of the El Cortez we were told.


This one? https://www.stellasanfelipe.com/eat


Yes, that seems to be it. Thank you.

David K - 5-20-2019 at 01:14 PM

Quote: Originally posted by DouglasP  
Yes, that is a big cemetery for such a little town.




Well, it is an old town. The ruined church, across the arroyo from the cemetery, dates to the 1880s or earlier. Some books have (in error I believe) named that ruin as a Dominican mission visita. The true Magdalena visita ruins are at the end of the aqueduct that go from the arroyo here east to the desert and a pila by the wide arroyo, which destroyed most of the ruins in 2014. I was there in 2009 and 2015, before and after the massive flash flood. The same that destroyed the road up to Guadalupe mission.

4x4abc - 5-20-2019 at 01:27 PM

Quote: Originally posted by StuckSucks  
Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Ex-Misión de Guadalupe. It is just the way I found it almost two years ago. There is a big parking area here. We made lunch then walked to the mission, but not through here, we walked up the arroyo to the next road going west from the La Presa sign.


Page 62


page 62 of what?

David K - 5-20-2019 at 03:08 PM

Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
Quote: Originally posted by StuckSucks  
Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Ex-Misión de Guadalupe. It is just the way I found it almost two years ago. There is a big parking area here. We made lunch then walked to the mission, but not through here, we walked up the arroyo to the next road going west from the La Presa sign.


Page 62


page 62 of what?


My book.

The GPS of the wired-shut gate, from Google Earth: 26° 55.078'N, 112° 24.223'W Harald, this is just west of the sign: Ex-Mision de Guadalupe by the mission area.

The better and openable gate to access the mission is to the left of the La Presa sign, here: 26° 55.226'N, 112° 24.322'W

The mission church is about here: 26° 55.107'N, 112° 24.362'W

4x4abc - 5-20-2019 at 03:13 PM

thanks David!

DAY 3 cont'd: To San Borjitas Painted Cave

David K - 5-20-2019 at 03:51 PM



The turnoff is at KM. 156 north edge of Palo Verde (the town where the Punta Chivato road is, at Km. 155.5). I will calculate the miles to the cave site from my GPS track or Google Earth and add it here. It is approx. 15 miles of pretty good dirt road.

You drive to the end of the road (left branch at the only fork midway in) and there you will see all the signage to arrange a tour to the site. We met Ernesto there, paid the permits... as I recall it was 75 pesos per person and 300 pesos for the one guide. I don't recall if there was a camera fee (like at San Francisco de la Sierra?

Ernesto hopped into one of the Raptors, took us back a bit to a side road with a locked gate, and we went down that valley, to a parking area (has bathrooms and shade tree) where the hike begins. Ernesto said it was an 800-meter hike. There are a couple of steep parts so this is for healthy people only. Two people in our group were older than me and we all made it, but my legs were sore later!

Well. the cave is fantastic... so many human figures on such a high, steep ceiling. How were they painted up there? Micheal Angelo worked the same way, at the Vatican!

Photos:


Sign at the ranch where you first go.


The parking area at the trailhead.


Nearing the cave.












Could they be... ALIENS???


Petroglyphs of lady parts and a turtle.


Our guide.




The big stone (by the guy on the right) is covered with ancient blood residue. Ernesto said this was a sacrifice site.










Day 3 final

David K - 5-20-2019 at 06:08 PM

When we returned to Mulegé, there was still enough light to film at the mission...








Dakar star and Honda m/c racer Ricky Brabek was with us.







Back to the Serenidad for dinner and sleep. I had the Mexican combination plate and it was very good.

END of DAY 3. Tomorrow we go south, almost to Loreto.


mtgoat666 - 5-20-2019 at 09:27 PM

15 guys in 6 cars. Matching cars, so Cute! Would be cuter if you all wore matching outfits! :light:
But in these days of global warming and environmental doom, you SHOULD have carpooled and driven 4 cars. My f150 crew cab has huge backseat, we have done baja trips with 5 adults and been very comfortable. If fat, maybe stick to 4 in the truck.

bajatrailrider - 5-20-2019 at 09:49 PM

Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
15 guys in 6 cars. Matching cars, so Cute! Would be cuter if you all wore matching outfits! :light:
But in these days of global warming and environmental doom, you SHOULD have carpooled and driven 4 cars. My f150 crew cab has huge backseat, we have done baja trips with 5 adults and been very comfortable. If fat, maybe stick to 4 in the truck.
The turd you drive is a no count good to go to market. Nothing else wet brain you cant carpool because you stink so bad. No one can get in back seat. To top it off your hurting global warming . Because no one changed your dippers dip chit get a new job. Your job of village Idiot baja blow hard is not working.:bounce:

bajaric - 5-21-2019 at 08:42 AM

Fun times! All those Raptors cost more than my house did back in the day... DK it appears that you drove on the new highway that bypasses Cocos, did you make it all the way to Chapala on the new road? Where do you get on it? I tried and was blocked; did not appear that they wanted drivers on it yet..
Poor Coco, if they stop maintaining the section of road that goes past his place it will not be long before it becomes impassable. The old dirt highway from Huerfanito to Cinco Islas is pretty much gone, barely passable even on a moto any more. Several large arroyos drain to the Sea of Cortez there and the big rain last October washed out the road in numerous spots.

David K - 5-21-2019 at 09:13 AM

Quote: Originally posted by bajaric  
Fun times! All those Raptors cost more than my house did back in the day... DK it appears that you drove on the new highway that bypasses Cocos, did you make it all the way to Chapala on the new road? Where do you get on it? I tried and was blocked; did not appear that they wanted drivers on it yet..
Poor Coco, if they stop maintaining the section of road that goes past his place it will not be long before it becomes impassable. The old dirt highway from Huerfanito to Cinco Islas is pretty much gone, barely passable even on a moto any more. Several large arroyos drain to the Sea of Cortez there and the big rain last October washed out the road in numerous spots.


Hi bajaric, yes, we used the new highway route going south of Las Arrastras, it was wide open on Monday the 13th (as it was for me in August of 2018). You get on it were the signed Coco's Corner road (the old road) forks to the left. This is just north of Las Arrastras and the bridge where you look down on the former arrastra gold mill and well. The Las Arrastras Split, I call it.

When we came back north last Friday, the ramp up to it was not blocked, either, but we went back via Coco's Corner. Coco was not there but his helper was, busy on the road removing all the beer cans from his string for recycling.

Now, I will say that the construction crews are back at work after a two-year absence, more paving is being applied as well. Where I could drive the entire new roadbed from Km. 167.5 to the detour down to the old road just north of the canyon, they have the section from Las Arrasttras Split north to the Km. 167.5 detour (20+ km south of the Pemex) closed off again.

Here is my GPS (inReach) track of both old and new roads...


DAY 4 (WED MAY 15): South we go!

David K - 5-21-2019 at 10:23 AM

The itinerary today was to try and get to the oldest European ruins in all the Californias, San Bruno. In 1683, after a failed attempt at La Paz, Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino and Admiral Isidro de Atondo y Antillón recrossed the gulf again and landed at San Bruno beach walked 2 miles inland and established their colony with a fort on top of a hill. Remains of the triangular-shaped fort are still visible on this hill.



First, we went to the mission visita of San Juan Londó. Cameron did not know of it and being just a half mile off the highway, it is an easy site for his tour to see. Londó was a farming location and a sort-of visita for San Bruno (1683-1685). Around 1699, it was redeveloped as a visita for the Loreto mission and even considered to be a mission by the Jesuits. However, as it did not have a benefactor or full-time priest assigned, it was not a true mission. The road west to Londó is at Km. 30.










At KM. 26 is a bridge over the San Bruno arroyo and on the south side, a road goes down to the dry wash. This is the access to the site (4WD only) and there is also a gravel/ sand mining operation in the arroyo you pass by. Now, the arroyo forks and the road leading north to the ruins is hard to spot. We go down the right branch to the estero and come back out to the highway and try the Playa Publica road to San Bruno beach next. This is at KM. 24 and in the military checkpoint compound. You get checked then almost make a U-turn to take the road east to the beach, right through the middle of the checkpoint structures. We go to the beach, it is beautiful and I chat with a fisherman at his shack just over to the left by the estero.
He tells me to go back and see the white gate for a road going north.
First, we take photos at Playa San Bruno. This is where the Spaniards landed in 1683.













The road going north crosses the arroyo we had driven down earlier... and we did return to the highway at the bridge after exploring the old ruins.



San Bruno

David K - 5-21-2019 at 10:46 AM

Some writers call San Bruno a mission, but it was more of a colony attempt to gain a foothold in California. It lasted less than two years as poor water supply, lack of food, and scurvy all were hard to overcome. Kino and Atondo did make a crossing of the peninsula from here making them the first to reach the Pacific by land.

We first drove as close to the site as possible, did not see a trail through the shrubs and tried to find another access. We all parked on the flat to the west of the hill. The drone was launched and Jimmy and I looked to find any sign of the fort. Meanwhile, the others hiked to it and found it first. They found a good trail up from where we first drove to, it was simply hidden to our eyes. I walked directly from the Raptor to the hill and up to the site. We all returned the way I went and said the trail they took up was easier.


The north side of the fort. The church was located here and houses were nearby. from the north side.




Here I am on the south side (pointy end) at the place others have photographed from the better trail up.




I take photos all around the fort.












The Jesuit site plan. Roughly, north is to the right. The photo where I am standing is about where the cross and cannon are, on the plan.

We drive out in the arroyo right to the highway bridge after seeing if the road going north look promising.

Next, time for lunch at Concepción Bay!

BajaRat - 5-22-2019 at 01:10 PM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Quote: Originally posted by Three2tango  
Quote: Originally posted by David K  
That dinner was at the hotel. The food and guacamole was great. The tacos were carne asada, shrimp, and octopus. Plus, batter fried fish. I didn't catch the hotel name but it used to be part of the El Cortez we were told.


This one? https://www.stellasanfelipe.com/eat


Yes, that seems to be it. Thank you.



That's it.

BajaRat - 5-22-2019 at 01:32 PM

Pretty cool David.
Thanks, Lionel :cool:

ehall - 5-22-2019 at 01:48 PM

Another great write up. Thanks David.

David K - 5-22-2019 at 04:09 PM

Thanks Ed & Lionel!

I need to finish Day 4 and still add Days 5 & 6!!! Hold on!!!

DAY 4, in the PM

David K - 5-22-2019 at 04:35 PM

With success at getting to San Bruno, we make a beeline for lunch at Mark & Olivia's Playa Buenaventura where we have a cheeseburger in paradise or some carne asada (I think)... I was one of the cheeseburger eaters, and it was great as always!

Cameron and another took a swim before lunch was served.
Let say that everywhere along the Cortez that week, the water was flat, no white caps, and warm! A great time to be in Baja!

After lunch, they were asking about a side trip to another place and I recommended they see the fantastic Playa Frambes Lighthouse Resort www.mulege.org run by Nomad 'Bob & Susan'. It was great to visit with Bob & Susan, again. I was last there with Baja Angel on our 1-year anniversary (2009).

From there we headed north to the Tres Virgenes volcano power plant and eco-resort before arriving at San Ignacio for a night at the La Huerta Hotel, where we had a great dinner! Cameron invited the owners of the ice cream shop to join us.

PHOTOS:


Playa Buenaventura


Mark & Olivia's


Rental rooms


Baja Nomad sticker


Mark chatting with Curt LeDuc.


Playa Frambes Lighthouse Resort (Freshwater pool)


Bob and David K (note camera crew is in the lighthouse)




















Pushup game they play if you say one of the forbidden words of the day.


Back at Mission San Ignacio.

4x4abc - 5-22-2019 at 07:10 PM

is the lighthouse real at Frambes?

mtgoat666 - 5-22-2019 at 07:42 PM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  


Mark chatting with Curt LeDuc.


Good god, man! Put a flocking shirt on!

An obese half-naked bartender with beer belly and man boobs, the polar opposite of Hooters (or how to repulse the customers)... i suspect people that would tolerate this bar service are the type that write bad reviews of Malarrimos

Turtle soup!


David K - 5-22-2019 at 09:48 PM

Quote: Originally posted by 4x4abc  
is the lighthouse real at Frambes?


It is one of the rooms for rent... Very popular. See their website www.mulege.org

DAY 5: San Francisco de la Sierra and Visita de San Pablo

David K - 5-23-2019 at 08:58 AM

Breakfast at the La Huerta in San Ignacio was good and we were on our way north. I was the only one in the group to have gone up to San Francisco de la Sierra, before.

As in 2017, the paved road begins at KM. 117.5 (16 miles south of Vizcaíno) and climbs steeply up to the top of the mountain, 22 miles to the village. The paving ends 4 miles before the village, however. In 2017, the road surface was rough and rocky. Now, there is a layer of dirt over the rocks making for much smoother driving.

2.7 miles after the pavement ends is Cueva del Ratón. The pathway to it is behind a locked gate as you need to hire a guide. Just under a mile past the cave, is the Hostel Buenaventura (bunk rooms, meals, and arrange to get guides and permits to see cave art here). 1 km. past the hostel is the village of "Rancho San Francisco" or San Francisco de la Sierra.

We go to the village first (elevation 3,640'), take some photos, and find out about how to see the cave art... We are told to go to the hostel where an INAH rep has a desk and can radio for guides to come.

We go there and find out the details, arrange for a guide, learn it is one guide for every 4 people, and 150 pesos per person for the permit, (I don't remember how much for each guide). They also charge to use the toilet there. Several of the people in our group have lined up to sign in and began paying for their permits, Cameron asked the lady taking the money, how much more for everyone and the lady said it was six hundred and some pesos for the rest of the permits, guide cost, etc. and Cameron gave her 1000 pesos and told her to keep the change.

While we waited for our 4 guides to arrive, we made lunch at our trucks. When the guides showed up they got in the trucks with us and we drove to the cave, 0.9 mile away. The guides were all Arce men (naturally) and none spoke English so I was asked to translate as I spoke more Spanish than anyone else. It was all very interesting and we took photos of the art and the guides. When I name-dropped the three mule riding ladies I know, the Arce men were all animated and gave me hugs and asked that I send greetings to them: Baja Bucko (Teddi), Trudi Angell, and Eve Ewing are the three I mentioned, plus I am friends with Edie of the new book, The Mission Walker.

Cameron told the Arce men that he will be back in late June with 60 guests (Trail of Missions 2019) and that he would provide a feast for the whole village, asked what kind of food would they like. He also asked if they would like him to bring them anything. Two of the men asked for small tents so that when they take people down into the canyons on mules, they wouldn't have to sleep in the open. Cameron asked that they not tell the villagers about the feast so it would be a surprise.

One of the trucks returned the Arce men back to the hostel while we headed down the mountain. Approaching one of the ranches passed before dropping down the mountain, a man was by the highway, a hatchet in one hand and a walkie talkie in the other, waving his arms.

It seems that the INAH rep wasn't happy with the money she charged us, or the extra Cameron gave her and demanded 350 more pesos! She radioed that rancher to stop us and get more money. LOL. We gave him 350 pesos and just had to roll our eyes. She also knew there was a group of 60 coming in a month thanks to Cameron... :rolleyes:

Here are the San Francisco photos:


Highway One north of San Ignacio.






Old church at San Francisco.






The man at the hostel was selling a candy made from goat cheese. Curt LeDuc bought a jar.






Oscar Arce (in the white shirt) was the lead guide.






L to R: Jason Scherer, Curt LeDuc, Cameron Steele, Ángel Arce Arce, Oscar Arce Arce, David Kier, and Filiberto Arce Ojeda.





[Edited on 5-23-2019 by David K]

Visita de San Pablo

David K - 5-23-2019 at 11:40 AM

The Visita de San Pablo is one of the mission sites I have not been to before. I tried in 2017 only to find a locked gate just as I entered San Pablo Canyon.

Nomad's have been there, XRPhil in 2010 (whose photo I used in my book) and Kevin (Baja Okie) about 10 years earlier. I have historic photos from 1949 and the 1920s, as well. The visita building looks a lot like Mission Santa María in style and made of adobe bricks upon stone. Some (even INAH) have mistaken this ruin as a mission and even called it Dolores del Norte, a mission that only existed on paper and whose name was changed to Santa Gertrudis upon being founded in 1752. San Pablo was probably attached to Santa Gertrudis but being midway from San Ignacio, it is possible that Padre Consag of San Ignacio was involved here?

In my TRIP #5 report from June 2017, I detailed the road from Hwy. 1 to the locked gate, which is south of Prosperidad, the big brick building from 1916, made by the Boleo copper mining company, near Guillermo Prieto.



Driving south on Monday, we stopped at the Vizcaino auto parts place (by the bank) where Curt LeDuc knew the owner and he knows the town's people. We asked about a guide to take us there. One of his customers at the counter pulled out his phone and showed us San Pablo visita photos he had recently taken... We had our guide! He has access to the gate key so we told him we would be back on Thursday. His automotive shop is next to the Hotel del Sol/ Hotel Martitha (they are either one and the same or one is right behind the other. Both signs are on the front).




The road from the locked gate to the ruins is 8 miles long, it is very rough and slow driving. A goat ranch is midway in.




We stop to visit with the rancher. Curt LeDuc checks out the branding irons hanging in the tree.








The road comes right to the front door of the visita.






Cholla cactus is covering much of the adobe slump.



2019 (Kier)

A trail (El Camino Real?) climbs a slope offering this popular photography location. Here are other's pics in the past:

2010 (Lang):


1998 (Clough):


1949 (McDonald):



Adobe mission-era structures are built upon a stone wall base, foundation.


Cameron Steele and I. He won last year's Baja 1000 and is prerunning the 500 this week. Nice to go from slow 4x4 trails and history searching to racing the same month, eh?


Ricky Brabec, a top off-road m/c racer. [and future first American DAKAR champion]


A large corral just past the visita.


Rock wall road construction near the goat ranch.


This dead Ford Ranger is parked on the Camino Real, the road detours down to the arroyo and goat ranch here and comes back up to the Camino Real route beyond. In many places in Baja, new auto roads are made right on top of the mission roads of the 1700s. The Camino Real was not quite as wide as a single lane dirt road.


The Guillermo Prieto road off Hwy. 1 is excellent and we all easily cruised over 100 mph here. The Ford Raptors were pretty nice.

We arrived at Guerrero Negro and got our rooms. Dinner was good, I had the breaded sea bass plate and a shrimp c-cktail.






[Edited on 1-26-2020 by David K]

TMW - 5-23-2019 at 11:43 AM

Sounds to me like the INAH rep is a rip off queen.

DAY 6, Friday: Guerrero Negro to Mexicali

David K - 5-24-2019 at 08:55 AM

We had an early start, 6 am (MDT) and as we drove 2 miles north and passed the Eagle Monument, that would be 5 am + the drive time from the Malarrimo Hotel. The objective was to get some morning tv shots on Laguna Chapala of the Raptors "turning money into dust" (a Curt LeDuc quote).

I made a point to photograph each washed out bridge detour between Gonzaga Bay and Puertecitos, plus any other major road damage or interesting image. Let's put a number by each detour photo...


Gas stop at Villa Jesus María and a photo looking over to (the late) Carmalita's tamale shack. I was surprised to see (to the left) that Tortas La Casita was gone. The attendant said Lupita moved it across the highway somewhere.




Villa Jesus María pump prices 7 days ago.


Nearing Laguna Chapala, May 2019.
In July 1973:

Before the Baja Highway was completed, we couldn't wait to see the changes coming to Baja and to go fishing at Loreto! My dad had just traded in his 4WD Chevy Suburban, thinking the highway would be close to finished... It was not. From near San Agustin to Laguna Chapala we were on the old Baja 1000 road we drove by Jeep in 1966 as the new roadbed was not yet bulldozed and graded for pavement in that section. Paving going south ended near El Progreso (40 miles southbound from El Rosario) and began is sections around Punta Prieta, and fully paved near Villa Jesus Maria. What they did to finish the work between July and late November was truly amazing! They built the Eagle Monument and traffic circle in those few months, too. I was 15, and made mileage notes and sketched maps to self-publish my first Baja guidebook giving the conditions and road details, location. People were hungry to know about the new road and the route it used compared to the old road.


My sister typed the book pages and my brother-in-law (a bank manager) copied them. I made the cover freehand, punched the holes in the paper, and sold them at two book stores in Escondido. A feature writer in the local paper wrote about it and Channel 8 in San Diego showed the book on a morning TV show called "Sun Up" I sold every one I made and they still sold after the highway was completed (as I added update notes). I finally retired that book. It did inspire me to keep writing about Baja and a year later, we drove to Cabo, taking notes, and my next guide was published in the Baja Bulletin Magazine's Special Edition.

OK, out onto the dry lakebed of Laguna Chapala for the camera guys:














Regroup at the south end of Hwy. 5. Curt LeDuc and one other leave for Ensenada where his son is in a race. The rest of us head for San Felipe.


One mile of dirt then paved to the hills. Same as I reported last August in my trip report then.




Coco's Corner. We knew Coco was not there. His helper was busy removing cans from a line and tossing them on the road!




We were concerned and asked what was up. He said Coco asked him to. That they needed income from recycling them.




Fresh paving north of Las Arrastras. All traffic is back on the older road. Last year, one could stay on the new roadbed as construction had halted.


Highway workers, once again.


Back on the paved highway at KM. 167.5, 12 miles south of the Gonzaga Bay Pemex.




It is still a Pemex station!

OK... more to come, including the detour photos. Stay Tuned!






From my phone...

David K - 5-24-2019 at 05:29 PM

Gonzaga Bay coming into view...



OK... next, I will present the photos of each detour driving north. The first was past La Poma and the last was just as you can see Puertecitos. Then, there is the 9-mile detour running along the new highway work from Km. 74 to Km. 60 (Matomí Wash).

Hwy. 5: Gonzaga to Puertecitos, 7 days ago:

David K - 5-24-2019 at 05:51 PM

Here are photos of every washed out bridge or obliterated roadbed detour taken at the beginning of each detour and some photos along the way.

#1




#2




#3


#4


#5




#6




#7




#8




#9





----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

North of Puertecitos begins the new, wider highway construction using bridges instead of vados. The detour road is quite good:










Back onto the older, 1990's narrow paved road at Km. 60.


Playa/ Campo/ Rancho Nuevo Mazatlan road at Km. 32


Bahía San Felipe


The south of town Pemex is now a Chevron station.

In the next post, I will show the photos going from Hwy. 5 to Mexicali East border we took (following Donna and Ken of Bulletproof Diesel).

To Mexicali East Border going north.

David K - 5-25-2019 at 08:44 AM

We followed Bulletproof Diesel who knew the muy rápido way to the east border crossing. The border wait was reported very low on this Friday afternoon.

The first deviation off Hwy. 5 occurred before the RR track crossing traffic circle. This is by the Kenworth and near Costco...


Get into the middle lane and go down... turning right ahead.
There are no turns until you reach the border wall using this route.


Passing the Kenworth building


Crossing Hwy. 2


See Garita II on the sign?


Under this road.


See Calexico sign?


Turn right as you see the border fence.




Pass an ARCO station.


Here Bulletproof truck turns for the Sentri Lane... we continue on to where we can make a U-turn and enter the regular lane.


Garita II is the border.


Trucks and Cars regular lane.


The GPS track of the Mexicali routes we took.

That ends the trip report. Six days, 3,000 miles, lots of fun and new sites to see for all of us. I was so happy to finally see San Bruno and San Pablo, too.

The Trail of Mission tour that this recon and filming was for is the last week of June. Cameron has 60 guests, so maybe up to 25 Raptors and other 4x4s? The cost now $7,000 per vehicle (2 adults and children), and this includes rooms and meals, with AB Catering the meals in remote locations (Alek's food is awesome) https://www.facebook.com/aboffthegridcatering/. The requests to join the tour are so many Cameron has to turn people away.

The TV show of the tour will be on ABC on Sept. 7. This is the 6th Trail of Missions tour. I was on the first for 3 days, flying to the group and returning in the helicopter flown by Jim McCoy out of El Cajon.

You can see all but the first show on YouTube. The first show was on CBS Sports and is online, but requires a password. I can share that with anyone who asks, send me a u2u or email.

I hope you enjoyed the ride!
David




[Edited on 8-8-2019 by David K]

advrider - 5-25-2019 at 09:32 PM

Another awesome report David! Thanks.. I've seen some nice Raptors in Baja the last few years, they are a heck of a truck for Baja, if only money wasn't an issue!

fishbuck - 5-26-2019 at 09:50 AM

Thanks Dave. Very cool report.
Please give our thanks to Team Raptor for taking us (you) along on the trip.
Cameron Steele, Curt Leduc, Jim McCoy the helicopter pilot, and others who helped...
What Baja dreams are made of...

David K - 5-26-2019 at 11:31 AM

The pleasure is mine!
Jim and his helicopter will be on the June tour. He was not with us on this recon and research trip. (The $600/ hour helicopter fee is a bit steep, even for Cameron Steele)

fishbuck - 5-26-2019 at 11:57 AM

How much of that $600 do I get to keep if I get my Helicopter Commercial rating?
That's a new trick for an old crewdog.
I ask Jim!
El Cajon is a Baja base for lots of planes I think. And othet cool stuff.
Another Newport/AirForce buddy owns Circle Air Group at El Cajon.
I think he has a Learjet or 2 now.
Yes, rich.
Baja needs planes and pilots!



[Edited on 5-26-2019 by fishbuck]

fishbuck - 5-26-2019 at 01:40 PM

Actually...
My Cherokee 6 is much quicker and cheaper.
You didn't need a 600/hr helicopter... did you?
Tell Cameron ( or whoever) to meet you at the closest open runway.
Where ever they are at.
The could tell us on the flight down and I can still find them.
Mulege is about 2.5 hours I think.

Unless that was a Bell Jet Ranger(or better) no helicopter is very fast.
I think a Jet Ranger costs alot more...


[Edited on 5-26-2019 by fishbuck]

fishbuck - 5-26-2019 at 01:48 PM

http://sdhelicoptertours.com/our-photos/

David K - 5-26-2019 at 04:44 PM

It's not for speed. It's for hovering and following with tv crews. Jim also is hired by SCORE and some race teams. He is very skilled at getting the good angles.

Marc - 5-31-2019 at 11:05 AM

Drove Chapala / San Felipe 3 weeks ago. Disturbing that the road was taken out like that. Poor engineering? Just asking.

David K - 5-31-2019 at 12:22 PM

It seems like the ends of the bridges were not attached to solid ground or bedrock. The flash flood simply washed away the ends of the bridges.

Akula - 6-5-2019 at 08:53 PM

Looks like an amazing trip David!

David K - 6-6-2019 at 05:59 AM

Quote: Originally posted by Akula  
Looks like an amazing trip David!


Yes, it was fun but go-go-go... I was worn out at the end, but I am a grandpa. The great part is that we were 100% successful in getting to all the destinations Cameron had hoped to with my help. The neat part is that two of them were mission-era sites I had never been to before (my bucket list gets checked off) and two painted cave sites as well. San Borjitas was amazing, a must see, and no mule ride is needed. I am writing an article about it (and the other places) for Baja Bound. I am happy that I can share these trips with you, in detail. The TV show (Trail of Missions 2019) may show only a little -- if any (Sept. 1 ABC). After seeing how little of the filming was used on America Unearthed, I am not optimistic anymore. However, all of Cameron's shows are in Baja.

Mother of Dragons - 6-6-2019 at 10:22 AM

I really look forward to seeing this show and you David, I’ll do a search for it.
Great thread and good job! This is awesome.

David K - 6-6-2019 at 04:53 PM

Quote: Originally posted by Mother of Dragons  
I really look forward to seeing this show and you David, I’ll do a search for it.
Great thread and good job! This is awesome.


You can see me in about a 4-minute section near the end of the Season 4 opener for America Unearthed "Vikings in the Desert".

When we know more about the Trail of Missions 2019 show, I will post it.

[Edited on 9-13-2019 by David K]

Mother of Dragons - 6-7-2019 at 11:00 AM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Quote: Originally posted by Mother of Dragons  
I really look forward to seeing this show and you David, I’ll do a search for it.
Great thread and good job! This is awesome.


You can see me in about a 4-minute section near the end of the Season 4 opener for America Unearthed "Vikings in the Desert". It aired last week on Travel Channel. Here is the whole show, commercial free (I am on after Minute 34:50):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZtN5z3FVt0I&feature=yout...

When we know more about the Trail of Missions 2019 show, I will post it.


Wow! Thank you. This is a great thread. Thank you for sharing everything. The pics are great.
Trail of Missions sounds great!

Vikings of the Desert is a really cool name.

[Edited on 6-7-2019 by Mother of Dragons]

Mother of Dragons - 6-7-2019 at 11:02 AM

David, the video was removed because of copyright violation.
Bummer :(

David K - 6-7-2019 at 11:23 AM

Oh no! Major bummer... well the show airs again on June 16 plus a couple of late night times... I bet that YouTube link, which had no commercials, upset sponsors? I bet it will be back on YouTube in the future... America Unearthed has a huge following.

Mother of Dragons - 6-7-2019 at 11:26 AM

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Oh no! Major bummer... well the show airs again on June 16 plus a couple of late night times... I bet that YouTube link, which had no commercials, upset sponsors? I bet it will be back on YouTube in the future... America Unearthed has a huge following.

Usually someone will report someone else’s video, photo etc..
Normally another youtuber *eye roll*

June 16 is soon enough. Thank you.

willardguy - 6-7-2019 at 12:04 PM

Quote: Originally posted by fishbuck  
Way coool. I 'm getting a Raptor... I'll tag along... if I can keep up:cool:


Raptor?.....please Ford, offer this reg cab Raptor! they'll sell a million! :yes:



https://news.yahoo.com/heck-funky-ford-f-150-210000885.html

[Edited on 6-7-2019 by willardguy]

Don Pisto - 6-7-2019 at 02:22 PM

a million and one, luv regular cabs. make mine red!:P

David K - 8-8-2019 at 08:09 AM

Update: The Trail of Missions TV show for 2019 will air on Sept.1 on ABC's World of X Games show.

BFG Tires will have several preview or 'additional footage' Internet showings beginning Wednesday, August 14 and every Wednesday after will be a different show from this trip and tour.

As I get specific times or links, I will share.

[Edited on 9-13-2019 by David K]

matthew_mangus - 10-6-2019 at 10:36 PM

David, would you mind sharing the coordinates for the remains of the San Bruno site? I'm planning on on spending a couple of days on a beach just N of Loreto in Feb and would like to check it out.

David K - 10-7-2019 at 10:04 AM

Quote: Originally posted by matthew_mangus  
David, would you mind sharing the coordinates for the remains of the San Bruno site? I'm planning on on spending a couple of days on a beach just N of Loreto in Feb and would like to check it out.


It is a great place to see and a short hike. A 4WD would be needed to get from the highway to the site parking as there is deep sand in the arroyo. Leave Hwy. 1 at the Km. 26 bridge. It is just 3.8 miles from there, to the east.

The GPS is in my book... page 215.
Don't have my book? www.oldmissions.com

That's okay, I give travel data freely on my VivaBaja.com page, the link for Spanish Missions: http://www.vivabaja.com/missions1/

It is also on my webpage for locating mission sites on Google Earth: http://vivabaja.com/missions4/


BigBearRider - 10-7-2019 at 11:02 AM

Thanks for posting, DK.

David K - 10-7-2019 at 12:31 PM

Quote: Originally posted by BigBearRider  
Thanks for posting, DK.


My pleasure. Baja history is exciting. Check out my Baja Missions Facebook group page.

See Dakar champion Ricky Brabec in Baja

David K - 1-26-2020 at 06:37 AM

Now that Ricky Brabec is the first American to win Dakar on a motorcycle, enjoy seeing and hearing him (singing, too lol) a few months earlier in Baja with us...

The 5 Trail of Missions Recon videos are each between 6 and 11 min long. It was a lot of fun shooting with the TV camera team and riding with Curt LeDuc ("my driver" lol). Here is Episode 1 and the others play in order after. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGbWpNvP-kI

If you want to go to a specific episode, they are listed and linked at www.vivabaja.com, near the top.



The links as they appear on my website:

2019 Trail of Missions Recon with David Kier (Episode 1: Missions Guadalupe & Mulegé)

2019 Trail of Missions Recon with David Kier (Episode 2: San Borjitas, Londó, San Bruno)

2019 Trail of Missions Recon with David Kier (Episode 3: Visita de San Pablo)

2019 Trail of Missions Recon with David Kier (Episode 4: San Francisco de la Sierra)

2019 Trail of Missions Recon with David Kier (Episode 5: Bahía Concepción, Volcán Trés Virgenes)



[Edited on 1-26-2020 by David K]

David K - 5-12-2020 at 04:13 PM

Today is one year since we started the Trail of Missions Recon.

I have not heard from Cameron, but I might guess that Trail of Missions 2020 is shelved until next year or maybe delayed? Just guessing folks based on the current conditions for all of us and that currently, travel to Baja for fun is forbidden! :o

David K - 6-21-2021 at 06:12 PM

Well, as suspected, Trail of Missions was a no go in 2020... But, the gang is about ready to leave for Trail of Missions 2021!

I only know this because a Facebook friend and one of the regular Trail of Missions members posted about it... I am not involved in the 2021 trip. I think Cameron got all my "secrets" so he can fly solo this year, LOL!

Udo - 6-23-2021 at 12:27 PM

Amazing trip, David!

Mil gracias for the posting, buddy! (Say hola to Cameron for me!)

(perhaps one day he'll accept my friend request on FB).

David K - 6-23-2021 at 12:32 PM

Quote: Originally posted by Udo  
Amazing trip, David!

Mil gracias for the posting, buddy! (Say hola to Cameron for me!)

(perhaps one day he'll accept my friend request on FB).

Hi Udo, this report was two years ago and I have not seen Cameron in person since. Only a short message or two... maybe regarding my help on the new Atlas or if he was going to involve me this year?