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rhintransit
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Posts: 1588
Registered: 9-4-2006
Location: Loreto
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Gas crackdown, no sales from barrels in San Juanito and environs
Haven't seen this posted here yet or maybe I missed it. On TalkBaja:
"As of yesterday, the gas stations in San Juanico were closed down by the government. http://www.bcsnoticias.mx/pgr-asegura-5000-litros-gasolina-v...
No one knows when they will re-open. If you come to town be sure you have enough fuel to get back to where you last fueled up. The closest fuel is
Zaragoza, a little over an hours drive to the South."
Also under comments:
"Just found out they closed every station that sells out of barrels. No fuel in San Isidro, La Purisima, Las Barrancas and San Juanico. I was told
they even confiscated the fuel. This may not have a quick resolution."
See TalkBaja Facebook page for more comments
reality\'s never been of much use out here...
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mtgoat666
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Law and order!
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Udo
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Does that mean no more gas sales in Cataviña?
Udo
Youth is wasted on the young!
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BajaBlanca
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That is utterly ridiculous.
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bajaguy
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Apparently people were not licensed and were not paying taxes on sales
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elgatoloco
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As one can see in Mexico one never knows about enforcement of rules and such. That is why one should always have their paperwork in order. 
And even then.....................who knows.
MAGA
Making Attorneys Get Attorneys
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AKgringo
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Silly me....I assumed it was probably some sort of fire and safety issue!
If it is a tax issue, don't those who purchase gasoline with the intention of re-selling it, pay the tax where they buy it?
I wonder if a Pemex truck will show up making the rounds like a propane sales truck? I look forward to the speaker broadcasting a few chords,
followed by "El Gasolina!".
A different tune than I hear in Baja, but you get the idea!
https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=Mexico+%27el+gas%27+pro...
[Edited on 3-5-2017 by AKgringo]
If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space!
"Could do better if he tried!" Report card comments from most of my grade school teachers. Sadly, still true!
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willardguy
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remember it wasn't long ago they decided to ban street tacos!
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TMW
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I think Mexico is on a Value Added Tax system. If so the guys buying the gas need to add the value of the tax when they sell it. In other words if
they sell it for a dollar more per gallon the tax would be on the dollar and then give it to the government. Maybe that's the problem. Also are the
guys selling out of barrels keeping any records, probably not.
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woody with a view
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Seems like the guys along the highway don't have many govt services to grab on to. They provide a service that doesnt exist and get shut down?
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mtgoat666
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Law and order!
It might be anarchy if every business operated without licenses or rules.
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Udo
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Exactly, Woody!
The times I remember buying gas from a barrel were (in recent memory) in Bahia Asunción before the Pemex, Bahia De Los Angeles, Bahia Tortuga, and
the last place I remember was Las Barrancas.
Heck, I remember buying gas in San Felipe when they had the gravity-fill pumps with the glass tank on top (at least when you asked for 10 liters, you
could see you got 10 liters.)
Udo
Youth is wasted on the young!
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AKgringo
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The Pemex at the turnoff to B.O.L.A. used to be open, but down at the bay gasoline was sold out of clear plastic jugs.
If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space!
"Could do better if he tried!" Report card comments from most of my grade school teachers. Sadly, still true!
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Barry A.
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Quote: Originally posted by Udo  | Exactly, Woody!
The times I remember buying gas from a barrel were (in recent memory) in Bahia Asunción before the Pemex, Bahia De Los Angeles, Bahia Tortuga, and
the last place I remember was Las Barrancas.
Heck, I remember buying gas in San Felipe when they had the gravity-fill pumps with the glass tank on top (at least when you asked for 10 liters, you
could see you got 10 liters.) |
I believe Bahia de los Angeles had one of the old-type "glass tank" gravity dispensers too for years, right opposite Diaz's place at the boat ramp.
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Gulliver
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Probably this won't last but it sets up an impossible situation for off road people traveling from, say, Mulege to San Juanico and any parts beyond
there. Even with my 4 gallon bike tank I need to gas up before I head either North to San Ignatio or South anywhere.
And there are some fairly significant business forces in San Juanico who are going to be hit bad by this.
It is another example of, "Don't let your reach exceed your grasp." Like people aren't going to fill up a big plastic container at the nearest gas
station and pass it on to their neighbors. There aren't enough gas police in the world to make that work.
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liknbaja127
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We came up last Sunday, And I did not see the guy selling from
barrel's at B of LA junction! I always see him there! We have used that several times with prerunning over the years.
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Gulliver
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A lot of things could knock the Baja economy flat. That is, the tourist part of the economy which is way more important than most people realize. And
I don't mean the horrors within a day of the U.S. border of from LaPaz South. Those aren't Baja to me.
One is violence. There really isn't much now. Way less than an equivalent area in the states.
The other would be no gas. It was enough of a hassle just recently with the disturbances over price hikes. If you have to stay on Rt. 1 to get gas,
what's the point of coming down here? Boring two lane road. A trip or two and you've seen it. like the fifteen bikes that just roared through Mulege
today together. I can't imagine that they are seeing anything but the back of another bike.
These are my personal prejudices of course. Who else's would I be writing about?
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KurtG
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Quote: Originally posted by liknbaja127  | We came up last Sunday, And I did not see the guy selling from
barrel's at B of LA junction! I always see him there! We have used that several times with prerunning over the years. |
He was missing on one of my recent trips and I was told that he was making a gas run to restock. First week of Feb.he was there as usual.
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KurtG
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Quote: Originally posted by Gulliver  | A lot of things could knock the Baja economy flat. That is, the tourist part of the economy which is way more important than most people realize. And
I don't mean the horrors within a day of the U.S. border of from LaPaz South. Those aren't Baja to me.
One is violence. There really isn't much now. Way less than an equivalent area in the states.
The other would be no gas. It was enough of a hassle just recently with the disturbances over price hikes. If you have to stay on Rt. 1 to get gas,
what's the point of coming down here? Boring two lane road. A trip or two and you've seen it. like the fifteen bikes that just roared through Mulege
today together. I can't imagine that they are seeing anything but the back of another bike.
These are my personal prejudices of course. Who else's would I be writing about? |
Agreed, when riding I have always counted on being able to buy gas in remote areas. This will certainly make it difficult for the locals in that area
as well as for tourists.
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bajabuddha
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One of the funniest things I have ever noticed in Baja and Mexico in general is Norte Americanos opining on things Mexicano and saying, "Well, YOU'ED
THINK ... !". Please, quit trying to Americanize Mexico, it is what it is. There is no rationale of one vs. the other. This gas SNAFU will also
pass, probably a bait-and-switch to take away from all the other b-chit going on with the new drug lord wars affecting the gov't... kinda like what's
going on in our own sphere in El Norte right now. Wiretaps and such. The barrels will be back, and so will the vendadores when the mordida is
sufficiently paid in full. Follow the money.
I don't have a BUCKET LIST, but I do have a F***- IT LIST a mile long!
86 - 45*
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