Will work for food (and flights) in Baja 
 
 
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Will work for food (and flights) in Baja 
Flying Doctors reward volunteers with beach time 
Janice Greene, Chronicle Staff Writer 
 
Sunday, August 13, 2006 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(08-13) 04:00 PDT Punta San Francisquito, Mexico -- By middle-of-Baja 
standards, the runway was a good one: dirt, with no bushes. The pilot 
made a butter-smooth landing, and we were in Punta San Francisquito. 
 
Some time later, (time is a small thing in Baja) I was gliding along 
in a purple plastic kayak around the bay. As I peered through the 
water at dozens of skates waving over the bottom sand, it occurred to 
me that I was getting quite a vacation for less than $400. And I had 
the deep satisfaction that volunteer work brings as well. 
 
I was on a team put together by a group of more than 200 folks called 
Los Medicos Voladores, ("The flying doctors"). The nonprofit group 
makes monthly trips to remote parts of Mexico to hold weekend 
clinics. Our team included a pilot, dermatologist, nurse and two 
volunteers, including me. 
 
I'd first become interested in Los Medicos Voladores (LMV) because it 
was affordable, both money and time-wise. Most volunteer vacations 
require at least a week's commitment, and a sizable check. A week's 
trip to Mexico with Global Volunteers, which has programs in Dolores 
Hidalgo and Queretaro, costs $1,795, excluding airfare. And the 
cheapest flight I could find to Queretaro was $716. My check to LMV 
was $200, for plane fuel; for the rest of the four-day trip I paid my 
own expenses, totaling less than $200. 
 
We left the Bay Area Thursday morning from San Rafael in a six-seat 
Piper Aerostar, stopping in Mexicali for customs, lunch and gas, then 
on to the town of San Ignacio, about halfway down the Baja peninsula. 
 
Surrounded by the rough, arid Baja landscape, San Ignacio is a 
surprise. It's an oasis, with citrus trees and towering date palms. 
It's also the closest town if you want to visit the Sierra de San 
Francisco cave paintings or San Ignacio Lagoon, a breeding and 
nursery area for the Pacific gray whale. 
 
We opened the clinic Friday morning, and patients streamed in. While 
one volunteer checked them in, my job was to jot down their symptoms. 
With my limited Spanish, this was a challenge, but at the end of the 
day my ease with the language had taken a giant step forward. 
Spanish, while not required to work with LMV, definitely adds to the 
experience. 
 
The patients' problems were pretty much the same ones the doctor 
encountered at home: acne, psoriasis and eczema were common. But most 
of their complaints had been untreated for years, if ever. Whenever 
possible, the doctor was wonderfully inventive with simple, 
inexpensive cures. I was surprised to learn, for example, that 
repeated applications of duct tape can remove warts. 
 
We closed the clinic in the late afternoon, then strolled around San 
Ignacio. It's a comfortable, restful town, with welcome shade 
everywhere. Friendly shops provide sunscreen, hats, ice cream and 
other necessities for travelers. A couple of restaurants serve 
standard Mexican fare and, if you're lucky, you can watch soap operas 
while you eat. 
 
The sight to see in San Ignacio is the magnificent church of San 
Ignacio de Loyola, built from 4-foot-wide blocks of volcanic rock 
taken from the nearby volcanoes, Las Virgenes. Inside are a massive 
altar of carved wood and an impressive sampling of religious art from 
the 17th century. 
 
Saturday morning, we opened the clinic again and saw patients until 
noon, when it was time to head for Punta San Francisquito. Though 
sometimes teams work through the weekend, LMV tries to follow a 
schedule of a day and a half of clinic work, followed by leisure 
time. 
 
There are no real roads to Punta San Francisquito; it's only 
reachable by plane or boat. The beach is proof of that -- it's the 
cleanest stretch of sand and water I've ever seen. On the curve of a 
small bay are a few houses, a restaurant and several palapas, beach 
houses with cement floors, doors of heavy canvas and eight cots each. 
 
I chose a cot, took off my backpack and tossed my watch onto a pile 
of dirty clothes. Outside was brilliant sun and turquoise water. I'd 
brought a book, but reading seemed much too strenuous. I swam, lazed 
on the hot sand and paddled my purple kayak. 
 
Dinner at the restaurant was fish caught that afternoon. As with all 
my meals on the trip, it was simply prepared and portions were more 
than ample. Entertainment was watching the pelicans dive and, when it 
got too dark for that, stories around the fire. 
 
My cot was clean and well padded. I fell asleep to the sound of the 
waves. 
 
After breakfast and a long walk on the beach, it was time to leave. 
We flew back to the States and I said goodbye reluctantly to the rest 
of the team. After four days of working and playing together, I felt 
as if I were leaving old friends. But I knew I could afford to see 
them again in Baja before too long. 
 
 
 
 
 
IF YOU GO 
Los Medicos Voladores, (800) 585-4568, www.flyingdocs.org. Pilots, 
doctors, nurses, interpreters and unskilled volunteers are welcome on 
regular volunteer trips to Central America and Mexico. Flights to 
Mexico are on planes that seat four to six. The flight-sharing cost 
for a four-day Baja trip is now $350 (tax deductible), with $150 
reimbursement for expenses while in Mexico -- keeping the price about 
the same as that in the story. Some knowledge of Spanish is helpful 
but not required. 
 
Where to stay 
 
Lodging is arranged by Los Medicos Voladores and their contacts in 
Mexico. Some villages pay for lodging for the team. Otherwise, prices 
are about $25 to $50 a night. Rooms are often shared. 
 
Where to eat 
 
Restaurant meals are home-style and cost about $5-$10. Local people 
usually provide the team with at least one meal and sometimes all. 
 
What to do 
 
In addition to clinic work, Baja trips have included fishing, whale- 
watching and excursions to see cave paintings. 
 
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