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ckiefer
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 02:20 PM
First Baja Experience


Please share your very first Baja Experience.

Mine: In 1964 with my parents, we traveled to Nuevo Laredo (I believe, would have to verify that one with Dad). All I remember was an outdoor market where chickens were running loose which I found quite odd (city girl) and I brought home this little wooden box that had a slide out top where a smelly snake popped out! I'll never forget that smell.....
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 03:55 PM


Amazing coincidence; my first time down was in 1964 with my parents also.
We spent the day shopping in TJ and had a blast !
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 04:15 PM


12/59 ~ TJ airport waiting for 1st plane ride to Mazatlan with family for Xmas. We had a long wait. Only one engine was working and waited while they fixed it. Spent 7 of 10 days very sick and never want to return to Mexico. Learned to eat and drink very carefully.
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 04:25 PM


You guys have me beat. My first time was a trip to TJ in 1969. Went to the Hotel Caesar, and had lunch. You can probably guess what we ate.
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 04:44 PM


1939 with my mother and aunts and uncles. I don't remember any of it. I have almost as little recollection of a night's liberty from Balboa hospital in 1952.



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And in the San Felipe area - check out Valle Chico area
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 04:58 PM


Another 1964 story. My mom and I went with my Grandfather to Ensenada for a fishing weekend. I fished in the bait tank, (color photo, bottom row). I couldn't keep them in my hands as they would wiggle out and fall in between the wooden slats on the deck. I put on my long sleeve sweater after that and used my sleeve to scoop them up.



We stayed at Papagayos. Photo on the left is of the three of us out to dinner. There was a dance floor there where my grandfather would take me for a waltz as I stood on the tops of his shoes.

Good memories. Thanks for asking.



P<*)))>{



[Edited on 1-2-2009 by Paulina]




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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 05:03 PM


paulina: look at the date that you edited your last post. 1-2-2009
weird?




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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 05:06 PM


It's reading Baja style; date, then month, then year. That throws me too every once and a while.



\"Well behaved women rarely make history.\" Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 05:32 PM
Southern California Commuters, Eat Your Heart Out


Sorry, but i'm going to cheat here a little. I was reminded of my second Baja experience, and had a question that some of you might be able to answer.

In 1970, I lived in Saugus, CA. It is now part of Santa Clarita, North of the San Fernando Valley. Anyway, not getting up or leaving very early, we decided to go down to Ensenada to have some lunch and check it out. We drove from well North of Los Angeles, to Ensenada. We had a leisurely lunch, hit the shops, and then turned around and were home before dinner time. I cannot imagine making such a day trip today. I've actually experienced four hour trips from central Orange County to Ensenada in recent times.

Here's my question: Aside from the mostly dirt streets, I seem to recall a surprising encounter with a hotel/ motel that may have been Days Inn/ Travelodge??? Obviously not there any more, but I suspect the building is with another name. What I do remember is my surprise at seeing a hotel with the name of a "major" U.S. chain on it. Can anyone help me?
(Smart alecky remarks not solicited:

[Edited on 2-2-2009 by Bajahowodd]

[Edited on 2-2-2009 by Bajahowodd]
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 05:50 PM


I'll bite: It was during the summer of '92 when my son in law and I headed south in my brand new truck to see what Mexico was about. We cruised downtown TJ with a loose goal of finding the road that would take us south. When I took in the dusty scene of street lights and a fender from a big rig laying by the wayside, I knew we were in it heavy duty. We took the free road and felt we were getting so much more of an authentic experience of Mexico than the fancy cars on the toll road. We cruised all around Ensenada's back roads - especially the dirt roads a few blocks back from the highway. It cracked us up to see the faded stop signs painted on the corners of the buildings. I felt safe eating at the brand new Magic Burger. It was the only new thing I saw in Ensenada. I knew I would never dare to eat from one of those scary looking roadside tables with hand painted signs that said, "fish tacos."

Somewhere south of Ensenada, we stopped at a shop that said "Fireworks," and bought as many exploding and flying things as we dared. We took a right hand turn for no real reason at all and found a partially demolished building, and we contributed in our own demolition efforts using our new fireworks. We attempted to place a lit explosive the size of a toilet paper roll in a huge bull's mouth that was lying upside down on the side of the highway, but it was too sinky to get close enough to. The road dead ended at a bunch of souvenir stands. We snorkeled there and I bought a T shirt that had La Bufadora Dives written with a picture of a cartoon snorkeler trying to spear a little fish while a big shark was just about to spear him. Then we headed back south. Years later, I found out that the souvenir stands were there for the blowhole tourist attraction. We were within throwing distance and didn't know it.

Then we drove, and drove, and drove, and drove through the hilly scrub land and turned around at what I later found out was San Quitin. We stayed at a little hotel in San Vicente on the 4th of July. That evening, I was amazed at how enthusiastically the Mexicans celebrated that holiday with fireworks in the street.

Then next day we headed back and gave the remainder of our fireworks to a kid, so we wouldn't have a hassle at the border.

It was just a two day trip, but I couldn't even begin to start to describe all the new, strange sights I saw and all the things we did on that trip, and it seems like it was at least a month long journey in retrospect. On the way south from TJ to Ensenada, it was just too much to take in. I did shameless hard nose bargaining that was just so much fun. I bargained EVERYWHERE - even grocery stores and Magic Burger. I didn't know any better. I bargained two bottles of soda pop to the equivalent of about 30 cents. I later found out that the deposit for the bottles was about 26 cents! In retrospect, I can hardly believe how effective it is to bargain from a position of ignorance.

When I got home, there was one thing I knew for certain: I would be going back someday. Today, I would give my right arm to travel down to Baja again and get the same feeling I got on that trip. Well, I did get some of that feeling again on my following trip a few years later on a trip all the way down the peninsula. It seems so Ho Hum anymore.
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 07:06 PM


Mi Primo, my cousin, Francisco de Ulloa was among a small group of explorers in Mazatlan, just swatting sancudos and eating nopales. He sent a message for me and my brother to come to the coast to join in the fun. It was no fun for us in Jalisco so we bought some mules and took off. When we got there we were very disappointed because he said "Emilio, I am ordered to take a ship, go north to look for the passage. You are ordered to come with me. It will be a grand adventure -- you will earn much gold and respect. Sign here."

I do not have the words to explain how disappointed we were to anchor near the small bay at Loreto where we were hostage to the whim of the crazy, smelly Indios who sold us water for gold as though it was the other way around
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 07:13 PM


1975 with my mom, riding the Norte de Sonora bus, road was a mess, portions good, others bad. Waking up in Mulege at 5am and watching the sunrise while the driver played Trio music, and watching the people sleeping in their roofs. Taking the Taxi from Insurgentes to Santo Domingo on a dirt road, things havent changed that much.



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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 07:47 PM


…I eventually ended up in Tijuana Baja California Mexico during winter time. I only had a blanket to keep warm which did not do very well in that respect but it was better than a stick in the eye. I was freezing and hungry and sick with a nagging strong cough. I found myself on a street in Tijuana where all the prostitutes hang out. I walked up and down the street to talking to several of them individually asking them for some food. All but one yelled at me something to the effect “Lárgate Niño malcriado” which loosely translated means “Get the “F” out of here you miscreant child.”

One of the women named Maria took pity on me though and got me something to eat and took me to a pharmacy where she paid for some medicine. I remember the guy gave me a shot in my butt which seemed to eventually cure whatever I had. She bought me a warm coat and let me live with her down at the Tijuana River where back then people lived in board and tarpaper type shacks. It was a filthy place to live but at least I had a roof over my head. I think they have all been torn down now. I lived with her for about 3 or 4 months and she treated me like her little brother. I walked the streets with her to keep my eye one her so she would not get hurt. I think I was 14 years old then. I then left and continued my way down south never to see her again. I wish I knew where she was so I could find her and thank her for helping me in my time of need. I then ended up in a small community just south of Ensenada called either Ejido or Colonia Chapultepec where Estero Beach is located. I ran into a local kid named Felipe on the beach who rented horses to the American Tourists.

I hung out with him during the day and at night I lived under an overturned boat on the beach just outside Estero Beach next to a dilapidated bait shack where I later sold salted anchovies to the tourists. I remember one day while walking along the highway in Maneadero Baja California I stopped to rest in an olive grove next to a ditch. I distinctly remember asking myself if being a homeless person was all I was ever going to amount to. It was at that point I decided I had to somehow find my way to my grandma’s house in Mesa Arizona. All I knew at that point is that I had a grandmother named Hattie in Mesa Arizona and an Uncle Melvin. I said goodbye to my friend Felipe and headed south. While walking along the highway between Maneadero and Colonia Vicente Guerrero one night I decided to sleep in a culvert under the highway. I was out in the middle of nowhere. I had been walking along the highway picking up cigarette butts people had thrown out of their cars and was smoking them. I went down into the culvert and wrapped myself in my blanket and fell asleep. The next thing I remember is hearing these God awful snarling sounds coming from the area of my feet.

I woke up and realized that a large pack of coyotes were in the culvert and in the process of attacking me. They must have thought I was a dead body or something and were going to eat me. I probably smelled pretty ripe at that time. When they started biting my shoes and tearing at my blanket I rose up in such a fright I began screaming at them at the top of my lungs. I picked up anything I could lay my hands on and threw whatever I had in my hand at them. I ran up to the highway and just kept running with a rock in my hand and looking behind me to make sure they were not coming after me. When daylight came I was going to throw the rock away but realized it was a crystal about the size of a half a pack of cigarettes or a little less. I kept that rock all these years and made a small crystal rock necklace with it which I have to this very day. I continued my journey south and ended up in Colonia Vicente Guerrero where I found a job digging for clams at the beach. It was cold work because I had to go out into the surf waist deep early in the morning and dig them out with a garden type pitch fork and put them into a gunny sack. I worked as a clam digger for a while living in a rusted out car next to the sand dunes and ate clams everyday. I then headed south again and got a ride in a pickup truck with a Mexican man who ended up dropping me off in the middle of the desert because he was turning off the main highway and going east up into the mountains.

There I was, without food and water in the middle of nowhere during the middle of the day. It had been raining so I looked around in the desert for any pools of water may have collected and the only water I found was that which had collected in some cow hoof prints. Of course I drank it. I found a rattlesnake by accident which I killed with a rock and skinned and gutted with my bare hands because I did not have a knife. I did have matches though which I used to light the cigarette butts I found discarded along the highway. I found some dry grass and started a little camp fire which I used to cook the snake over the coals. I had done that before with jack rabbits I had killed while roaming throughout Mexico. I then found a Cholla Cactus and an Ocotillo bush. I removed several sections from the cactus and Ocotillo with some rocks and sticks to form a ring on the ground so I could sleep in the middle and keep the snakes away from me. I had a restless sleep that night and the next day I was picked up by another Mexican man in a pickup truck and off I went making it to El Rosario Baja California.

I remember coming down into the town from the mesa and being dropped of at Mama Espinoza’s Restaurant. There was one of those old gas pumps in front of the restaurant the type where the gasoline was hand pumped into a glass container on top of the pump. I think I was 15 years old then. Back then there were no paved roads that I recall beyond El Rosario. I remember that I was starving and that Mama Espinoza took me in and gave me food and a warm place to sleep. She treated me as though I was one of her own children. I told her my name was David Martinez because I was an illegal alien in Mexico and did not want to get in trouble. Back then I was a kid and I think I was not expected to have a Mexican Government ID but just the same I did it to be on the safe side. I worked at the restaurant for a time then I went to work at a ranch called Rancho San Juan de Dies located in the mountains south east of El Rosario where Anita’s husband Heraclio Espinoza owned a small ranch. One of Mama Espinoza’s sons and his wife lived on the ranch at the time. Before her son was at the ranch he worked as an abalone diver and wore a hard hat type diving suit to gather abalone.

While I was at the ranch an old man came who was hired to build an adobe house next to a water tank and a small stream. One of my jobs was that of helper and had to haul big adobe bricks to him. The man was an alcoholic. I don’t know how, but he managed to keep everything level and plumb. Whatever he was drinking he always put it in his coffee morning noon and night. At night after work he would drink some more and walk along the lonely dirt road in the hills of the ranch singing and yelling. There was nothing around for miles and miles but cactus, wild animals and cows. One night the old man took off on one of his walks and I fell asleep. I was suddenly awakened and could hear him yelling very loudly from a long way away. It sounded as though he was injured or something. I went to wake up Mama Espinoza’s son at the main house and found he too was awakened by the yells of the old man. We walked for a long distance down the road in pitch black toward the yelling old man. When we found him he was lying on the ground drunk as a skunk with one of his arms over the neck of a calf and singing to it.

We dragged him for what seemed like an eternity back to his bunk where he refused to go to sleep and kept arguing that he wanted to go back and sing to the calf some more. We had to hold him down until he finally passed out. The next morning he denied he did any such thing and was peeed at us for making up the story. I wonder what happened to him. After I returned to the restaurant from Rancho San Juan de Dies, one day a young American Tourist traveling alone stopped to buy gas at Mama Espinoza’s in an old World War II 4X4 ambulance wagon. It was still painted in the military green. He told me that he was going to cross over the mountains to the other side of Baja California and head over to San Felipe Baja California. I told him I was an American and was trying to get to my grandmother’s house in Mesa Arizona. He offered to give me a ride as far as San Felipe so that day I told Mama Espinoza I had to leave. I thanked her for her kindness and left with American who gave me a ride to San Felipe. I got a job in San Felipe working as a dishwasher at a restaurant on the beach north of town. I slept in a small rat infested trailer while working there.

I remember the owner had an old, old Toyota Helix pickup truck that we always had to park on a hill to start it by popping the clutch because the starter would not work. One day I got so sick that I remember dreaming that rats were eating me. The next thing I know is I am waking up in the surf and the pickup truck is parked on the beach. I guess I drove it to the beach and jumped into the surf which must have reduced my fever to some degree. I remember an American tourist couple were walking on the beach and pulled me from the surf. I guess I was out of my mind because the next thing I know I was at the local clinic where they paid for my care. I wish I knew who they were so I could thank them. I think I had the Hong Cong Flu or something. One day after I felt better and working at the restaurant a shrimp boat captain came to the restaurant from his fishing boat on a smaller boat which he beached and came into the restaurant to eat. I found out he was out of Guaymas Sonora which was on the other side of Bhatia de California and one step closer in getting to Arizona. After explaining my situation and wanting to get to my grandmother’s house in Arizona I asked if he would give me passage to Guaymas Mexico which he said he would.

I worked for 2 or 3 weeks on the shrimp boat. I remember that for the first couple of days I was so seasick I was in the fetal position in the living quarters. After that I was ok and got my sea legs. The captain dropped me off in Guaymas where I got work with Circus Vargas feeding the elephant and cleaning up their poop. I remember they had such large poops. While working at the circus I found out there was a warehouse near the Port of Guaymas where semi tractor trailer drivers loaded up to head to Nogales Mexico which borders with Arizona. I asked around for passage to the border until one of the drivers finally consented to give me a ride. He gave me a pack of Raleigh cigarettes and told me to meet him at the warehouse the next morning before light. I camped out near the warehouse next to some trash cans all night long until he showed up at the warehouse then next morning. The trucker gave me a ride to Nogales Mexico.
He drove me all the way to the border and pointed out a line of people walking into the United States and told me “Kid get in the line and when you reach the immigration man tell him you are an American Citizen.” I got in line and continued forward with the rest of the people. At the time I was wearing rags for clothes and had cardboard in my shoes to cover the holes in the soles of my shoes.

I also spoke better Spanish than English at the time. Well when I reached the immigration guy I told him I was an American Citizen trying to reach my grandmother’s house in Mesa Arizona. For whatever reason he did not believe me, and neither did any of the other immigration guys. They ended up turning me over to the Mexican Immigration who locked me up in the Nogales Mexico Jail. God was I scared. I was in a big cell with many criminals and with only one toilet to go to the bathroom. I spent the night wide awake and never used the bathroom once. The following day the Chief of Police had me brought to him and asked me what the hell I was doing in his jail cell. I told him about Colonia LeBaron and my homeless travels throughout Mexico and that I was a 16 year old American Citizen just trying to get to my grandmother’s house in Mesa Arizona. God did he raise the roof at the police station with the people who placed me in the jail cell. The Chief made a telephone call to someone and the next thing I know is two Americans came to interview me at the police station. I told them my story and the names of my grandma and uncle and they said they would try to find them for me.

For the next 4 months or so I lived at the police station in a small room where they put a cot so I could have a place to sleep. The policemen bought me some new clothes and new shoes and some of them even took me to their house so I could take a shower. I became the official police shoeshine boy, office cleaner and interpreter until my Uncle Melvin showed up with my American Birth Certificate and took me home to my grandmother’s house in Mesa Arizona. At the Age of 17 I joined the Marines and went to Boot Camp in San Diego California.

I have edited the above to correct a couple of misspellings and to say the following:

1. What is written above is true.
2. It was not written to outdo anyone.
3. It is what happened to me in my childhood, which made me a better and stronger person in life.
4. There is more of the story before and after the above, which I wrote in another area of the forum but removed it some time ago.

[Edited on 2-4-2009 by ELINVESTI8]




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ckiefer
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 07:57 PM


ELINVESTI8

Well that beats the pants off my snake in the box story! :lol:
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 08:58 PM


In 1969 I went with my Parents ,My grandfather and my Aunt , Uncle and cousins to Rosarito and Ensenada we stayed on the beach somewhere, in these little beach houses/shacks. There were tide pools that we played aroung in. We saw this little Octipus sneeking around. As we were trying to catch it my Aunt heard all the commotion and came and drug us off the rocks screamming that the Octipus was going to pull us in the water and drown us. We tried to tell her that it was only as big as our hand. But she wasnt listening all she knew was, that there was an octipus out there and it was going to kill us. That same day My grandfather bought some live lobsters for dinner. When my grandfather put them in the pot My Aunt freaked out started screamming and crying. She damb near wanted a funeral for them. We didnt eat lobster that night and my grandfather never let my aunt come to Baja again.
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 09:01 PM


Crap...I can't even make up something to be in the same boat as ELINVEST18!!



Mexico!! Where two can live as cheaply as one.....but it costs twice as much.....
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[*] posted on 2-1-2009 at 09:55 PM


BajaDanD, your aunt sounds a bit like my mother.

She once called me in a worried tone and asked me if I was OK at work because she had read about these computer viruses going around.
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[*] posted on 2-2-2009 at 11:01 AM


I visited Las Cruces with my parents and aunt and uncle in 1961. Flew down in a private plane.






Fishing was great for marlin, cabrilla, pargo, etc...



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[*] posted on 2-2-2009 at 12:16 PM


Don,

I think I have a photo of the same Las Cruces swimming pool in my memory box on the bottom right, posted above. My grandfather used to fly down there often.

I wonder what it looks like now.

That's a great photo of you and the pargo.

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[*] posted on 2-2-2009 at 01:06 PM


ELINVESTI8.....wow that is an incredible story. It seems like there is more to it. Did you write a book about it? I have a ton of questions that you have probably answered a million times.
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