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mtgoat666
Select Nomad
Posts: 18380
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
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Mood: Hot n spicy
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Quote: | Originally posted by shari
i think it is a Gunther rig...but WTF is that thing swimming in the water??? |
isnt gunter same as gaff?
pic caption said pilot whale
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David K
Honored Nomad
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It was one of a hundred black and white (and a few color) photos taken by Choral Pepper while she was exploring Baja, often on an Erle Stanley Gardner
sponsored expedition. I have a cardboard box full of them... and posted several on the web site I made for sharing her photos. Pepper was the editor/
publisher of Desert Magazine during most of the 1960's.
All of the Desert Magazines are online for viewing, for free... see the link at http://dezertmagazine.com ('Dezert' is a new magazine to fill in where the original Desert left off, many years ago). The publisher is a Baja
Nomad, but not here much... I helped him with a couple of Baja articles when he got it started. Goat, that web site has been online for maybe 10
years, linked on my site... Glad you liked it... I should get some more photos added!
EDIT: The Dezert site is being upgraded... so enjoy their Facebook page in the meantime: https://www.facebook.com/DezertMagazine
[Edited on 3-1-2013 by David K]
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mulegemichael
Super Nomad
Posts: 2310
Registered: 12-24-2007
Location: sequim,wa. and mulege
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shari!!!!!.....we didn't talk about this this past couple of days!!!????...i wanna go there!!
dyslexia is never having to say you\'re yrros.
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BAJACAT
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 2902
Registered: 11-21-2005
Location: NATIONAL CITY, CA
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we run out of water on our trip, and we end up filling up the bottles on the water source below LA PINTADA CAVE, nobody die,but yes take a water
filter it's a most. We saw all the caves on Ramon's paper one day to go in one day to see the caves , last day to return to Rancho Guadalupe...
IT's crazy that a simple turn on the road will take you to another world,take alot food this guys have a big appetite,you will too if you have to be
chassing the mules,and not only that watching over you too, this guys do alot work to make sure you have a good experince,my guide(QUITO),Still calls
me from his cell phone,when ever he comes down to San Francisco de la Sierra where he can get cell signal..
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Baja Bucko
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Registered: 9-23-2003
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The water coming out of the pipe in the rock beneath Pintada is the finest water on the planet...no need to filter. BUT if you get the water from the
arroyo FILTER because a lot of people go into that canyon and there are a lot of goats coming down from R. Sta Teresa.
My other 4WD is a Baja Mule!
La Mula Mil Survivor 2013-2014!
1000 miles by mule from the tip to Tecate!
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Baja Bucko
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Posts: 288
Registered: 9-23-2003
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Hay BajaCat-when will I run into you up there again? I'm going in next week .....heading to the NE remotest corner for several days...only abt 8 this
trip.
My other 4WD is a Baja Mule!
La Mula Mil Survivor 2013-2014!
1000 miles by mule from the tip to Tecate!
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64852
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Teddi... I always enjoy seeing photos of the mission visita of San Pablo. So similar to Mission Santa María... When have you last seen it, do you have
any photos?
Here is a picture from 2010 (by XRPhil):
This is the ruin that has been confused as being Mission Dolores del Norte by authors of the last century and INAH!
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Baja Bucko
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Posts: 288
Registered: 9-23-2003
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Hi DK-I was there last year and then a couple of years ago before w Eve. I had plans to spend an afternoon with a machete trying to hack away at the
heavily-overgrown cholla that will soon cause the walls' demise but did not get much done---nasty nasty stuff. It will be but a memory in a few years
if the cholla is allowed to eat away at the adobe.
I will probably ride down to it again next year sometime.
Also someone had somehow cut part of the cave art in one placeout and hauled it away....rotten souls!
My other 4WD is a Baja Mule!
La Mula Mil Survivor 2013-2014!
1000 miles by mule from the tip to Tecate!
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David K
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Location: San Diego County
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Shows you that putting something in a permit only zone and not making it more visible isn't helping!
The more people that know about and can visit the mission sites, the more they will be valued, and preserved. If nobody sees it or goes there, than it
is no big deal to dig a hole in it as it means nothing to anyone, so it would seem!
Thank you Teddi... and if you need help with photo posting, let me know.
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Baja Bucko
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Ooohhhhh ...and the places INAH will NOT allow people to go even heavily supervised with a custodio-that is another story. Its all about politics.
There is one place that no outsider (ie tourist or researcher) is allowed to ride in to and it has some of the oldest rock art in the region-nothing
like Pintada but just older and more archaic...very very special, in my eyes.
My other 4WD is a Baja Mule!
La Mula Mil Survivor 2013-2014!
1000 miles by mule from the tip to Tecate!
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David K
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Yet INAH says they can do nothing to protect other historic sites from farmers, like San Juan de Dios or the the three Santo Tomas ruins (all three
are unprotected).
Not allowing people to see something made by people, that brings money to the locals, is just plain sad.
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Baja Bucko
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The most DANGEROUS thing for these rock art sites is EASE of getting into them.....if there is a road within a mile or two making it accessible.
People do not realize just HOW IMPORTANT it is having these vaqueros in the mountains!!!!! These guys live there and notice every car that goes in
and out of an area. If it is very remote and the family is not around ANYONE can slip in and take things from the hills.
INAH does not treasure the mountain folks as it should-it is these people who really GUARD and protect the ranges and if they can not survive in the
hills, they have to move to a town, leaving unprotected sites. One friend told me that when a road was built in to a certain area years ago, soon
after a truck came in and left with big bags of things dug from the caves. At that time INAH had not done anything to educate and protect and these
folks did not understand the importance of these sites.
NOW they do....a few years back I gave a presentation to the kids at the little Santa Marta boarding school about their history and genealogy and I
stressed to them how important their families are in the protection and guarding of some of the most incredible treasures on Earth....their mountain
range!
INAH doesn't pay their custodios much and these guys do not have health insurance or any kind of retirement/pensions. They scrape by raising their
families on their meager ranchos, raising goats and selling cheese. NO rain-no cheese, animals die, no income-INAH's pay doesn't do much. The
tourists that come in to the San Franciscos see a tiny part of the vaqueros' lives and it is a very tough one. Corazon Vaquero romanticized it in
many ways but understand, it is very difficult.
IF these cowboys can not support their families then they have to move away to town which they don't want to do-they don't want those drug
influences......
So I encourage people to GO VISIT THE sites-support these tiny communities with guiding jobs.
I feel that it is an HONOR to share the trail with the LAST of the Californios-no, it is a privilege to be allowed to spend time with them. They keep
me safe (have saved my life a few times.....).
IF the cowboys can not stay in the mountains, the archeological sites will be TRASHED..............it has happened before and will happen again. If
it takes 4 days' riding to get there, chances are it will have a vigilant custodio or local guy keeping an eye on things.
JMO.....
My other 4WD is a Baja Mule!
La Mula Mil Survivor 2013-2014!
1000 miles by mule from the tip to Tecate!
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Bajagypsy
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Registered: 8-31-2006
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This is something that I think the gypsy may do on our next trip down!
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fishbuck
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Registered: 8-31-2006
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Very cool report! Wish I was there! Thanks Shari!
"A ship in harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for." J. A. Shedd.
A clever person solves a problem. A wise person avoids it. – Albert Einstein
"Life's a Beach... and then you Fly!" Fishbuck
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Paulina
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I SO want to do this. Our main issue is our dogs.
Dern and I both want a pair of handmade shoes. I wonder how long it takes to make them?
I am going to do this trip one day. I would love nothing better than to spend a week up there.
Thank you to everyone who contributed to this thread.
P>*)))>{
\"Well behaved women rarely make history.\" Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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David K
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In the 1960's...
Choral Pepper took these photos when she and others with the Erle Stanley Gardner expedition visited the known caves and also discovered others, as
could only be seen by helicopter.
(I will show more photos from the Pepper Collection, I just scanned... in the Baja Photography forum, on Nomad)
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BAJACAT
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 2902
Registered: 11-21-2005
Location: NATIONAL CITY, CA
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Quote: | Originally posted by Baja Bucko
Hay BajaCat-when will I run into you up there again? I'm going in next week .....heading to the NE remotest corner for several days...only abt 8 this
trip. | Lucky,you that is truly a amazing place,and I can say less about the people there, I left my truck in
their ranch for 3 days with my rest of the food and drinks and tools,and nothing was missing when i came back.This year Im going to visit the La
Purisima area,maybe next year I will return tu SF de la sierra,,to tour other canyons,but San Pablo canyon is just incredible,it was a pleasure
metting you even for a brief time you are a legend there everybody knows you and also loves you,you are and asset to them...have fun in your trip wish
I was there,really I wish I was there...
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BajaBlanca
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Location: La Bocana, BCS
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wow...Les just went to CuevaRaton with his daughter last week. As it is so close to the village, one heads to the village first and then with guide,
returns to the cave. No need to book this one in advance .... you drive to it and walk up some steps to see it.
In the book THE CAVE PAINTINGS OF BAJA CALIFORNIA, pg 58-59, Harry Crosby analysed the paintings and says some intersting things:
1. various artists, at different times, seem to have painted.
2, the painted area is 40 feet long and represents a small but choice collection
3. you can see deer, borrego, rabbits, humans and a mtn lion.
4. one of the monos is rare in that it has a largeblack oval where the face would be and this can only be found in 4 other painting sites.
Les and I went to the cave years ago and I remember that the location is just spectacular ... the drive is as amazing as the paintings themselves.
Not for the faint of heart - the last part is very narrow and treacherous.
My sister went another time with a guide from San Ignacio and he showed her lots of rock art along the road heading up. Really amazing and beautiful
- I myself have only seen the pics.
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vandenberg
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Registered: 6-21-2005
Location: Nopolo
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Quote: | Originally posted by shari
i think it is a Gunther rig...but WTF is that thing swimming in the water??? |
Pilot whale
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64852
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Quote: | Originally posted by mtgoat666
Quote: | Originally posted by David K
Some of the Photos from the Choral Pepper collection... now at http://choralpepper.com
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DK: thanks for link to pics. I found the sailboat pic interesting, could not tell if it was cat boat or gaff rig. do you have pics of the early
sail rigs used by baja fishermen? i'm wondering what was the locally favored sail rig in baja in pre-motorized-panga days
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Those were the sail boats of the original Vagabundos del Mar.
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