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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64864
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline
Mood: Have Baja Fever
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He is a Newbie with 12 posts from 2015 and replied to a post once in 2017. That's it... poof, gone!
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surfhat
Senior Nomad
Posts: 549
Registered: 6-4-2012
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Harold, for all the places you have explored and shared here, moon dust/silt beds is new? This surely cannot be.
You have been lucky to have avoided them. They would be forever imbedded in your life of exploring Baja once you did.
Driving north from Pequena in the early 90's in a Ford 4wd van did not inspire confidence once I hit the patch that seems never ending until I gave up
and just barely managed to turn around in that thick and so fine dust.
If I had not been alone I might have gone on with some company to share the moon dust with that manages to get in everywhere. Who knew I needed a
dust mask at the time to drive through that stuff?
That patch of road, if it could be called that, was extra wide like a four lane highway was going to come in.
It is just as well that the GN Salt works plants owners never made the paved highway south along the coast happen.
Good roads bring all 'sorts' of people is a well known common phrase. Bad roads are a savior in their own way and are so worth the trouble they can
bring to get out there.
Who didn't first come to Baja to get out there?
That a few inaccessible areas remain to this day, continues to inspire many us longtime and short time Baja lovers alike.
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Don Pisto
Banned
Posts: 1282
Registered: 8-1-2018
Location: El Pescador
Member Is Offline
Mood: weary like everyone else
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try the fesh fesh on a scoot!
there's only two things in life but I forget what they are........
John Hiatt
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4x4abc
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4291
Registered: 4-24-2009
Location: La Paz, BCS
Member Is Offline
Mood: happy - always
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Quote: Originally posted by surfhat | Harold, for all the places you have explored and shared here, moon dust/silt beds is new? This surely cannot be.
You have been lucky to have avoided them. They would be forever imbedded in your life of exploring Baja once you did.
Driving north from Pequena in the early 90's in a Ford 4wd van did not inspire confidence once I hit the patch that seems never ending until I gave up
and just barely managed to turn around in that thick and so fine dust.
If I had not been alone I might have gone on with some company to share the moon dust with that manages to get in everywhere. Who knew I needed a
dust mask at the time to drive through that stuff?
That patch of road, if it could be called that, was extra wide like a four lane highway was going to come in.
It is just as well that the GN Salt works plants owners never made the paved highway south along the coast happen.
Good roads bring all 'sorts' of people is a well known common phrase. Bad roads are a savior in their own way and are so worth the trouble they can
bring to get out there.
Who didn't first come to Baja to get out there?
That a few inaccessible areas remain to this day, continues to inspire many us longtime and short time Baja lovers alike.
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I know that awful stuff - did not know the term "moon dust"
[Edited on 7-17-2022 by 4x4abc]
Harald Pietschmann
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64864
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline
Mood: Have Baja Fever
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It is an American term, 'Moon Dust' as that was what our boys discovered up there, 50+ years ago! Now, if they called it 'Baja Dust', wouldn't that
have been something!!??
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PaulW
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3078
Registered: 5-21-2013
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Moon Dust
Silt is What it really is
Other common names
Fluff
Talcum powder
fesh fesh
Regardless of what you call silt, here is a writeup that explains it
https://www.asphaltandrubber.com/racing/fech-fech/
[Edited on 7-18-2022 by PaulW]
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64864
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline
Mood: Have Baja Fever
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There was an Off Road Pitting group called the Chapala Dusters.
Laguna Chapala is where us 'old road' travelers first experienced the talc-like, silt-dust in great volume.
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Marty Mateo
Nomad
Posts: 104
Registered: 12-7-2019
Location: Vanisle Sur
Member Is Offline
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What remains of the whale, when I was out there in early 2019. It is beached just south of south of town. My first trip out to San Juanico was in 1993
,we had met up with couple from Alta California on the drive south who had bought a lot and were moving there full time.
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bajaric
Senior Nomad
Posts: 638
Registered: 2-2-2015
Member Is Offline
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Great historical thread --
lots of history both old and new.
[Edited on 7-18-2022 by bajaric]
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