Pescador
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3587
Registered: 10-17-2002
Location: Baja California Sur
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Rain, rain, and more rain
Some years the desert around Santa Rosalia may get little or no rain, but this year has been one of the wettest years I can remember. No hurricanes
yet, but the rain has been constant and coming almost every afternoon. The desert is a green as I have ever seen it, butterflies are so thick that
you have to stop sometimes and clean your windshield, dragon flies are eating most of the mosquitos, and the grass is so high along the road that they
have started cutting it. The Cardon Cactus are a swollen and fat as I have ever seen them and there are blooms and flowers on plants that I have
never seen bloom before.
Fat Cardon Cactus
South of Santa Rosalia
Desert Bloom
Mountains between Mulege and Santa Rosalia
[Edited on 9-5-2012 by Pescador]
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jbcoug
Senior Nomad
Posts: 709
Registered: 9-24-2006
Location: Vancouver, WA
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Mood: Needing Baja!
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Better watch it, if that cactus explodes, sombody is going to get hurt!
John
\"The average dog is a nicer person than the average person.\" Andy Rooney
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64762
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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... and just a couple weeks ago (when we were in Sur), it was so dry!
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willyAirstream
Super Nomad
Posts: 1786
Registered: 1-1-2010
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Yeah, it is raining thousands of yellow butterflies in town. They are everywhere!
There was 6 inches of mud in town on most roads, cleaned up by now as there was a large clean up crew. And of course the culvert bridge was washed
again. Green green green here.
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Osprey
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3694
Registered: 5-23-2004
Location: Baja Ca. Sur
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Don Jorge, we here at the cape missed out on that Sonoran stuff. My books show the southern verge of the Sonoran is right at La Paz and my Audubon
book on deserts calls us a transitional zone.
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MICK
Nomad
Posts: 499
Registered: 11-12-2003
Location: Rio Hardy
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Mood: livin the good life on the river
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It's also been raining here in norte every afternoon yesterday we had a big cell go thru and drop what must have been an inch of rain. At least it
cools it down
Mick
Getting there is ALL the fun!
Ok being here is fun to
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DavidE
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3814
Registered: 12-1-2003
Location: Baja California México
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Mood: 'At home we demand facts and get them. In Mexico one subsists on rumor and never demands anything.' Charles Flandrau,
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What a sucker I am...
There's been a scraggly, emaciated looking chipmunk scrambling around my garden eating cantaloupe flowers, and biting into (even green) tomatoes,
scrounging for food. So I bought one of those tiny repackaged dog food bags at the supermercado in the hopes that this will be better for her (or him)
as all of the chipmunk websites seem to say they love dog food, especially the high protein, high fat variety that I got. I've been tossing a bit
under the car every evening and in the morning it's gone. Hope they don't celebrate by making more chipmunks. I just can't stand to see animals (or
humans) go hungry.
A Lot To See And A Lot To Do
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Osprey
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3694
Registered: 5-23-2004
Location: Baja Ca. Sur
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No, your map says it all. We are squashed between the SOC and the sometimes forest. Sometimes when I'm out on run, over imbibing at some local bar I
call myself "Thornscrub" just to honor my whereabouts. Visitors from Iowa and such think that's rustic.
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tortuga
Nomad
Posts: 277
Registered: 8-11-2007
Location: Bellevue, Idaho or Los Barriles B.C.S.
Member Is Offline
Mood: Muy Despacio
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Photos Verdes
Senoir Pescador,
Thanks for the photos. Always good to SEE what is going on
Saludos, Tortuga
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Bajatripper
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3148
Registered: 3-20-2010
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My wife and I just got in yesterday from a trip down the peninsula, and boy, have things turned beautiful.
While we were eating dinner at one of the truck stops at Rosarito (below Punta Prieta), we heard the arroyo rumble to life as a flash flood made its
way down it, blocking the highway a quarter of a mile down the road. A lady living next to the arroyo said three cars were lucky to get through just
ahead of the wall of water.
As we'd intended on camping a few miles ahead anyway, the inconvenience of the blocked highway didn't really matter at the moment, we headed into the
nearby hills and camped for the evening. The next morning, at around 7am we arrived back at the arroyo just as pickups and SUVs began to cross, we got
right through. The process was repeated a few minutes later at another arroyo.
Other than that, it was smooth sailing all the way (other than the mess all those butterflies made on the windshield and the front of the truck. I'll
be scrapping them off the radiator today).
[Edited on 9-7-2012 by Bajatripper]
There most certainly is but one side to every story: the TRUTH. Variations of it are nothing but lies.
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