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BajaRun
Nomad
Posts: 222
Registered: 2-25-2012
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Mood: Just Cruisin'
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Watch Tecate Wait Time Increase
I crossed at Tecate on Friday in 15 Minutes. Currently at 3 PM the wait time is 3 hours. It will probably increase
https://apps.cbp.gov/bwt/mobile.asp?action=n&pn=2505
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PaulW
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3074
Registered: 5-21-2013
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Time wont matter much when the migrants arrive they will close that border like the ones further west.
Head for Mexicali before the migrants get there.
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jgoldy
Newbie
Posts: 11
Registered: 11-23-2018
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I can't really see an incentive on the part of the migrants to walk across the desert again just to sit at another border crossing further east. I
suspect this will all stay in TJ.
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64848
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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Nobody walked across deserts to Tijuana... it would have been televised and it is all highway... They had to have been taken there to beat the
majority. You have to ask why go to the most distant U.S. border from Central America?? Texas is over a thousand miles closer than San Ysidro.
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Lee
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3507
Registered: 10-2-2006
Location: High in the Colorado Rockies
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Quote: Originally posted by David K | You have to ask why go to the most distant U.S. border from Central America?? Texas is over a thousand miles closer than San Ysidro.
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No doubt, a conspiracy by the Dems? Better life in California? Hope you won’t be repeating something you read. Points for
originality.
US Marines: providing enemies of America an opportunity to die for their country since 1775.
What I say before any important decision.
F*ck it.
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mtgoat666
Select Nomad
Posts: 18377
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
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Mood: Hot n spicy
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How dare those refugees inconvenience the gringo middle class on holiday?
Woke!
“...ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America
will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”
Prefered gender pronoun: the royal we
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Element Gypsy
Newbie
Posts: 10
Registered: 10-15-2018
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Mood: excited
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I have been planning the past month to cross at Tecate. Wonder how long the wait will be this Tuesday? Wednesday?
Leaving Los Angeles in the morning, hoping to get to Ensenada before dark.
Maybe a back up plan for an overnight before Ensenada in case the wait delays me.
My friend is south of La Paz and told me NOT to take 5 as it was hell and he is a seasoned traveler and has a good big truck with a slide in truck
camper.
Getting as far south of the border quickly may be my plan and by pass some of the things I penciled on my map.
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64848
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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The 5 is not Hell, it has some unpaved sections amounting to a total of maybe 30 miles. Where's your sense of ADVENTURE?
That's okay... the other kind of "hell" is on Hwy. 1: CITY TRAFFIC, COPS, WINDING mountain sections, several dirt mile detours ALSO, and lots of
farming towns and stops for traffic.
Between Ensenada and Laguna Chapala on Hwy. 1 you will have stops or traffic possible in:
Maneadero
Santo Tomas
San Vicente
Colonet
Camalu
Colonia V. Guerrero
San Quintin
Lazaro Card##as
Los Pinos/Santa Maria
El Rosario
On Hwy. 5 between San Felipe and Laguna Chapala you have these farming towns with traffic to deal with:
------
Yep, zero.
Also getting through San Felipe is a whole lot quicker than the miles of getting across the city of Ensenada.
If you are game, go down one and back the other then you will know what 'hell' really is!
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schwlind
Nomad
Posts: 362
Registered: 8-30-2008
Location: Daytona Beach, FL/San Antonio Del Mar (Colonet)
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That's Right Goat... How dare theyhttp://forums.bajanomad.com/images/smilies/biggrin.gif
Linda
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pacificobob
Super Nomad
Posts: 2306
Registered: 4-23-2006
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in the years ahead as food and water resources dwindle, and violence escalates we will see mass human migrations worldwide. this is just a preview of
coming events. folks would rather take a walk than starve and suffer in places where life is brutally difficult. if we were in their circumstances we
would do the same. don't ever think you couldn't be in their shoes/shoe-lessness. get used to it.
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PaulW
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3074
Registered: 5-21-2013
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Check this link before heading north. Frequently updated. Monitoring it for various time of day and days of the week will result in knowledge about
the best time to cross.
https://bwt.cbp.gov/index.html
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bkbend
Senior Nomad
Posts: 693
Registered: 11-27-2003
Location: central OR or central baja
Member Is Offline
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Quote: Originally posted by Element Gypsy | I have been planning the past month to cross at Tecate. Wonder how long the wait will be this Tuesday? Wednesday?
Leaving Los Angeles in the morning, hoping to get to Ensenada before dark.
Maybe a back up plan for an overnight before Ensenada in case the wait delays me.
My friend is south of La Paz and told me NOT to take 5 as it was hell and he is a seasoned traveler and has a good big truck with a slide in truck
camper.
Getting as far south of the border quickly may be my plan and by pass some of the things I penciled on my map.
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The waits being mentioned are northbound. Heading south into Mexico shouldn't be much of a wait... unless Tecate comes under siege and the crossing
is closed.
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John Harper
Super Nomad
Posts: 2289
Registered: 3-9-2017
Location: SoCal
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Under SIEGE? Seriously? Penniless migrants against the MIC of the US?
Hyperventilate much?
John
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bkbend
Senior Nomad
Posts: 693
Registered: 11-27-2003
Location: central OR or central baja
Member Is Offline
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mtgoat666
Select Nomad
Posts: 18377
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
Member Is Offline
Mood: Hot n spicy
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Quote: Originally posted by pacificobob | in the years ahead as food and water resources dwindle, and violence escalates we will see mass human migrations worldwide. this is just a preview of
coming events. folks would rather take a walk than starve and suffer in places where life is brutally difficult. if we were in their circumstances we
would do the same. don't ever think you couldn't be in their shoes/shoe-lessness. get used to it. |
Refugee migrations have been happening since dawn of time.
The haters in the trump base, hating on central american refugees in 2018, remind me of californians of the 1920s hating the 1 million dust bowl
refugees that left the plains.
Is it selfish human nature for the haves to stomp on the have nots?
What would jesus do?
Woke!
“...ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America
will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”
Prefered gender pronoun: the royal we
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bajadogs
Super Nomad
Posts: 1066
Registered: 8-28-2006
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Quote: Originally posted by David K | The 5 is not Hell, it has some unpaved sections amounting to a total of maybe 30 miles. Where's your sense of ADVENTURE?
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David, the 5 is much worse right now than you describe. Heading south toward Puertecitos there are many miles of washboard from construction of a new
road. Then past Puertecitos there are about 20 areas where the road had been washed away from the recent hurricane. Many bridges are damaged. I would
warn anyone with with a trailer, boat or RV to avoid this route for a while. It took longer for my pickup to take the 5 than the 1 in the past week.
If your idea of adventure is flat tires and broken springs with no service for a hundred miles go for it.
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David K
Honored Nomad
Posts: 64848
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
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Mood: Have Baja Fever
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Yes, I know... Thank you.
You guys really should read what travel was like before 1973, if you didn't personally travel in the days when pavement ended at San Felipe or near
Colonet!
The 30-mile figure includes the Arroyo Matomi to Cow Patty detour and bridge washout detours.
Life is not always a highway!
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bajadogs
Super Nomad
Posts: 1066
Registered: 8-28-2006
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Quote: Originally posted by David K | Yes, I know... Thank you. You guys really should read what travel was like before 1973, if you didn't personally travel in the days when pavement
ended at San Felipe or near Colonet!
The 30-mile figure includes the Arroyo Matomi to Cow Patty detour and bridge washout detours.
Life is not always a highway! |
Hey Snowbirds,
Unless you have a baja1000-type race rig I suggest you take HWY 1. HWY 5 is HELL! DAVID IS WRONG. HWY 5 is pure hell unless you have an off-road racer
or dirt bike. For some reason David has missed the current road conditions. Refer to him if you need to know what it was like a long time ago.
Yesterday it was hell and it will be hell for years. There is massive damage. This is not the shortcut many thought it would be. HWY 1 is faster,
safer.
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DEVEAU
Nomad
Posts: 104
Registered: 11-29-2005
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Mood: "WFO"
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My brother just crossed back into the USA after a solo 1100 mile dirtbike ride. The "official" website said 75 minutes. He made it through in 8?
He did say HWY 5 was pretty torn-up. Matomi was smooth and flat.
Chase Trucks? ??
We don\'t need no stinking chase trucks!
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WhackAMolE
Nomad
Posts: 121
Registered: 1-6-2014
Member Is Offline
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Quote: Originally posted by David K | Nobody walked across deserts to Tijuana... it would have been televised and it is all highway... They had to have been taken there to beat the
majority. You have to ask why go to the most distant U.S. border from Central America?? Texas is over a thousand miles closer than San Ysidro.
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Much safer route.
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