Baja Travels Part 3
We played about 50 rounds of bocce throughout the dunes that evening. The competition was fierce! Had a few bevies, cooked a great meal and hit the hay just after dark. It is really amazing how easy it is to fall asleep when you should when you don't have a beam of pure information shining directly into your eyes constantly. It is very refreshing.
That night, it rained and it got super windy. Our travel companions use tents, which they had set-up near the vehicles that night. Not thinking it was going to storm, only one of them set-up with a wind block. At one point in the night, I heard some fabric rusting pretty good. I peeked out the side window to see two of the tents almost flattened from the wind, you could almost make out the people inside they were so flat. I chuckled a bit, turned up the heat up a notch and fell back asleep until morning. Oh right, this is why I built this thing. :sombrero:
The morning turned out to be a beaut! No more rain, wind was calm and everything was nice and dry. Good stuff. Had a nice breakfast, packed up and headed back the way we came in so we could continue further south.
Interesting thing about the rain and the local roads leading to and from Mex1. They are all dirt that turns to crazy peanut butter mud once they get wet. It was bad, it was thick. One year later I am still finding this muck on the truck. It was inches thick in places.
No matter, we pressed on. Tried to find a car wash thing, but gave up pretty quickly. Figured it would dry, I could chip it off and be on our way. In all honesty, the majority of the stuff stayed on until I got back to Seattle. Oops...
Back on Mex1 and head south. Just after El Rosario, you turn off the pavement and head about 2 hours towards the ocean on a dirt road. It was a pretty cool drive.
And finally, you end up in Punta San Carlos. It is a small fishing village tucked away in, what feel like, the middle of nowhere.
It is cool though, becuse there is a place there that hosts kite and windsurf events. They also have an airstrip so you can fly in and stay with them. Very cool.
http://www.solosports.net/
More amazing views and vistas. Somehow they never get old.
We spent about 3 days here. Some surfing, some kiting, some exploring & some relaxing. Overall a very cool spot. Since it was offseason, it was very desolate. There were a few older windsurfers who spend the summer down there, but we had the place to ourselves.
Surfing:
Kiting:
It was side off, perfect waves, but it was just me and the gf on the water. Tough to fully commit to it. Still very, very cool. We even enticed the windsurfers to come out on their bigger sails. Great stuff.
Oops, offshore wind you have to turn sooner than normal, otherwise you get pulled though the face, haha. I think I figured this out a bit later in the session
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Eventually, the time came that we had to depart this fabled land. It was a sad day for sure. We had to head back north as our vacation time was coming to and end. Our travel partners, however, were headed further south to 7 Sisters for another couple weeks. Lucky for sure. Packed up, headed the 2 hours back to the pavement and said our goodbyes.
On our way in and out we passed some massive Cardons. Had to stop on the way out to get some pics. The whole valley was full of them, it was really cool.
After this, it was just a quick rush to the border so we could get back home. Only took about an hour in the border line, so I think we got lucky. Then it was just a straight shot back to Seattle. Work stinks for sure haha. Amazing time, amazing place. We will be back!
Good times!