I finally met other bike tourists in Mexico. They were a wolfpack of 6 and offered me into their wolfpack. However, when you are riding alone, you make all the decisions and have to concede nothing. I did not want to ride at the group´s pace, especially because they were planning to camp in the desert again. I had to leave them behind, but I would soon see them again. One of them looked as though he was going to join me when I mentioned I would be going all the way to La Paz in one day; however, the others in his wolfpack pulled him back into their group like crabs do when one is about to escape the pot of boiling water.
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This was about 110 km into the ride, and I felt strong and thought I could make it before sundown. |
As you approach La Paz from the North, you are up on a mesa and can see the city down at the edge of the flat valley about 40km away. Salvation was ahead! However, darkness was looming. I was on the road about 28km outiside of La Paz when the sun was completely down. I was planning to ride in the dark even though I knew it was unsafe. There was a situation that made me immediately change my mind. I was riding in my lane when a car coming the other direction was passing a car in my lane. I was buzzed by that speeding car and immediatly jumped off my bike and hitched into town.
The very first truck to pass picked me up. I really had no idea what to expect. However, I was lucky. One of them spoke English. The guy driving was the owner of a spear fishing store in La Paz. They took me all the way into the heart of La Paz and showed me where the action happens. I found a place for 220P a night 3 blocks from the Malecón. This happens to be where all of the bike tourist stay as there are about 10 of us in there now.
As it is a Friday night, I head to the Malecón for some nightlife. I wander down the drag and found a spot that was recommended by some younger guys at the spear fishing store. I was struggling to stay energetic as I just put down a little over 100 miles in significant heat and headwinds. Even though I look very much like a zombie, a Gringo named Jason introduces himself. He has been living in various places in Latin America studying Spanish. We trade war stories, and my spirits are lifted.
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Having fun with locals at Las Veritas Friday Night. I ran out of sunblock during the ride, and my face got roasted. |
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This is Jungle on the Malecón Saturday night. |
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This is the Mexican version of Bingo. I am not sure how you win, but I know everyone in this photo was really disappointed about 30 seconds later. |
1 comment:
Maybe I missed this, but it was my understanding your whole premise was to ride your bike to South America. A brief consultation with a map (http://www.maps-of-mexico.com/picture-of-mexico/map-of-mexico.gif) shows that it appears you are heading down into the cul-de-sac of Cabo San Lucas. Are you going to ferry across the gulf of california?
Anyways, its pretty cool that you are riding a bike to vacation destinations (however B team, for Mexico, they may be). It reminds me of the time that Cohn and I rented a canoe and paddled it to Hula Hut on Lake Austin.
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