Our Dear Friends,
I hope the year now ending finds all of you in good health and doing as well as can be expected, given the economic sleigh ride the country’s gone through in recent months.
Hopefully, with change on the horizon, things will start to get better for everyone in the country, although it’s likely to take some time to accomplish. Most estimates I see predict recovery in a couple of years (ouch!). Meanwhile, let’s do our best to be happy with what we have and work to make life as good as possible under the circumstances.
We’ve had a very good year, so this is a summary of how things are going in retirement. Living well, and inexpensively, in Sonora has made it possible for us to enjoy many of those things we put off while still working. We have some income from our little “inn,” or whatever it is, here at Casa Tortuga, although we put it in a reserve account and use none of it for living expenses. We live modestly and efficiently here, and we resist the temptation to spend money on newer cars and such. A brand new car, we can’t even imagine. So far, so good.
Here’s some of what we did this year:
We began the year by taking our reliable old Nissan Quest van (with 250,000 miles on it!) on the ferry in February from Guaymas across the Sea of Cortez to Santa Rosalia. On the ferry, we met Tulio Manicardi, a retired mechanic from Milan. He travels to warm places in the cold months because it’s cheaper than trying to heat his apartment in Milano. He spoke no English, but it was an all-day ferry ride and we had lots of time. so we cobbled together enough butchered Italian mixed with Spanish to make the conversation work. After a night in Santa Rosalia, we headed northwesterly to meet up with our friends Richard and Alana Eager for a bit of camping out at a ‘low-impact’ place called Kulima, on the Pacific side, and pet the whales in Laguna San Ignacio. It was pretty cool to hang out in small pangas while huge whales, with calves, surfaced around us. When you touch them, they feel like a gigantic rubber chew toy – sometimes, a well-used rubber chew toy! But a very close encounter with these huge animals can be a breath-taking experience. Richard even has a picture of Alana kissing one. She’s very passionate!
The little town of San Ignacio is about 50 kilometers inland from the Laguna, and it’s a quiet and beautiful tree-filled oasis in the desert along the Transpeninsular Highway. It must have seemed like a mirage to those early Spanish settlers crossing the barren wastes in creaking old carretas pulled by oxen. The narrow streets are lined with stone dwellings with walls several feet thick. The most exciting thing that happened the day we were there relaxing at a little restaurant by the plaza was when a dog got up from sleeping in the street and wandered over to pee on the church.
From there we drove southerly back to Santa Rosalia for a few days. It’s an old French (!) mining town made up mostly of wooden (!) buildings with a odd little prefab church built by Gustav Eiffel (!) in the center. The church was built for display at the Paris Expo where they debuted the Eiffel Tower as an example of how the same iron truss-work technology could be used to build smaller structures for the masses. Apparently the church was to have gone to some place in Belgium. We don’t know the whole story, but the would-be recipients may have backed out after they got an eyeful (eiffel?) of the ungainly thing. At some point, the Rothschilds, who owned the town and mine at Santa Rosalia had it shipped the New World, and there it sits today. There’s a big effort underway to turn the huge old ore mill into a museum. It should be ready in a year or so. We enjoyed several nights at the charming Hotel Francés with the whistling parrots in the courtyard. The whole town of Santa Rosalia is not something you normally see in Mexico, but this country often surprises us.
We drove onward through Mulege, southward past the beautiful shores of Bahia Concepción (with several fine sailboats at anchor), and then across the desert on our way to Loreto. The town of Loreto is a very nice place to visit, with a beautiful church, good restaurants, a good coffee house or two, a few fine hotels, and a pretty malecón, or walkway, along the seafront. A fine and gentle on-shore breeze cooled the town every afternoon and rustled the long, trailing, fronds on the coconut palms while we were there. Dinner on the second floor terraza at Augie’s Bar and Bait Shop was delicious. Augie Dagostino himself was the main attraction. It’s worth spending a few days in Loreto on your way down the long spine of the Baja Penninsula.
Then we were off to La Paz, a flavorful Mexican port city with a beautiful broad malecón looking over a sheltered bay. When we arrived, Carneval was underway, and we had a great time wandering through the huge crowds. A band was playing at every corner along the Malecón, so the music was nonstop. I think we were the only gringos in town at the time.
After a few days of revelry, we drove southwesterly to Todos Santos to spend a few days at a very nice B&B outside of town, owned by friends of Richard and Alana. The owners tried (with great success) to over-feed us every morning. The town of Todos Santos is old and charming, and is the (widely rumored) site of the Hotel California, of Eagles fame. The hotel’s been there since the thirties and has a very good restaurant and a bar that’s fun to hang out in. The place looks like Jackson Browne or Bonnie Raitt could walk in any minute. And we all had a very good dinner at Tre Galline, a Tuscan-style eatery in town.
Then further south to the famous Cabo San Lucas, land of Californios and cruise ships. It was an interesting place, nevertheless, since we found Plaza Wilkes, named after a well-known teacher and descendant of English buccaneers and freeboarders. Sounds like the Wilkes Clan, alright. When we visit cities, we like to park the car in some reasonably safe place and spend our time walking. So that’s what we did in Cabo. It’s good that most of what we really wanted to see was within walking distance. Much of the older part of town is worth seeing, and there’s a huge (and actually interesting!) waterfront mall for the turistas. We found a fun and funky place just a few blocks away, called the Cabo Inn, to rest our bones.
After a few days of that, we left to drive through San Jose del Cabo, around the Eastern Cape, past Cabo Pulmo, Los Barriles, and through some small, interesting mountain towns. Then back up to La Paz for a few more days before catching the huge ferry to Topolobampo. They use the La Paz ferry to carry freight to the Baja, and we counted seventy heavy trucks aboard (40 of them semis!) when they unloaded. Aboard the ferry, we met a couple of Brits who were winding up a 3-month adventure on BMW motorcycles. From Britain, they had taken a ship to Brazil, and were on the last legs of the journey – scheduled to end when they boarded a ship in Houston. One was a Barrister, and the other was a London cabbie, and they had done several epic journeys before. From Topolobampo, they were headed eastward through the Barranca de Cobre to Chihuahua, and then to the US border at Ojinaga/Presidio. We had been on that long, deserted road across the desert about ten years ago and told them not to expect much (in fact, almost nothing) in the way of services along the way, after they leave the charming little town of Aldama.
In my travels I’m often reminded of that Dr. Seuss line, “Oh, the people you’ll meet!”
After a night in Topolobampo, it was a day’s drive back north to Kino. We usually break up the trip with a stop at “Libros y Más” in Ciudad Obregón. It’s a very good book store with high-quality jigsaw puzzles and an excellent deli on the second floor where you can eat outside on the veranda overlooking the main street.
Back in Kino, we spent the next few months enjoying (some would say, ‘enduring’) Semana Santa (Holy Week) and Semana Diabla (Mexican Spring Break), and the many other things that keep us happy in Kino. Among these was a trip with the Hilkemeyers, Kino friends of ours, into the mountain country along the Rio Sonora, and to the hot springs at Aconchi. We were looking for Padre Lalo who’d been transferred from Kino to the beautiful old church in Baviacora (founded in 1639), but we missed him because he had to go to Hermosillo for the day. So we spent the time wandering through the old mountain towns ‘looking for Padre Lalo.’ A high point was lunch at our friend Alfredo’s place in the former Sonoran capital of Ures. He was kind enough to share a bit of his best Bacanora with us, and he can never resist an opportunity to pull out his guitar and sing a few songs for the few gringos who find their way to Ures.
And then in May, we went back to La Paz to enjoy a weeklong sailboat charter with cousin Gary and his wife Renee, from Placitas, NM. Since we had three very qualified sailors aboard, the four of us had a Moorings 40-footer to ourselves – and that was about the right size for a weeklong charter. Since we were able to drive to La Paz, Carolyn and I provisioned the boat with lots of very good food, premium rum and gin, and 20 bottles of good wine. In short, it was a floating gourmet extravaganza. Plus, we spent the entire week hanging around Isla Espiritu Santo, a large island and wildlife preserve that the Nature Conservancy helped put together. There was good swimming and snorkeling, and the sunsets were stunning. Afterward, we all went to Cabo Pulmo to snorkel the only living coral reef on the Pacific side of North America. After C and I took Gary and Renee to catch their plane out of Cabo, we went back for another couple of days at Cabo Pulmo, where the food is generally excellent, for such a small place.
After a two-month break in Kino, we were off again.
In July, we went north to Oceanside towing a small sailboat for our nephews, the Bockman boys, to love and care for in years to come, She’s the small boat that their cousin Eliot and I bought in the Spring of 2001. I had a wonderful time sailing with the boys and ‘showing them the ropes,’ as it were. Then I got out onto the dock and it was their turn. There’s nothing like someone handing you the tiller and stepping out of the boat to give real meaning to the lessons you’ve just had. I’m proud to say they did just fine.
Then it was north to Oakland to see the daughter. We spent some great time with her and her friends enjoying all the gourmet wonders of the Bay Area. After coming back through Las Vegas (and seeing a couple of very good shows) we were back in Kino until October.
As Fall touched the Rio Grande Valley, we headed north to Alburquerque to vote. But first, we took a detour through the city of Chihuahua to see Placido Domingo in concert. That was an absolutely wonderful experience! We were in the new Olympic-sized stadium with 30,000 people listening to the fabulous voice of Placido, while vendors hawked elotes down the aisles. It was so Mexico! The town has also grown and improved quite a bit since I first started going through there about 30-40 years ago on my travels further south. There are some pretty neat things about the place these days.
As for the election, this was a very important one and we didn’t want to take any chances. It’s amazing how difficult it is to vote absentee if you live outside the country – unless you’re in the military, where it’s easy. After voting, it was wonderful to see family and friends and spend time at many places we miss. We even attended a homecoming game at my old alma mater, Sandia High, with Jay and Ann (who both graduated from there also, though a few years later!) and Jay’s “little brother,” Raymundo, who gleefully consumed more ballpark junk food than we could hardly believe!
So, we’ve had a busy year. Writing about it, I realize just how many wonderful things we were able to cram in and how fortunate we are to be able to do this. As far as paying guests go at Casa Tortuga, it’s also been a very good year. We don’t seem to be affected much by ‘the crisis’ up north. And the peso has been dropping against the dollar, so things are cheaper down here than before. In the past month, the peso has dropped from 9.5/$ to 13.5/$. That means your dollars will also go about 40% further here these days, so please remember to pick out some time that works for you and come to visit. Most of the sibs seem to live on or near a beach these days, so that may not be the draw it once was, but you can probably use the time away.
So I want to wish you all the very best of Holiday Seasons and remind you that the door is open here, if you need to get away to a beach on the Sea of Cortez. Just check our on-line calendar for room availability. Or just email us for more exact info.
Love and hugs from Kino,
Perry