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Eco beach at Playa Escondida |
We spent eight days in Bahia Conception. It reminded me of a
Scottish loch with ridges of mountains rising along both sides. Instead of pine
trees and heather there were tall cacti and prickly bushes. No waterfalls
cascaded down the gullies because there is no rain until the hurricane season
begins.
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RV's at Playa Coco |
Playa Santispac has a beach bar and a restaurant. We went to
Ana’s for lunch and met up with Tamara and Andrew from Veraison. Our next anchorage was at Playa El Coco. We
were the only cruising vessel there, perhaps because there was no restaurant.
Nearby is the eco beach of Playa Escondida, where we met former world cruisers,
Katie and Jim, who used to own S/V Tenaya. Now they have a motor home. From here there are good trails over the hill
to Playa El Coco and out to Highway 1. We think we found a warm spring, but it
was so depleted and half full of debris that neither of us felt like touching
the water.
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All alone at Playa Coco |
The strong north winds abated for a day, so we headed to the
southern anchorage of Isla Requeson. We crossed a sandspit that joins the
island to the mainland in the dinghy on our way to the hotel and restaurant at
Playa Buenaventura. We met land travellers, Stu and Norma, on the beach and had
lunch with them. The food was good and plentiful and the owner was friendly. It
was worth paying a little extra for the amazing seafront view.
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The sandbar and the anchorage behind Jeremy, from the top of the island |
The afternoon wind had risen while we ate and we had a wet
ride in the dinghy back to a pitching Sal Darago. A motor boat arrived and
anchored in quiet water in the shallows. We took the dinghy to the island and
followed the trail up to the top. Like several before, the trail petered out or
there had been rock falls and we had to pick our way over rough and slippery
ground avoiding the prickly bushes waiting to grab our legs as we passed.
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On top of Isla Requeson |
On Saturday 3rd March, we motored northwards and
anchored in our favourite bay, Playa El Burro. Naturally, we had to follow the “beautiful
trail” we had read about in our cruising guide that started just across Highway
1. It took us a while to find the start (not a good omen). Then we had to
scramble over rocks and boulders until we came to a slippery, zig-zag path. The
views over Bahia Coyote and Bahia Concepcion were good at the half-way point. Further
up the trail came to an abrupt stop. Jeremy climbed up large rocks and saw a
path on the other side. When he came down, he searched for the trail and found
it hidden behind a bush. We carried on and finally made it to the top. The view
was spectacular.
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Nearly at the top of the trail |
On the way down, I wore supports on both knees, like before.
Jeremy fell full length when his feet slipped away beneath him. He was lucky to hurt only his thumb. Bertha’s restaurant was a welcome sight at the bottom of
the hill. Tamara met us inside and gave us a quarter of a fruit cake she’d
made. Thank you, Tamara. We had it for dessert later. Lunch at Bertha’s was
good, affordable and pleasant.
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Playa El Burro and Playa Coyote from the top of the trail |
We really thought we had been transported to Scotland when
the amplified sound of bagpipes playing Amazing Grace echoed across the bay at
8.00am. We learned that this was a daily ritual, but it was particularly loud
on Sunday. We went ashore to look for Amerindian petroglyphs which were meant
to be near the trailhead. I suppose it’s not too surprising that we didn’t find
any, as we’d had such difficulty finding the trail. We walked along Hwy 1 to
have a look at Playa Coyote. Much of the beach is not accessible and there were
signs saying “Privado”. A dog ran out at us barking and growling - not very
welcoming. On the way back we stopped at Bertha’s tienda and bought
some bread, red wine and tomatoes. Nearer to SD we had a fish taco lunch at
JC’s.
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Mision Santa Rosalia de Mulege |
The next day we went ashore to have lunch at Bertha’s
restaurant. It was closed on Mondays. We met Errol who used to play in the
Stone Canyon Band with Rick Nelson. He gave us a lift to another Bertha’s next
to the tienda. Although the cold north wind blew into the restaurant, the
chicken and fish dinners were huge and great value, along with a pint of beer
each.
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Museo Regional de Historia |
Tuesday 6th March was our last day in Playa
Burro. We hitched a ride to Mulege in the back of a pick up truck. It was quite
scary at 60 mph with no tailgate, but we covered the 14 miles quickly. The town
is pleasant, not touristy and had lots of date palms on the banks of the
freshwater river. We went to the historic Mision Santa Rosalia de Mulege and
the Museo Regional de Historia. The latter was housed in the former prison.
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Hitching a ride |
We had an excellent lunch at Los Equipales, an upstairs
restaurant with a tropical feel. We watched humming birds just outside the
window, when we looked up from our phones. We had WiFi for the first time in
over a week and there were many messages to read. After shopping for the next
few days, we returned to Hwy 1 and started hitching. One ride dropped us off
next to a speed bump and a row of shops. After about half an hour, a woman and
her daughter picked us up and drove us all the way to Playa Burro.
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Los Equipales |
On Wednesday 7th March, we weighed anchor before
0700 and motored north to Punta Chivato.
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Dawn exit from Punta Chivato |
1 comment:
hello kathu and jeremy,
lovely reading your blog.your clearly in good nick,blizzard here today,really disruptive.should end tues.spring due then.bet emma had a load of winter weather.the east has been badly hit.
all the best
love,
david and mary.
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