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Maps Map of
Baja
in baja norte Tijuana
to El Rosario El
Rosario to Catavina Catavina
to Bahia de Los Angeles >Bahia de Los
Angeles to San Felipe Mountains
of Baja Norte Canyons
of Baja Norte
in baja sur Mulege The Islets
of Bahia Coyote La
Trinidad Guerrero
Negro and Dunas de Soledad
courtesy of Erik Gauger copyright 2003 notesfromtheroad.com

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In the morning I told Vance I was going to
teach him how to shop third-world style. We loitered around the back
streets, Vance asked the price of a knick-knack. "One dollar." I said, "Don't buy it, ask for fifty-cents."
Vance said, "fifty cents." The man said, "One dollar." I said,
"watch."
I went about the store. How much is this and
how much is that? Twenty dollars, twenty-seven dollars. Fifteen dollars.
"Okay, I'll take these three for thirty five. But only if you give us (the
knick-knack) for free. "Yes," he said.
"And wrap it up really
good. We're going to the Sierras."
We took to the rocky
road to Laguna Hansen, reportedly named after an American who was burned
to death in a cauldron of boiling water by a friend. We were stopped at a
federale post north of town. "You speak Spanish?" "No Spanish." "Open your
back window." I obliged. "He your brother?" "Vance? No he's traveling with
me."
"Where you been?"
I pointed to the map.
Here. There. Tapping my finger on the map in quite a few areas. "Where
are you going?" I pointed to a distant place without a name. He took
the map and stared at it for a while. "Okay, thank you." It always
seemed to work. It worked for the Pinacate, and it worked at the borders.
Federales liked that we had been to these places. Surely they had trained
in similar conditions.
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