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in baja norte in baja sur
courtesy of
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“This is history accelerated, a model of geology, and everything they taught me about in physics,” Brother Hans said: limestone had deposited in these broad, flat coastal plains in times of flooding, and loosened in a constant Aeolian depth of time to form stretches of barren dune-lands. We walked along the shore, the three of us, until I stepped into a sand that quivered and shook like jello. “Uh, I am afraid this is quicksand,” Brother Hans said. “We better watch where we step.” So instead we walked the rest of the way along the dune-ridges. At night, we cooked for hours as the mist of the sea turned into a deep fog. Everything turned to black, so we opened the truck doors, played Ennio Morricone’s soundtrack ‘The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly’ at high volume. The inherent creepiness of this album was enough to scare us out of our being frightened, of being in the middle of nowhere, so we finished the last of our bottles of tequila. In the morning, in a thick Pacific fog, we packed camp and headed north. Everything was green here - the goofy datilillo’s, which extend above everything, and the coastal agave’s were in full bloom, the sands were covered with Checkerblooms and Devil’s Claw and yellow pricklypoppy, a carpet of yellow and violet. At the immigration checkpoint north of
Guerrero Negro, we were waved by a triplet of Officiales. “Immigration
papers,” one said, peaking in the back window of the truck. "This is very bad," he said, stamping papers with his stamper like he was the most important man in the world. And not just stamping, but thrusting his stamper on the paper with the force of a psycho with a knife. The expression on Father and Brother's faces suggested they thought
he was a dolt. That would come out to a total of about sixty-three dollars. The amount sounded familiar. Looking at our passports, the Officiale stamped some more papers, and sent us on our way. I told Father that we already paid our immigration fees to some corrupt cops in Tijuana, and that we weren't going to pay again. Northward, we passed again through the canyons of El Rosario, where
a plentitude of white bags had been freshly stacked along the highway.
Later, passing the modern vineyards in the pine and scrub backlands south
of Ensenada, we saw them, the truckloads of white bags headed for the
United States, still dripping with seawater.
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