Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Baja Inesperada: Los Quesos

Unexpected Baja: The Cheeses
by Trina
Photos by Trina and Greg




Perhaps even more inesperada than a Baja beach climate requiring wool hats, wool socks, gloves, neck gaiters, ear muffs and two insulating layers UNDER a nano puff UNDER a biggest-ever down coat was the cheese. It turns out that homemade, fresh, natural cheese is just a regular part of simple daily life in Baja. As with so many of life's best adventures, we stumbled into this one somewhat clumsily. We'd been told by Alfredo and his five dogs - one of whom was named Mayonesa (Mayonnaise) -- that the nearby town had a market called Tienda Comunitario. After a few passes up and down the street, we finally saw what looked to be a delapidated, boarded up, abandoned looking store with the words Tienda Comunitario roughly hand painted on the front. By then we were on the wrong side of the street so decided to go get our water jugs filled and come back to the tienda when we'd be going in the right direction.

As Greg filled our water jugs, I asked a local woman if the Tienda Comunitario was open. She said it was. I asked, "Yes? Today? It looks like it might be closed?" She assured me it was open, so we drove back to it to find that it was indeed delapidated, boarded up and abandoned. Given that there's always the possibility that I've ever so slightly misunderstood someone's Spanish, or directions in general regardless of language, we asked a third person about the tienda, got another set of directions, this time with more gesticulating, and a new word to look for on the signage: DESCUENTO, meaning discount.

Had it not been for the giant "DESCUENTO" under the new store location's much smaller "Tienda Comunitario", we'd never have realized that the partially fenced dirt yard populated with free-roaming chickens, an empty, run-down dog house and a row of broken down old cars was not someone's residence, but the local market. We pulled in, missing the chickens, and parked in the line of dead cars. Inside the store, we quickly found what we were looking for, and as Greg was paying, I was still nosing around, just enjoying the unfamiliar grocery store stock when I noticed, in a cooler by the front door, in amongst a tub of hot dogs and cartons of milk, what appeared to be crudely shaped wedges of a fresh-looking, homemade-looking cheese.



Not wanting to be the gawking, entitled, photo-snapping gringa, I tried to sneak a discreet photo of the lovely cheese, but, alas, was caught by a nice gentleman who couldn't figure out why I was taking pictures inside his refrigerator. Abashed, I explained that the cheese looked beautiful and delicious, asked if it was for sale, and asked permission to photograph it. We quickly lapsed into a conversation about cheesemaking, including a diversion about goats and cows, in which I learned that he himself was the proud maker of this particular cow’s milk cheese. He then led me over to another refrigerator wherein there was a large, gorgeous block of goat’s milk cheese with a darkening, firm rind indicating that it had been aging for a while (I never did ask how long).



Thrilled by the discovery and charmed by the cheesemaker, we bought a chunk of the aged, salty goat cheese and ate it with slightly sweet, homemade biscuits from the same tienda, transforming our usual roadtrip fare of (ordinary) bread and (ordinary) cheese into a wholly unordinary gustatory indulgence.



To our delight, this first experience of finding amazing homemade cheese in a most unexpected setting repeated itself as our journey took us deeper into Baja. Dusty roadside gas station markets, with their predictable convenience store supply of plastic wrapped candy and junk food would have, in the beer cooler or under a mesh cover next to the Ho-Hos and lolly pops, wheels of beautiful cheese made by a local family.





Lonely dirt roads gridding out farm lands would suddenly sprout hand-painted signs pointing the way to a farm where fresh cheese could be found.





Eventually the signs led us to La Cava de Marcelo, a fancy, very first-world, fourth generation dairy farm with a recently built cheese cave where we, not having had a proper bath in well over a week and sporting dirt-streaked, dog-haired camping clothes, stumbled into an elegant afternoon wine-and-cheese tasting patronized by clean, spiffily-dressed city slickers from nearby Ensenada. Given our condition, we opted out of the sit down tasting but did partake of a quick private tour of the cheese cave. Despite being uncertain as to whether we were enjoying gracious and forgiving hospitality or a security escort ensuring we didn’t touch anything or frighten their cleaner, better dressed customers, we enjoyed seeing what was truly the anomaly of our entire Baja experience.



Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Baja Inesperada: Playas, Vanas y Llenas



Unexpected Baja: Beaches, Empty and Full
Words by Greg
Photos by Greg and Trina


Despite the impression given by our previous post, we were not freezing cold for our entire time in Baja. Just an unexpected amount of time. For we who like to travel slowly, who like to make little discoveries along the way, the trip was a pleasure. Each hour was filled with unexpected delights. (Like frost and snow…?)

We weren't really expecting any problems getting in and out of Mexico, even with our dogs. Still, it was unexpectedly easy. It was also easy to dodge gun smugglers/drug runners/border patrols/crooked cops/theives/poison/kidnappers/beheaders. However, we may suggest that if you're the type to quake with fear, you should stay home, stay inside, and huddle under a blanket with the TV turned up high so you can hear the warnings about how dangerous the world is.

We did not expect to find beaches both so empty and so full. Empty of people. We rarely saw other people, and usually at a distance. But just behind the empty beach the shore was lined with homes. Beach homes. Empty homes. "Homes" that ranged from cinderblock shade shelters to preposterous mansions. Most straddled a less than grandiose line in between. Often an RV parked near a stubby tower holding a water tank. Or an RV with a roof build over it. The coast of Baja had been parceled and sold to gringos from the north.

Few of the beach houses showed signs of recent use. Most showed signs of neglect and many showed signs of serious decay. Of unfinished dreams. Of abandonment. Of post apocalypse. Where had all the gringos gone?

Stories seeped in from hollow towns. Twin prongs of economic downturn and fear. Too little money to pay a home mortgage resulted in beach home neglect. And the pounding drum of media hysteria that had turned all of Mexico into a dark alley on a violent night. Surely there are dangerous places in the world. In Mexico. In Phoenix, Arizona, USA. We did not find such a place.

The decay we saw, was it all the result of these most recent years? Or has Baja always walked a sandy line between promise and decay? We never found a satisfactory answer to our question.

We camped one night in soft sand where dunes were covering walls. Another on an empty beach below an empty house. We turned our backs on the land and faced the sea. Walked through the rich smells of sea air. Wandered amid tiny lives and tiny lives lost. Snails and crabs and hollow twisted shells. Slugs and nudibranchs and isopods. Starfish and brittle stars. Fish bones and fish dried to leather. Limpets and barnacles. Sand, gravel and tumbled rocks green with slippery slime. Oysters, clams and cockles. Broken empty urchin shells and crumbled sand dollars turning back to sand.























































Monday, March 5, 2012

Baja Inesperada

Unexpected Baja


Words by Greg
Photos by Greg and Trina


As winter's cold grip tightened upon the February land, we began to dream of lazy sun-filled days, of palm trees and beaches, of fresh fish tacos and lapping waves. So… We grabbed the dogs, jumped in the truck and headed south. Through Utah. Arizona. Then we slipped over the border and into Old Mexico. Into Baja, into a surprising and unexpected land.

Beaches? Yes. Palm trees? Yes. Fresh fish tacos and lapping waves? Good gracious, yes! But also pine forests. Dr. Seussian cactus jungles. Misty lakes. Fields of blossoming wildflowers. Spouting whales. Swarms of creepy crawlers. Oceanside hot springs. Floating rocks. Wind-twisted trees. Happy street dogs. Jewel-like sea creatures. Hidden desert water. Frenzies of pelicans and porpoises. Beautifully decayed dwellings. Rugged costal cliffs. Muffin-boulder mountains. Smashed cars. And gracious people.

We'll start with a few beach photos. And begin to wonder if perhaps we did not go far enough south.

















Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Bikerafting Dog Platform



Spring/summer/fall bikerafting season is quickly approaching and we've been mulling over ways to improve the experience. It must be noted that we complicate the experience of bike + raft by being hopelessly enamored of our beloved canine companions who we insist on bringing along with us. And frankly, who insist on coming along. It is our dogs' experience of bikerafting that we have felt requires the most improvement. To wit:

The Law of DOGravity says that in any situation or circumstance, the dog will gravitate to the highest point with the best view.

This has served well for the most part in our bike + raft + dogs adventures to date. They seem happy enough to find a princely perch on top of our backpacks on top of our bikes on top of our rafts. Initially this seemed to be an adequate platform for them... in calm water. But it only took a few journeys in rougher waters to learn that having our small-footed friends laying or standing on top of our bike frames and wheels creates a doggie leg entanglement danger -- and entanglement is perhaps the number one no-no in boating.

After one moderately traumatic leg-caught-in-wheel incident (Sprocket, the AMH, actually screeched for a moment) we decided they would need better platforms from which to enjoy our aquatic adventures. We wanted a platform that would not collect water, would not be slippery when wet, would provide some grippiness for dog paws, and would be light and packable. Ideas like tables and pillows were thrown overboard as being impractical. Perhaps a fabric? We settled on the idea of a plastic mesh cloth with elastic cord loops and plastic clips on the corners. We purchased our materials and began the construction process.

The fabric platform concept immediately proved popular with the dogs who waited no longer than for us to lay out the fabric before they took their perches upon it and wouldn't get out of our way. Fabric was laid over bike-on-raft and our co-experimenters gave their initial impressions and suggestions. We cut fabric to shape and sewed corners -- with help from our JRT Zeek. Soon we were nearly done, or seemed to be -- as nearly as could be told through the haze of passionate cursing that arose as we attempted to sew the shock cord to the fabric. The task overwhelmed our sewing machine. An attempt to hand sew the shock cord to the fabric soon produced another cloud of profanity as needles broke, fingers were pricked, blood was spilled, and we realized it might take us days to finish in that manner.

Rescue came in the form of a quick trip to an upholsterer's shop where we were kindly treated with immediate service and headed back to our experimental laboratory for further testing of our new bikerafting dog platform/tarpaulin/trampoline devices. Raft on patio. Bike on raft. Tarp stretched over bike. Hooks in place. Then, add dog.

The results? Satisfaction! If it all works out as well on the water as it has on the patio, it seems like we have an excellent season of bike+dog+rafting ahead of us!