We initially expected todays journey to be a gentle side excursion from Bahia De Los Angeles (south 80 miles to San Francisquito, thence 45 miles west to El Arco and then 26 miles back to Mex 1) for at least the first leg to San Francisquito was described in our guide book as "suitable for small RVs and even pickups with small boat trailers". We modified our expectation somewhat when we heard yesterday from some of the other tourists that the recent Baja 200 (or Baja 1000 depending on which particular tourist) had recently run through that road and it may be a little chopped up. The reality was, however, altogether different to any expectation. In over 8 hours of driving we had traveled only 65 miles, not even reaching San Francisquito before the day started to fade. Not only had we shaken the truck unmercifully for those 8 hours but we had also climbed our way over and around numerous wash aways in the road that in some cases reduced the road width to less than our truck and in the process gave Nina a bad case of the shakes. At the end of the day we could confidently tell any other travelers that asked that; The Baja race had indeed chopped up the road. But so had many years without maintenance. And this road certainly was not suitable for small RVs.

Despite the anxiety and concern associated with the rough treatment of the truck it was a spectacular journey. Colorful desert mountain ranges,vast sandy valleys with huge cacti, and picturesque deserted coastal stretches.


With the day waning it was obvious that we would have to spend the night somewhere beside the road so we simply picked a place where we could get 50 yards off the track and behind some scant vegetation, a token effort to shield us from passers-by. Mind you passers-by were few and far between. We had only seen 5 vehicles all day.