Showing posts with label Touring California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Touring California. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Is Mexico Safe?


One comment that we got from people ALL THE TIME--especially in Southern California as we were approaching the US/Mexico border--was to avoid going into Mexico.  Actually, I still get the comment all the time.  It poses a tricky question:  Is it safe to enter Tijuana from San Diego on bikes?

The short answer is no.

Here is the long answer:

The entire US/Mexican border is a volatile place where much crime and violence has taken place in recent years for various reasons.  Stories of kidnappings and shootings along the border are fairly common in the news and by word of mouth.  So is going across the border dangerous?

Yes.  

But so is riding your bike down a mountain going 50 miles per hour with nothing between you and the pavement but a thin layer of Spandex.

Or spending the night in a tent in the middle of bear territory.

Or drinking water from a potentially virus contaminated stream off the side of the road.

Or sharing the single lane highway with geriatrics driving 50 foot long motor homes requiring no special training.

Need I go on?  By the time we got to Tijuana, drug cartels with automatic weapons and explosives weren't any more frightening to us than what we had already endured.  Any of those things I listed are potentially life threatening.  You can't be "deader" than dead.  It is like rock climbing; You get to a point that if you fall, you are going to die.  Climbing higher doesn't increase the severity of death you will experience if you fall.

The fear of death can drastically limit the flavors of life that you can sample.  Everyone dies.  Don't fear death.  Fear passing up the opportunity to live.  Given the choice between dying while just living an ordinary life (AKA, in a car accident, by terminal illness, or natural disaster) or while living an extraordinary life (AKA being mauled by a grizzly bear, eaten by wolves, or shot by a Mexican drug cartel) I'd have to pick the latter.

One can influence the chances of death or injury under given circumstances though.  How do you do that?  Well, to increase your odds of surviving a bike wreck, you wear a helmet, and learn how to ride safely.  To increase the odds of surviving a bear attack, first learn how to avoid them with proper backwoods techniques, and learn what others have done to survive actual attacks.  You can decrease your odds of danger when visiting Mexico too.  I'll talk about more of that in another post.

As a final thought for this post, we've visited the marketplace just over the US/Mexico border at Tijuana numerous times in recent years without issue.  One time, we actually asked one of the shop owners who we'd become chummy with if we were in any danger.  Here is how he put it:

"Our entire economy [in that area of Tijuana] relies on you Americans coming over the border and buying from us.  If you don't do that, we are history.  You see the guys there, there, and there?"

He pointed to some dangerous looking Mexicans standing like statues in the shadows with their arms crossed tightly over their chests and eyes hidden by sunglasses.

"They make sure you are safe.  They make sure that we can stay in business."

I got the impression that those guys weren't exactly hired by the city officials--but were maybe placed there by whoever really runs that town.  I'm not saying it was the Mexican Mafia... but I'm not saying it wasn't.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Two Wheels North: Bicycling the West Coast in 1909

If you enjoy reading my blog, this book might be worth a look.  Kinda sounds like us...except in 1909!  It is called Two Wheels North: Bicycling the West Coast in 1909.

Two boys on a bike trip are sure to find adventure. Send them off into the wilds of the American West, and it's a safe bet adventure will find them. (Its true!  That is what this whole blog is about!)

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Los Angeles

I almost can't believe we have come this far. We arrived in LA city limits yesterday and are currently staying in a hotel right on Venice Beach. We spent all day today just browsing around the shops, talking to independant hip-hop artists and whatnot, and also surfing. Sweeeeet. When people believe us, they are just thrilled and awed to have met us, and demand that we shake their hand, and have a picture with them. However, many people just think we are lying to them, or jerking their chain. Haha, sometimes it is hard for me to believe that we have come this far, but then I get on here and see all of the pictures, and it blows me away.

Finally, the weather is WARM and SUNNY, and glorious. There simply are no computers available for me to upload any photos though. There are only these internet kiosk things where we can do internet stuff, but no USB ports or anything. I will be uploading the many hundreds of photos that have been acumulating since the last upload when I am back home in SLC, which will be in 5 very short days. We have our tickets to fly out of San Diego on August 10th. wOOt!
That also means that I will get time to start uploading video clips too. I've got 20 hours of footage now. That is going to take a LONG time to sift through. :S

I look forward to seeing all of my friends back home again very soon. I miss you all!

Friday, July 25, 2008

San Francisco

Well, we made it through Washington and Oregon, and Northern California. Wow, That was a big chunk without any updates! Haha, I plain just don't have time to post all of the details of the trip! Basically, the weather has continued to be below the norm. Rather than sunshine and warmth we have had overcast, and frigid mist...

...untill we finally arrived in San Francisco. It has been sunny, and moderately warm the past few days, and warming up. (Yay!) We stayed here in San Fran last night, and we explored around today, and we will head back out on the road tomorrow morning. It looks like we are right on schedule to arrive at the Mexico border by August 10th or 11th. Or maybe a little earlier. Haha. We'll just have to see.

It has been amazing. The giant coastal redwoods of Northern California are simply breathtaking. I wanted to spend a few weeks just exploring and hiking through some of those areas. Fantastic. It really makes you feel insignificant in the grand scheme of things though, to see these giant lifeforms, born over 1000 years ago, and they will still be around long after I am gone. Even the fallen trees last as tributes to their lives.

The redwoods are incredibly resiliant as well. It seems like they are impervious to just about anything that can be thrown at them. Many of them have had fires burn holes right through their trunks or stumps... and yet they still stand... AND LIVE! There was one tree in particular that formed a little room inside it's trunk where it had been burned out; a hollow cavern large enough for me to stand. And the tree was still tugging along. Amazing.

San Francisco has been great. It reminds me a lot of Salt Lake City, but considerably bigger, buisier, and with excellent public trasportation in place. Tonight we are going to see the revival of "A Chorus Line" which I'm told will be excellent. I had to work for a few hours today washing out my pants so that I don't look like a homeless person at the theater. Haha.

Still no opportunity to upload photos from Washington on down. I'll have a lot of work to do when I get to a better computer.