Monday, February 28, 2005

President's Whale

Last weekend, armed with Lauge - the semi-professional Baja-Bum, three 4-wheel drive trucks, and an astonishingly courageous and competent Dodge Intripid, we successfully steered clear of Gringo Hotspots, overpriced Margarittas, and went straight for foot-deep mud puddles and deserted beaches. It was a journey filled with adventure (getting lost at the Tijuana boarder), danger (Dodge Intripid + 17 mile of a flooded dirt road), suspense (Lauge's trip to the Police Station for running a red light), beauty (it's Baja!!), delicious food (fresh clams from the lagoon, eggplant asada and guacamole made by the campfire), surprise (getting spat on by a whale and touching the soft barnicles on its back), discovery (we found a pelican skull and whale bones on a deserted beach), and a special bonus prize (Mario proposed to Monica after 10 years of being together).

It was my first proper trip to Baja. We drove all the way down the entire length of Baja California, and into South Baja to Guerro Negro. It was hours in the backseat of Nicole's Great White Beast, swaying to Tom Waits, head-banging to Stone Temple Pilots, and singing along to (yes, I'm admitting it...) Brian Adams' "Summer of '69". Our main goal of the trip was to see some grey whales at Scammons Lagoon, they go there every year to give birth and nurse their calf. The landscape that we drove through was just amazing. It ranged from the lush rolling hills south of Ensenada, piles of bolders scattered in a desert plain, to mountains covered with strange twisted shadows of cacti, and all the while we had the Pacific glistening to our side.

The highlight was definitely when we went out on the little boat, expecting to see some whales from afar, but instead met this incredibly curious and friendly whale that just circling and diving under our boat for a good 20 minutes... and eventually allowed us to pet it. The skin was tough but soft to touch and of a spongy squishy texture, I guess its what you would imagine an elephant would feel like after spending a day in the spa being rubbed with exfoliating sea salt and kelp.

We camped on the beach the second night by the lagoon. Supposedly you can hear the whales breathing at night, but I think Nicole and Amy's Margarittas might have hindered my sensory acuity... The moonlight was so bright in a clowdless night sky, reflecting off the water and the sand, we took an evening stroll and didn't even need any man-made luminating device... The third night we camped among the bolders in the desert, surrounded by cacti of all sizes (which lead to a rather painful extraction procedure involving my right thigh, Lauge's pliers, and a mean and stubborn piece of cactus).

We an a great time. Bass wrote down all the turns and dirt roads we took so perhaps someday we can find our way back.

A picture is worth a thousand words. So I'll leave the rest to them.

Baja California - Cacti Sunset Posted by Hello

C in the Bilabong Posted by Hello

C-B out in the desert Posted by Hello

Baja California Grey Whale - Head Up
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Baja California Grey Whale - Monica & Sam
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Baja California Grey Whale - Nichole
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Baja California Grey Whale - Lauge
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Baja California Grey Whale
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Baja California Whale Boat
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Baja California Whale boat
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Baja California Whale boat
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Baja California Toy Trucks
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Baja California Posted by Hello

Baja California
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Baja California New Day Posted by Hello

Baja California Sunset
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Baja California
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Baja California
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Baja California Posted by Hello

Baja California Posted by Hello

Loquat/Pi-Pa/Mespila/Acadinia

"The only trees that are useful are trees that bare fruit." -- B. Atallah

Months after Bass telling me that he has a loquat tree in the backyard, one day a couple of weeks ago, I looked out the kitchen window, and excitedly shouted with a sudden realization, "You have a loquat tree! Loquats are Pi-Pa!! Oh my god..." I ran outside immdiatedly -- it was true, the tree was baring little green fruits of a familiar shape from my days in Taiwan. It was a Pi-Pa tree; a Mespila tree; an Acadinia tree.

{kids - if you are as ignorant as I was about loquats, educate yourself here}

After months of being neglected, suddendly the loquat tree was now receiving all the love and attention previously given to its neighbors in the backyard -- the deformed lemon tree and orange tree. Like an expecting gradparent, I checked on the loquats morning, day, and night, waiting imapiently as I noted to myself the evolutionary disadvantage of the speed at which the loquats are ripening.

Thankfully with all the rain we've been getting here, the day finally came when we had sweet sweet loquats in the backyard. They don't taste as sweet as the ones in Taiwan, but it has that lovely mixture of sweetness and tartness to it that home-grown fruit tend to have. Bass picked a whole bowl of it this morning, and we munched on it during Systems Neuroscience lecture today -- they got me through the differential functions of internal and external globus pallidus.

Now there is just one mystery tree left in the backyard. I think its a cherry tree, although it could be a plum tree as well, since both these tree bloom when all their leaves are gone and have five petals to a flower. We'll find out soon...

Waking up with by th pi-pa tree Posted by Hello

Loquats ripening Posted by Hello

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Anza-Borrego

Anza-Borrego was still covered in green and flowers today.

It is a 1h45m drive from San Diego to Anza.

It was a rush. Jumped in the car and gunned it down 805 to the 8. The only stop Cindy and I made before hitting Borrego was at a road side stall - Pam's Place in Descanso. Golden Apricot Butter and 3 damn good blood oranges set us back $8.

North of Borrego Springs on Di Gorgio Rd there seem to be the best blooms. The road is surrounded by huge dense citrus trees - mostly grapefruit. The have been cut into box shapes about the height of a one store building. It is not clear where one tree ends and the next begins so the form an endless hedge.

After lunch- queer quiche in the sand, types of flowers were counted and photographed and back we went. Through Julian again but this time east on 78 to 67 and then down US 15.

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