
The roads are not that well marked down here, and you need to be paying really close attention to where you are headed. The signs are random and not very clear. Thus we were able to justify missing our turn to the coast route and proceeded to head up into the mountains for a 4 hour detour...opps. Sometimes it's just the way of it!

The recent shark attacks in this area have seriously hit the tourist industry. Four surfers have been killed in the last year in Troncones and nearby. We checked the waves in the morning and found them to be closed out. We didn?t bother to hunt for any as were just focused on getting south. So we kept on movin? through Ixtapa-Zihuatenejo and then on to Acapulco.

The downtown area of Acapulco fills a huge bay with white sand beaches and blue-ish water. Giant hotels line the shore, and nightclubs line the boulevard. The Hard Rock Caf�, Se�or Frogs, and BarbaRoja beckon tanned and toned tourists looking for a good time. It was not our idea of a good time, in fact, quite the opposite. We couldn?t get out of there fast enough.

Also, there appears to be few regulations on doing business in rural areas. You can just post up wherever and put out what you?ve got to sell. No business licenses to deal with, no permits from the health department. This could be a double-edged sword, as there are no regulations on sanitation for some restaurants or roadside stands, or at least they are not enforced. Still, the people seem to be pretty healthy, and we haven?t been sick yet (touch wood). I think it actually makes you stronger to inoculate yourself with some powerful bacteria.
We stayed in a small town called Marquelia on the main road south that night. Dozens of small taco stands lined the road, and we found one with the cheapest and best chicken tacos ever. They came with marinated onions, guacamole, and salsa roja. We had two orders each, and a michelada, which is beer with tomato juice and pepper sauce. Delicioso!
The people in the small towns are some of the friendliest ever. They are not jaded by tourism, or desperate for your money. They are always willing to help out in whatever way they can. Many people have been to the states to work, and they relate their stories of where they were and what they did. Most seem to be happy to be at home.
Puerto Escondido is an amazing bay that is filled with some of the best surf in Mexico, or the world for that matter. We pulled in late and the afternoon onshores were blowing so we proceeded to do some much needed errands. We heard the swell that we had been racing down for had hit and that the surf was big.

We wanted to surf Puerto, but the idea of triple overhead draining death pits didn't seem too inviting, compared to the long hollow right points that we knew would be pumping further south. So we hit the road before sunrise, only regretting we hadn't been able to find my friend Jenny who was staying in town. But I knew we would cross paths with her soon.
We weren't disapointed with our decision to race south as we were gifted with the waves of our dreams.



The road into the famous Barra de La Cruz is the worst road we have yet encountered in Mexico. A narrow, rutted and eroded patch of dirt winds through a hilly and tight valley. Driving this rig on through town is kind of like dropping into a big wave, just a little scarier.
We pulled up to the beach and Barra was doing its thing. Overhead peelers grinded down the point, tubes spitting on the takeoff. We got some really great rides with a pretty mellow crowd, and then found a campground to park up for the night.

Barra de la Cruz has had a lot of publicity lately, if you haven?t heard. Rip Curl had a contest here a few years ago and got some of the best conditions in a decade. Many surf movies were made of the waves before during and after the contest and the surf world gobbled it up. Pros were claiming the best wave ever. The magic of the wave had been revealed, and all wanted a taste.

Now it is common to have twenty or more people out, all jockeying for position and pushing each other deeper into the pit. Vanloads of hungry wave-mongers show up daily, from all over the globe. All this means more pressure on the local community and its infrastructure.
The community has responded in a very proactive way. They recognized the wave as a resource and regulated access to utilize it for their benefit. All who wish to use the beach must pay US$2, which includes the use of showers, bathrooms, and a palapa to hang your hammock from. There is also a restaurant on the beach, serving the hungry surfers cold beers and garlic filets.

Surfing has created a reason for the people to come together and take an interest in the future of their beach. It has had an impact on the locals, perhaps in some ways negative. Yet they have chosen to turn the problem into a solution, and are just starting to see the benefits.

This community structure makes Barra different from all of the other surf spots we have visited so far in Mexico. They saw that they could either sell out or hold out, and they chose to protect what they had. They could have easily sold the beach to a developer or the town to some rich Spaniards, but there is a consciousness here that recognizes this place as sacred and irreplaceable.
Furthermore, they are protecting their livelihood in other ways. All businesses are locally owned, and most of the money made in Barra is spent in Barra. A portion of the food is produced locally, and sold here. The local economy seems to be strong. Most people have a home with running water and electricity, and a way to put food on the table. Many families have their own plots in the neighboring valley where they grow food for themselves and for profit.
I met a man named Olgilver who is building a house for his family right off the beach at Barra, and he invited me to visit his family farm in the next valley over. We took a walk over the hill and through the woods to his little plot of paradise. He ranges eight head of cattle in a cow-calf operation on land that is planted to cocos and limes. We ate cocos and then took a tour of the banana plantation. In the new plantings of bananas he was intercropping corn. He grows everything organically, no chemicals at all. He loaded me up on some awesome fruit; cocos, limes, and the best bananas ever.

The community structure of Barra could be modeled and reproduced in other areas that are suffering from the pressure of foreign investment and development. If other communities could see how another responded to these pressures by preserving their land and heritage, they may be more convinced to not sell their family land to developers.
We are excited to be here and are looking forward to continuing building relationships withing the community!
Source: http://surferswithoutborders.blogspot.com/2008/09/visions-of-utopia.html
surf guitar surfing in europe surf and turf recipes free proxy surf surfing wallpapers
No comments:
Post a Comment