Summer Vacation 2012
Details:
The Big Picture
Road Reports:
Road Report July 27
San Christobal de Las Casas to Tuxtla
Beautiful 2 lane and shoulder highway from the Capital
of Chiapas to San Christobal. It is "shoulder dancing" a kind of drive on the
shoulder and pass when you can type highway.
Tuxtla to the Arriaga / Pacific Coast
There are two options; the free road or the toll. On one
of our map books the toll highway is not even drawn so we cannot calculate the
distance. The other map has the highway penciled in but does not give distance.
We decide to use the toll as we haven't been on it
before.
It is a 2 lane shoulder dancing highway as well. Its was
clear, no potholes or problems. It was much quicker to get to the coast as it
didn't go through towns or hit a million topes. We definitely recommend this
road and will port a road log soon.
Arriaga to Tehuantepec
The roads from Arriaga to Tehuantepec is clear and good
except for approximately 10 miles where we experienced a detour for road
construction.
Tehauntepec to Oaxaca
The 2 lane road was well maintained. It was slow going
as it twists and turns going through the mountains. Not as many topes as in
Chiapas.
If possible, drive in the morning. The morning light was
spectacular and made the trip very enjoyable! Not too many Pemex's so stay
topped up.
The Periferico around Oaxaca continues to be confusing
and messy. Best to keep calm and try to navigate at non-rush hour periods.
Road Report - July 11
Palenque to Villahermosa to La Venta to Tuxtla
Guerrero.
The road has generally improved making it almost a 4
lane and shoulder road to Villahermosa.
The new toll Highway from La Venta to Tuxtla Guerrero is
fast easy and beautiful. Lots of vistas and pictures.
This is a great road for RV's that need space and fewer
curves.
Road Report - July 10
Palenque to Tikal and Back.
The road to Bonampak and Yaxchilan was generally quite
good. Paved two lane roads with few topes, 3 military check points as well as
Migration. Met some fine folks that we hope to run into when we go traveling in
South America.
When you leave the boat launch for Guatemala you must
ensure you check out with Mexico Immigration. That means you go to the office,
fill out a form and get a piece of paper.
You take a boat to Guatemala, (a launcha that seats 10
passengers and 2 crew)hop on the bus to La Flores. They have a "money changer"
there; an old woman with a 3 inch wad of bills.
The bus takes you to Guatemala customs where you pay
some cash, have your passport scanned and then your off! Two hours on a badly
potholed dirt road and then two hours on a paved road and you hit Las Flores.
Yes this was a chicken bus that stopped in every pueblo...
Tours to Tikal appear to be the main business in Las
Flores and unlike the tour companies in Palenque, the prices fluctuate wildly.
The bus to Tikal takes 1 hour and you are then charged approximately $30 to
enter the park. It appears like Guatemala always has one more additional
charge....one that they didn't tell you about.
Tikal was great and will write about that later.
The return trip back to Palenque was uneventful. Again
we met lots of great travelers - something we always seem to do when we hit the
road.
It was wonderful to return to Mexico.
Road Report - July 9-
San Christobal de las Casas to
Palenque
Highway 199
The road to Palenque continues to be
challenging with a million topes through the mountain passes. Mostly 2 lane no
shoulder roads with a fair number of complete "deslaves" or washouts. The road
drops away completely in many spots. Night driving is not advisable....ha ha.
We have noticed that fewer and fewer
women are wearing their traditional dress. Soon everyone will be wearing jeans,
shorts, and t-shirts and the beautiful hand embroidered blouses and skirts will
only be sold in markets to tourists.
The two waterfalls along the way
haven't changed much in al these years. 2 different ejidos charge admission to
Misol-ha. One for the road and the other for the entrance.
Road Report-June 25
Tapatula to San Christobal de las
Casas
The
highway to the Huixtla cut off to HWY 211 is beautiful and clear. There are
numerous immigration and aduana stops along the small stretch going north.
After the turnoff from the highway the
road narrows immediately to a 2 lane no shoulder road. From Huixtla to Comatán
the going is very slow. The road is narrow yes.....but the problem is not
this....It is the dam topes. A zillion of them, in all different sizes, shapes
and colors.
The road itself winds through mountain
passes through small towns and settlements. There are no super steep grades or
other hazards. A few military immigration stops.
This all changes when you approach
Comatán. The lanes expand
and shoulders appear in spots. Traffic moves forward rather than one step up,
one step down and one step forward....The Tope Shuffle.
Comatán
has many stores along the highway including an AutoZone, Walmart, Sam's Club,
Bodega etc.
Just outside Comatán
the roads revert to the Tope shuffle and shrink in size. There is a noticeable
population change as well. The Mayan Indians - usually the women - now begin to
wear traditional dress. Up here in the highlands they wear a black wool skirt
that appears to be sheep skin rather than a woven fabric. It is hairy. They also
wear a satin blouse in colors that we believe identifies a town or family - but
we are not quite sure yet.
There is also a shift in what they
produce for sale. The big sale item right now appears to be what we used to call
a whirligigs They are carved characters that have various legs (wings or other
limbs) move when the air catches them. Of course there is the roadrunner and a
multitude of cartoon characters. There was even Dora - the Explora....
We have always scratched our heads
with the local Mayan "artisans". Every time we visit the San Chris region we
notice that one "craft item" is all of a sudden produced and sold at over half
the roadside booths or in the market. It is as if one person has a great idea
and then everyone else in town copies them because they are successful.
Shortly before San Christobal the
roads expand again but so does the traffic. The topes remain.
We are glad to be here. The weather is
much drier and cooler than the coast. We put on jackets to go out for dinner
last night and stacked up the blankets high in our hotel room.
Today we search for an apartment.
Road Report-Post Hurricane –
June 21
Ixtapa / Zihuatenanjo to Puerto
Escondido
Highway 200 is in fine condition for
the most part following the hurricane few days ago. Of course you can see some
downed trees and significant garbage/tree branches in waterways leading to the
ocean.
The Highway washouts began once you
are in Oaxaca. Some of the road pavement just falls off in about 6 place north
of Puerto Escondido. They remain unmarked and unprotected. These would cause
serious vehicle and personal damage if drivers do not see the utter drop-offs
beforehand. Do not even attempt to think about driving at night.
Zihuat experienced light flooding and
garbage flows to the ocean. They were cleaning up two days ago so should be back
to normal.
Acapulco looked unscathed.
Puerto Escondido is fine – a few down
trees but otherwise normal. Zicatella looks fine too except for the mostly
southerly beach which looks like experiences a flood onto the street from the
beach. A sand-out so to speak.
Road Report-Post Hurricane –
June 24
Puerto Escondido to Tapachula
Roads were fine for the most part. The
hurricane wrecked havoc in areas south of Puerto Angel. One gas station had the
roof ripped from the pump area...a huge heavy projectile in the storm!
But the roads were fine.
Some ongoing roadwork south of La
Ventana through some smaller towns but otherwise the roads from Salinas Cruz to
Tapatula are a welcome relief from Tope hell on the coast of Guerrero and
Oaxaca.
Border checks and immigration booths
going north are proliferating at an alarming rate. At least a half a dozen now
check road travelers as they drive north.
Tapatula continues to expand into
shopping malls. Downtown disintegrates.
Off today for the interior.
*
Road Report-June 25
Tapachula to San Christobal de las
Casas
The
highway to the Huixtla cut off to HWY 211 is beautiful and clear. There are
numerous immigration and aduana stops along the small stretch going north.
After the turnoff from the highway the
road narrows immediately to a 2 lane no shoulder road. From Huixtla to Comatán
the going is very slow. The road is narrow yes.....but the problem is not
this....It is the dam topes. A zillion of them, in all different sizes, shapes
and colors.
The road itself winds through mountain
passes through small towns and settlements. There are no super steep grades or
other hazards. A few military immigration stops.
This all changes when you approach
Comatán. The lanes expand
and shoulders appear in spots. Traffic moves forward rather than one step up,
one step down and one step forward....The Tope Shuffle.
Comatán
has many stores along the highway including an AutoZone, Walmart, Sam's Club,
Bodega etc.
Just outside Comatán
the roads revert to the Tope shuffle and shrink in size. There is a noticeable
population change as well. The Mayan Indians - usually the women - now begin to
wear traditional dress. Up here in the highlands they wear a black wool skirt
that appears to be sheep skin rather than a woven fabric. It is hairy. They also
wear a satin blouse in colors that we believe identifies a town or family - but
we are not quite sure yet.
There is also a shift in what they
produce for sale. The big sale item right now appears to be what we used to call
a whirligigs They are carved characters that have various legs (wings or other
limbs) move when the air catches them. Of course there is the roadrunner and a
multitude of cartoon characters. There was even Dora - the Explora....
We have always scratched our heads
with the local Mayan "artisans". Every time we visit the San Chris region we
notice that one "craft item" is all of a sudden produced and sold at over half
the roadside booths or in the market. It is as if one person has a great idea
and then everyone else in town copies them because they are successful.
Shortly before San Christobal the
roads expand again but so does the traffic. The topes remain.
We are glad to be here. The weather is
much drier and cooler than the coast. We put on jackets to go out for dinner
last night and stacked up the blankets high in our hotel room.
Today we search for an apartment.
Click here to view more photographs
Wild
Michoacán Coast
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