Days 128 - 156 Spanish days in Mazatlãn. 0 km
First things first, I'm a dumbass and misspelled ":El espinazo del diablo" in my last few posts! I can't get in to change it, so I'll leave it as an example of my overconfidence and suffer whatever criticism comes my way. To anyone reading this who is offended I offer my apologies. I know it bugs me when people misspell places that are close to my heart.
Mazatlan is a city in excess of 1 million people. At times it seems like that (think rush hour) and at times it seems like a friendly little village!
It's got a perfectly decent beach that is used, but certainly not overused (mind you, it is winter!), a walk along it is calming to the soul. Along the beach is a four lane dual carriageway that seems to be busy all the time, but that really comes to life at the weekends with cars, beach buggies, open air taxis and taxi pickups all cruising up and down, blasting music and often with their own light shows! It's certainly different!
Further down the beach there are lots of municipal facilities where people gather to do aerobics, boxing, basketball, swimming. On a Saturday morning the area is a hive of activity.
I'm told the city has recently come to life and started redeveloping. That's clear along the beach - recent high rise apartments or hotels, more on the way, older buildings and some derelict sites.
Away from the beach you can walk five minutes in one direction and enter a modern shopping mall, while five minutes in the other will bring you to the municipal market and loads of fresh food, fruit, vegetables, seasoning, coconut water and just some amazing aromas.
There are little stores everywhere selling the basics. I've no idea how they can all survive. Food stalls are everywhere too, sometimes a permanent feature, sometimes temporary. It's not unusual to see a section of road blocked off with rope tied to three or four plastic containers containing a stick and cement. Hang around long enough and some people will show up with a van, remove the rope, set up a kitchen on the side of the road, perhaps with a few seats and serve up some delicious food. I don't just mean delicious - I mean really delicious!
It's friendly too. I'm pleased to report that my idea of Mexico as a land of smiles has not been altered. Most people are quick to smile and project a friendliness as warm as the weather.
Learning a new language at 47 years of age is not an easy thing!
I've always had the idea that foreign languages are not my thing. In my lifetime I've studied Irish, Latin & French in school, German in university, lived in the Netherlands for 20 odd years (odd on every meaning of the word!). I have excelled in absolutely none of them!
This time, I've been determined to give as good a shot as possible. Anytime the dark thought of "I'm just not cut out for languages" arose I've hammered it down. The thought may not be front and center, but it refuses to surrender the edges of my mind.
Nonetheless, I think I've made some progress.
It's an interesting experience to go back to school as an adult after a long break.
It's only in the last few years that I've learned to be comfortable with myself and not to beat myself up over mistakes and errors. Starting to cycle coincided with that change of mindset.
However, going back to school found me heavily conflicted between my old attitude of beating myself up for every error and my newer approach of doing the best I can and forgiving the mistakes.
There were days I was so frustrated with myself it was like a cold, black cloud had wrapped me up and wouldn't let me do anything. Thankfully, the ocean was a ten minute walk away. A walk along the beach in my bare feet and the ocean washed the negativity away.
To do things right I should by rights, stay for a minimum of two to three months but that's just not practical from a timing or budgetary point of view. My hope is that I'll have enough of a grounding that will let me develop more as I work my way south.
There's always the possibility of stopping somewhere further down the line too, depending on progress and season.
Just learning new vocabulary is incredibly difficult! At times it seems like my head is solid wood and there's no place for anything new! But, progress is being slowly made.
Gender's a pain in the ass! It's not enough to know the word for chair, I have to know if it's a boy or a girl!
And the rules!!! Not to mention all the irregulars!!
One of the hardest things is processing the sounds.
V is like B, H is silent, J is H, LL is J, G is K. My poor brain is addled! I hear a word and it appears to have no relationship to what it looks like! Dutch words come to mind first, but I've also recalled words that I thought I had failed to learn in French more than thirty years ago! Our minds are very strange, very powerful things!
This is the longest I've been off the bike since I started.
It was an interesting experience the first week, setting up home in a new city. It's been twenty years since I did that. It was a bit scary finding my way around but also very rejuvenating.
When I did start to relax I found myself getting quite tired.
I've tried not to overeat which is not easy for two reasons;
My body has become accustomed to processing a fair whack of food every day - it expects it!
And the food is so darn good!! It's not all spicy (but when it is...it is!!) It's simple, fresh and very tasty. If style over substance is your thing, Mexico may not be for you. But if you prefer how something tastes to how fashionable, modern or equipped a restaurant may be, then hightail it over here!
Noise
There is no escaping the noise generated when more than two Mexicans gather!
A walk along the Malecon, beach front exposes the stranger to the sounds of engines, horns and various forms of music being pumped out of a variety of vehicles.
Horns are used in vehicles as a warning (I'm coming up behind you), as a reminder (hey! The lights are green), a greeting, a call to passengers (your bus is here) or from Taxis looking for a fare.
On a side note, walking around back in Monclova every taxi beeped at me as I was walking around. In Torreon, taxis were smaller, yellow cars with horns that sounded like wolf whistles and were constantly in use looking for fares. In Durango it was far more civilised and Mazatlãn is a mix.
However, there appears to be very little aggression in the use of horns.
Street stalls and restaurants often have a large speaker blasting out music, sometimes even a full band! The music definitely stirs something in me. There are surprising connections to Irish music in terms of themes (emigration, separated by borders or distance, homesickness) and my exposure to some of the Texan music means that the instrumentation, rhythms and sounds are not strange in my head.
Noise, like I said is everywhere, yet it doesn't seem excessive to me. For some reason, it seems to "fit". Maybe that's just my travelling head speaking and I'd have a different view if I lived here, but I'm not so sure.
Most of the Mexicans I meet are very quick to smile and it seems that celebrating whatever and whenever possible is the default option. The noise is simply proof of that so I'm happy that I get to hear it!
Roads & traffic
It's difficult to accurately describe the chaos of traffic on urban streets. Often a lane is "lost" due to parked cars, buses or taxis pick up and deposit passengers in the middle of the road, cyclists, motorcyclists and pedestrians often travel the wrong direction on busy roads. The surfaces are unbelievably poor, especially for a bike. Not to mention incredibly effective speed bumps! It is such a shock to the system when compared, for example, to The Netherlands.
However, I'm loving it! Talk about feeling alive!
I can't say that every driver is considerate, but the vast majority are and even more are patient. It looks crazy! It seems to be death defying! In actual fact it's reasonably safe and a hell of a lot of fun!
Security Presence
Wandering around the old town it was a shock to round a corner and almost walk into four or five soldiers in full camoflauge clothing (white and grey) sporting some serious hardware. They were laughing and joking amongst themselves, but the sheer number of clips sticking out of their pockets was a strong counterpoint to the light and breezy image they projected.
Occasionally I'd encounter a couple of pickups with a couple of guys and a heavy machine gun mounted in the bed of the truck.
These sights seem so out of place, yet a look at a newspaper will demonstrate that they are not quite as left of field.
Speaking only for myself, once they are out of sight I quickly forget about them.
Sunsets
Mazatlãn sits inside a gentle bay with islands of various sizes at each end of the bay.
Walking along the Malecon was a delight as the sun sank down.
Looking straight out to sea the sky was layered in soft colours sliding gently into the sea. The colours could be golden orange fading to to the palest of blues, or vibrant pink, merging to purple and dissolving into a vibrant blue.
Clouds took on all kinds of colours and depending on their shapes and the wind became works of art or mythical creatures moving across the sky.
Sometimes the sea reflected the colours from the sky - a perfect canvas above, a living, breathing piece of body art below.
Depending on position I could watch the sun sink down into the sea or watch it turn an island the darkest of
blacks as it descended behind it.
What was truly amazing was that the scene changed constantly.
It was never still. Colours morphed from one to another. Clouds became birds, then, elephants, tumbled into forms from fantasy novels and finally faces, slowly aging as the last of the sun's rays died and grey took over.
On the right side of the bay, the contrast between the islands and the skies above, between and behind them was a picture in picture light show, while away to the left the lights of the old town grew stronger as darkness fell.
For a few nights I had the pleasure of watching the tiniest sliver of a moon crescent slip slowly beneath the waves. On other nights, a moon, full and proud hung in the sky directly behind me as I watched the show.
The greatest nature documentary on the largest screen ever!
Every evening was different. It was like some artist started with a blank canvas every evening and attempted to create the world's most beautiful painting. Down on the beach, away from the traffic, this presentation was accompanied by the sound of waves breaking on the shore.
There are worse ways to spend an evening!
VW Beetles
In Mexico, these are everywhere! Some old and battered, held together with rust and prayers, while others are wonderfully souped up and modified. I think Mexico was the last place they were manufactured and it's a real pleasure to see so many. I've admired those cars ever since being brought to see "The Love Bug" in a cinema by my sister many years ago.
The Next Stage
There have been definite stages to this trip, in my mind at least.
The US was about visiting places I wanted to visit. Mexico, so far, was about getting to Mazatlãn to get some Spanish under my belt. And food!!! I checked off various things along the way - Charleston, Nashville, Austin, Texas in general (although I really only dipped my toe in the huge lake that Texas is). There were trains and diners and Dairy Queens, the hospitality of a church and Fire Stations. There was El espinazo del diablo. All things that I had wanted to experience, had been aware of.
From now on that changes. My to do list has one item left on it! And that's a road in Colombia.
I've not read anything nearly as much about the rest of the way to "El fin del Mundo" as I have to this point. I've read accounts of bike trips but haven't visualised and inspired myself as I did for the previous stages.
From now on, I'm painting onto a blank canvas as opposed to colouring by numbers.
It's scary, certainly, but also exciting and liberating!
What that means is that there is no definite route in my mind. I have limitations in terms of visas, security and climate that will have impact, but decisions about destinations and routes will be made on the fly.
I've done more and more of this style of touring as time has gone on, although never on such a massive scale. It wouldn't have been unusual for me to head off on a circle route some weekend and wander off it half-way through the first day. Instead of heading north, I might turn south for some Belgian frijtes. Instead of heading to the sea, I might turn east and head for some currywurst!
There's wonderful advantages to that type of touring, but there's always the disadvantage too - a lack of a definite goal may mean that it is never achieved!
I'd like to get to Ushuaia - it would be an interesting place to have been, but there is not a burning desire to get there, as there was with Nashville or Austin, for example. I don't intend on rushing past places, or people, that speak to me simply because the goal is Ushuaia.
My goal for the next stage is simply to take on board as much as I can from the journey. Hopefully, it will be enjoyable, but honestly, that is unlikely to be the case all the time. Maybe I'm just dumb, but misery and suffering can have its benefits too!
So….. if you are finding yourself frustrated with my progress, or lack of it, or my wandering around, well that's just tough! You think you can do it better? Be my guest!
My general plan is to head south towards Puerto Vallarta, then inland to Guadalajara. I'll head a bit south, then do a loop around Mexico City, going around on the Northern side, west to east. Everyone I've spoken to has said Mexico City is a must visit so I'll either pop in on the bike or take a bus. Then south towards Pueblo, further south to Oaxaca and as far as Comitán near the Guatemala border. At that point I'll either head south into Guatemala or turn east and head into Yucatan to explore the Mayan history of the region. I'll figure that out closer to the time.
But that could change tomorrow!
Central America has taken up more of my thoughts recently. One of the three cyclists I met on my way to Mazatlãn expressed surprise that I planned to cycle there. The El Salvadorean army walked into their parliament the other day, fully armed, when the parliament was debating increasing their budget. MS13 attacked a court and freed one of their leaders a couple of days ago in Honduras.
Further south, Colombia has been heating up for a while. There's a three day travel ban enforced by rebels currently taking place in some regions.
It seems like my adventure is only begining!