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Ride Report: Copper Canyon, Mexico |
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bahwolf
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Joined: 30 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 515 |
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Topic: Ride Report: Copper Canyon, MexicoPosted: 26 Apr 2007 at 8:30pm |
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Bahlobo y los
Gringos: In which the Dakar and I travel with my gringo friends Chris Marlow, Rich Desmond, and Daniel Holloway to Mexico, the Barranca del Cobre (Copper Canyon) area to be specific. Despite hail storms, tornadoes, and floods ... federales, the gun-toting Mexican Army, and every friggin' cop in the entire state of Chihuahua (that's not an exaggeration!) ... dust devils that'd flat lift your ass out of the seat ... the mirror-hungry Batopilas "Stairs From Hell" ... goats, cows, burros, and mad dogs around every corner ... dusky senoritas scented in peyote and mescal offering the smoothest tequila ever to pass human lips, free of charge! ... enough dust to choke out an Egyptian sandstorm ... unmarked twisties that'd suck you in so fast your bike would be sideways before you could say "Oh sh*t!" ... vultures that refused to yield up the roadway ... abandoned mines ... cheap, knobby-tossing, knock-off-brand tires ... and the completely unfathomable route from Batopilas to Urique ... we four gringos survived our adventures and returned culturally enhanced with the ability to say "por favor," "muchos gracious," and "What'd he say?" with the best of 'em. Grab your helmet, a roll of toilet paper, and brace yourself for chills and spills and scenic vistas that'll have your eyes popping like a stomped-upon bullfrog's. It's time to saddle up and ride south of the border. All photos by me (or at least taken with my camera) unless otherwise noted. |
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Brian A. Hopkins
http://bahwolf.com |
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bahwolf
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Joined: 30 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 515 |
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Posted: 26 Apr 2007 at 8:34pm |
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Bahlobo y los
Gringos: CAST OF CHARACTERS (a.k.a. LOS GRINGOS): If you've been following my moto adventures, you should recognize these yahoos. Just in case you're a first timer, however, they are (left-to-right in the photo below):
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Brian A. Hopkins
http://bahwolf.com |
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bahwolf
Senior Member
Joined: 30 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 515 |
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Posted: 26 Apr 2007 at 8:36pm |
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Bahlobo y los
Gringos: PREPARATION: I can't speak to specifics for the other guys (though I imagine they went through a similar procedure with their bikes), but I performed the following maintenance a week or so before we departed to prepare my BMW F650GS Dakar for our Copper Canyon adventure:
I had ordered a new maintenance-free battery to replace the stock lead-acid battery which had already boiled over once (making a nice acid-etched mess of the top of my engine in the process!), but it had been backordered and failed to arrive in time. In two years, the bike had never failed to start, but I really didn't trust the original battery anymore. Unfortunately, because of its unusual size and reversed poles, a replacement wasn't as easy as walking into the nearest Walmart. I would have to go to Mexico with the questionable battery. I had also ordered a few trick components from Touratech (a German company specializing in custom components and gear for adventure motorcycles) for the Beemer: an offroad-type chain guide (normally found on true dirtbikes), an oil-type air filter (to replace the BMW's stock paper cartridge type), and a folding brake lever (I'd already replaced the shift lever with a folding type). Unfortunately, these items were also backordered (seems to happen every time I order something from Touratech). They actually arrived at my doorstep a few days after we departed for Mexico. Grrrrr... It goes without saying that a carefully prepared machine is the key to enjoying (perhaps even surviving) an adventure such as this. We would be hundreds of miles from anything resembling a motorcycle repair shop. We were carrying tools, spare parts, and whatever we needed to handle anything short of a catastrophic mechanical failure. All of us know our bikes inside and out and are competent at fixing flats and whatnot. We were also carrying two first aid kits, just in case, and in our planning had agreed that we needed a minimum of three riders for the trip (one to go get help and one to remain with an injured rider in an emergency situation). We studied maps and read dozens of ride reports from other adventure riders who had toured the area. We talked and planned and coordinated what everyone would be carrying ad infinitum. In other words, we were as prepared as we could possibly be. A week before we left, we did a test loading at my house to make sure we could fit all four bikes on Chris's trailer. Then, Thursday night, the 12th of April, we loaded them for real. We would be driving Rich's van, which not only had plenty of room for the gear but had bench seats just right for snoozing. The plan was to hit the road around noon on Friday the 13th (gulp!), driving straight through to the border at Presidio, TX where we would get a few hours shut-eye at a hotel, then cross into Mexico on the bikes first thing Saturday morning. The fat lady is singing now, buddy ... Time to get the hell outta Dodge!
(to be continued...) |
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Brian A. Hopkins
http://bahwolf.com |
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bahwolf
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Joined: 30 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 515 |
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Posted: 26 Apr 2007 at 9:05pm |
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Bahlobo y los
Gringos: GETTING THERE: Friday the 13th ... what were we thinking? Mother Nature -- that cantankerous bitch! -- threw a freakin' fit at our sheer audacity.
It stormed and hailed. Tornadoes ripped across Oklahoma and Texas. Just north of the town of Seymour, TX we caught the worst of it. Hail the size of walrus testicles hurtled out of the black sky. Rich crept forward at about 15 mph. You couldn't see ten feet through the blinding rain and the pounding hail stones. The hail sounded as if it was about to punch through the roof of the van. Danny and I put our palms to the headliner and traded concerned "Oh sh*t!" expressions as we felt the beating Rich's van was taking. Of course, there was absolutely nothing to hide under in this part of Texas ... and our bikes were OUTSIDE, strapped to the trailer. My beloved BMW was taking a serious beating. Watching, I expected at any moment to see the windshield shatter, the mirrors crumble, and the paint chip away from the faux tank panels as hail the size of ping pong balls plummeted from the heavens. I needed a Valium!
Eventually (seemed like a lifetime!), the storm passed. We rolled into the town of Seymour, where the streets were under a foot of water, the ground was covered in hail stones, and everywhere we looked there were downed limbs, spider-webbed windshields, and pock-marked autos. We stopped at a gas station to fill up and assess the damage. Amazingly, the only damage to the bikes was a two-inch tear in the BMW's seat cover. A hail stone had actually punched a hole in my seat! Sonofabitch! Unfortunately, Rich's van was not so lucky. The roof of the van was stippled with hail craters. Danny, Chris, and I felt terrible about it, but Rich seemed to take it in stride. "At least it's isolated to the roof," he said, "and I never look up there anyway." We pressed on, undaunted, arriving in Presidio in the wee hours of Saturday morning, where we got a room at the Three Palms Inn and crashed.
(to be continued...)
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Brian A. Hopkins
http://bahwolf.com |
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jamespratt
Admin Group
Joined: 22 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 1347 |
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Posted: 26 Apr 2007 at 10:18pm |
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More, more!
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James Pratt
Ride Oklahoma webmaster |
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Metalwkr
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Joined: 23 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 257 |
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Posted: 26 Apr 2007 at 10:39pm |
Yes....Yes....MORE!
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Ed Jones
Mine 96 XR 650L Hers 2009 Kawasaki Super Sherpa |
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bahwolf
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Joined: 30 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 515 |
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Posted: 27 Apr 2007 at 9:30am |
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Bahlobo y los Gringos: Creel: Saturday morning, Danny and I were up and at 'em, raring to go. We had to pound on the door of the DR-Z Boys' room and practically drag 'em outta bed. Dammit, it was time to ride! We had breakfast at the little restaurant next door to the hotel. It was good, but the service was S.L.O.W. We made arrangements to leave the van and trailer at the Three Palms ($3 per day), then hit the border. It took less than an hour to go through immigration/customs and do the paperwork on the vehicles and whatnot ... then we were officially on Mexican soil. In Ojinaga, we laundered some money, then we were ripping through picturesque mountains on some gloriously twisty pavement which eventually spilled us out into the Chihuahua desert. In the desert, the wind was brutal. Likewise, the traffic in Chihuahua. But we fought through it all, Don Quixote types one and all, to arrive at last -- after what we all thought was the longest 320 or so ass-breaking miles of our lives -- in the little town of Creel.
Our plan was to base most of our riding out of Creel, thus eliminating the need to carry all our clothes and crapola on the bikes every day. The only exception would be an overnighter at the bottom of the canyons in the town of Batopilas, basically because it would be nearly impossible to make it down there and back to Creel in one day without having to ride after dark. Compounding the issue was the fact that we wanted to ride the much lesser known and rougher road out of Batopilas to Urique, and there was no chance of doing all that in one day. You absolutely do not want to ride in this area after dark. There are just way too many critters sharing the roads and trails with you. I liked the town of Creel. The people were friendly (although the Tarahumara Indians were mostly aloof), courteous, and helpful, even if very few of them spoke any English. None of us had more than a rudimentary grasp of Spanish. We grunted and pointed a lot and said "por favor" and "gracious." I never felt as if I was in any danger while exploring the town, even when off the more public thoroughfares. This isn't the touristy Mexico of Cancun or one of the sleazy towns sharing a border with the U.S.A. Vendors didn't harass me to buy crap or offer to let me sleep with their sisters for fifty pesos. Nobody tried to sell me any weed. (I've had all these things happen in places like Tijuana, Cancun, Playa del Carmen, Cozumel, etc.) When I bought things and suggested the merchant keep the change, they always counted the change back to me and insisted that I take it. The Mexican women we saw were very attractive and well built. (The first thing we noticed when returning to the States, in fact, was that there were fat women everywhere we went.) The primary form of entertainment in Creel appeared to be loading your favorite chica bonitas in the backseat of your car or the back of your truck and driving up and down the main street of town. The town, like every place we saw in Mexico, was horribly littered. Mexico really needs to implement some sort of litter control program. Our room was clean, but the hot water situation was tenuous. I think maybe they turned off the water heater during the day. I took more than one cold shower. The room had a television, but it got only one or two channels -- entirely in Spanish. Most of the news that week was focused on the death of some famous Mexican actor named Pedro, but we did eventually learn a bit about what was transpiring in the States that week (i.e., the horrible events at Virgina Tech). Both mine and Danny's cell phones were working. I stuck to text messages back and forth with the wife at home, because T-Mobile wanted $1.49 per minute for calls to and from the area. Text messages sent from there were 35 cents a pop, while received messages were free. Most of my texting amounted to "Safe & sound. Miss u. Luv u. Bye," with the exception of the night I sent "Very hard day. Me go boom. Me not hurt. Beemer not so good" (more on that later).
I certainly wouldn't hesitate to stay in Creel again. We located the bank (where we paid the fee for our tourist visas), the Western Union office, the Post Office ... just about everything we needed. We had great roasted chicken at a place called Pollo Gordito -- or something like that (big yellow building on the southern outskirts of town). Danny and I had not-too-terribly-bad pizza and talked at length with Rueben, a street vendor who understood a fair amount of English and was ever-so-proud of being his own boss. We had another enjoyable conversation with one of the local jewelry artists, Obierto (Alberto?). All in all, a great time ... but we'd come to RIDE, so let's get on with that part of the adventure! (to be continued...)
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Brian A. Hopkins
http://bahwolf.com |
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zrod
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Joined: 22 May 2006 Online Status: Offline Posts: 381 |
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Posted: 27 Apr 2007 at 6:30pm |
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AWESOME!!!!!! |
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It's not hard, you're just not doin it right!
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bahwolf
Senior Member
Joined: 30 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 515 |
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Posted: 27 Apr 2007 at 7:15pm |
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Bahlobo y los
Gringos:
TWISTIES TO DIE FOR: The pavement in this part of Mexico is wonderful. The roads twist and twine through the mountains, up and down the canyon walls, in and out and over the arroyos and mesas. Forget Deal's Gap, the so called Tail of the Dragon; call this place the Tail of the Gila Monster or something, 'cause it's got more than enough curves to keep any rider entertained and doesn't have any of Deal's Gap's heavy traffic or overly exuberant law enforcement. In a day's time here you could almost get tired of being on the sides of your tires -- emphasis on almost. Corners aren't marked with a safe speed, though, as they are in the States, so you pretty much have to judge them for yourself. Warning signs seemed to come in two flavors: a gentle curve and a 90-degree bend. These signs weren't very consistent. The pavement, however, had excellent camber and very few potholes. Traction was generally good, but there were a few iffy places, including one stretch through the mountains near Creel that always looked greasy or wet to us, even though there'd been no rain in who knows how long. A couple times Chris and I commented on having lost traction and kicking out our rear ends (better to lose the rear than the front, though!). On one occasion, I entered a corner much too hot, lost the rear end while trail-braking, saw my back tire come around and pass my front, and very nearly high-sided the bike regaining control. I slowed down for a bit after that, adequately reminded that knobbies are not sport tires and I was not mounted on my ZZR1200 or CBR1000RR. Chris was behind me when this happened and told me later that there's no way he could have saved such a bone-headed move. I told him it was probably pure luck on my part. For a second there, I'd been certain I was going to be the one for whom we'd brought first aid kits. The fact that I hadn't panicked is probably what saved me, that and enough time with the rear end of my dirt bike sliding out from under me to think it was all perfectly normal to be slewing sideways. Rich admonished both Chris and me, "Stay off those rear brakes, ya idiots!" I think we just needed to slow down a bit, but good golly, Bob Golly (an inside joke*), we couldn't help ourselves on those roads! You have to be particularly cautious in blind corners here, because the Mexicans seemed to consider the centerline much more of a suggested boundary than a safety barrier. (This comment applies equally well to the areas where we were off the pavement.) On several occasions we found trucks coming around a corner taking up several feet of our lane. Danny said he was almost taken out by a horse trailer that drifted over into his lane. Watch out for the logging trucks, too. Drivers in Mexico will signal that it's safe for you to pass them by turning on their blinker, but be cautious. We relied more on each other, each rider waving on the rider behind him if it was still clear to pass. Posted speed limits were ridiculously low ... but who cared when there was no one enforcing them?
* Bob Golly is some guy who convinced Daniel to go on this trip.
I had invited Danny and tried to convince him to go, but he was certain we'd be
murdered by drug lords or butt-raped by banditos or thrown down a mine shaft by
Indians craving my pocketfuls of Lifesavers. Anyway, Danny didn't trust us. It
was only when some guy named Bob Golly told him it was perfectly safe that Danny
agreed to go along. We're still not entirely convinced that Bob Golly exists,
even if every time we got to doubting the story, Danny would pull out his cell
phone, show us the phonebook entry, and dare us to call him. It was a running
joke the entire trip: "Well, Bob Golly says..."
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Brian A. Hopkins
http://bahwolf.com |
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Metalwkr
Senior Member
Joined: 23 May 2006 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 257 |
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Posted: 27 Apr 2007 at 8:57pm |
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Dang it Brian......Quit tossin us bread crumbs and git on wit it!
This is a really great report....I feel like a kid at christmas wait'n for the Sandy Claws dude.....
Ed
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Ed Jones
Mine 96 XR 650L Hers 2009 Kawasaki Super Sherpa |
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