Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Let's Stay in Pie de la Cuesta - or not - Next Day to Puerto Escondido - But there's A Protest Roadblock So To Oaxaca

Sunday, March 1, we were all set for a short driving day along the Pacific coast, so we headed from Zihua to Pie de la Cuesta. We arrived and negotiated a price and were waiting an hour for the room to be ready and when it was the price went up 25% so we left and headed further south.

Pie de la Cuesta
The drive was beautiful and we found a couple of hotels we just wouldn't stay at so we ended up in a small town on the beach called Playa Ventura. There had been a sign advertising a hotel that looked great. We went and even though there were only two cars in the lot there was no room at the inn for us. It seemed strange, but we had passed a number of other suitable places so we headed back into town and stopped at a place.

As we were asking about rooms and pricing a Mexican couple came in and inquired as well. She told them the type of room we were looking for was 800 pesos - about $45 - and sent her husband to show them the room. We asked if there was another room and she quoted us 1500 pesos for a lesser room. By now we were getting the impression that the color of our skin was a factor so we headed down the road to another hotel.

The lady there was actually happy to see us and offered us a room at a fair price with AC and WIFI and she had a restaurant across the street as well. We had been looking for a place with AC because it was in the mid 90's that day. We got a "bienvenido" wave and welcome from the group of neighbors she had been talking to on our way to dinner, and felt more at ease.

With that behind us we headed to Puerto Escondido where we have been before, and hoped to meet up with some folks we had met at the Monarch Reserve and pay them back for sharing their wine with us. We were cruising along ahead of schedule and planned to stop at the market in Pinotepa Nacional for some mole which we had the last time we went through there 14 years ago, but were stopped 6 kilometers short of Pinotepa by a random protest roadblock that stopped the road heading that way.

We waited an hour and a half and did some housekeeping stuff before deciding that we could instead head to Oaxaca up Mexico 125. The mapping software said 7.5 hours which seemed long, but we headed out at noon. I lasted about an hour with Pam driving on the curvy, potholed highway before I was about to be car sick. She let me drive which keeps me from feeling ill and I spent the next 4 hours getting us from kilometer marker 198 to marker 70 - yes, 128 kilometers in 4 hours or just shy of 80 miles!

Here are some pics we took along the way.




















When we reached the hotel at 5 PM everything in the back of the van was tossed about everywhere. We grabbed the essential bottle of wine, cork screw, cups, cooler with dinner provisions and bathroom bag and headed into the room to recover. After bottle one along with dinner, we decided to clean the mess and repair and improve the pack before heading back in for bottle number two.

The challenging drive was spectacularly beautiful and we only wish we could have taken more pictures, but there really was no place to pull off and the beauty was something you would need to see for yourselves although the road is a nightmare to navigate with at least 200 speedbumps to add to the fun.

The hard work of the day before paid off in a short shy two hour drive to Oaxaca for a light breakfast and coffee, a trip to the ATM for cash and a city walk which ended up with a parade of unknown origin, before heading a little out of town to a peaceful, friendly campground with a few other van-travelers, where we sit drinking beer and working on this post.

Enjoy the pics we did get and we wish you all peace and love and promise more soon.





















How can you pass up a pastry when they look so good!  At least we've gotten down to splitting one...




We finished our walk in the city by running into this parade.  Pretty cool...but not sure what it was about!






Such pretty street and so many beautiful churches.




















Such a wonderful, peaceful little campground.  

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