Saturday, July 7, 2012

East from San Diego...


At times, San Diego came to seem quite characterless and boring and so, tired of kicking around town, a few of us decided to go for a trip to the east. Vincent headed out first, taking the rural bus out to a place called Lake Morena, up in the mountains about three hours east of the city. Crystal followed the next day and I joined them the day after that. Crystal had made plans to help out at the farmer’s market so her time was limited but Vincent and had talked vaguely about going for a bit of a bike tour after taking the bus as far as it goes. We were interested at traveling on, having a good chunk of time before the group would be able to leave, and especially excited at the prospect of making our way into the desert.


Vincent took a bike on the bus and when Crystal met up with him they spent their time hiking and exploring around the lake, amidst the boulder-strewn hillsides of the mountains. I got on the bus at three the next day, with one of the trusty old mountain bikes from the boat. The bus left town and wound up through the hills. I was having quite a pleasant time, excited about traveling to new and exciting places when I heard a collective gasp go up from the bus passengers and out of the corner of my eye saw my bike performing a riderless wheelie and subsequent backflip across the other highway lane, narrowly missing a speeding car. The bus driver pulled over and I ran out across the road, grabbed the damaged bike, and, feeling quite dismayed, put it back on the bike rack.


My spirits were low and I was feeling quite frustrated at having a grand unknown adventure go out the window (or fly off the rack as I should say) so suddenly. The bus driver was apologetic and when we stopped for a break at a country store, I surveyed the damage. By the looks of it, aside from bent handlebars and a scuffed seat, the only injury to the bike had been a severely bent rear wheel. I asked the kid at the register in the shop about where I might find a new wheel, to no avail, and stepped out to have a look at the bike alongside the bus driver. The driver was very apologetic that bike had managed to squirt out of the rack and mentioned that he might be able to look around that night for another wheel in Tecate, the Mexican border town in which he lived. Shortly thereafter a woman, one of the few passengers remaining on the bus, spoke to the driver in speedy Spanish, telling him that she had an old bike at her house that I could use.


We all got back aboard and the bus drove on. When we got to the woman’s driveway, the driver told me to be quick and I ran up to the house to find a few old mountain bikes out back. I picked one up and the woman, just arriving at the house told me to take the whole bike, as I was in a hurry and she didn’t have any wrenches to remove a wheel. So back down the driveway I ran, throwing the derelict bike on the rack and we were off again. Before long we came to the end of the run and off I went with the two bicycles, greeted by Crystal and Vincent. We spent the night at the lake and the following morning, fixed the bike, and saw Crystal off on the bus back to San Diego in the morning. The bus driver took the other bike back to the woman and I thanked him greatly for his help in turning around such a disastrous situation. Knowing well that we would potentially be headed for hot sunny places, I had brought four large white pillowcases to be used as head-wraps of some sort and we donned these and our sunglasses, ready to hit the road.


All this was the beginning of a grand adventure that first took us up and up into the Cleveland National Forest and back down to the town of Julian. Going was slow and squeaky, as we were both riding old mountain bikes from the boat. We were also carrying our gear in backpacks rather that panier bags but despite all this, our spirits were high and our appetite for adventure and new places kept us happily pushing forward. After a long day of riding we slept out in the hills above Julian and came into town early in the morning. 

At this point we found ourselves at the divided between coastal San Diego and the desert over the mountains to the east. We had been himming and hawing over the idea of going down into the desert since dreaming up the trip. Everyone we met, from San Diego to Julian, with whom we shared the idea told us that we’d be crazy to head into the heat but it was all too easy that morning, with the allure of the desert below, to head down the winding road to the east. We filled up all our jugs of water and down we went.
Our travels took us miles and miles downhill into dry country, desolate valleys, and intense heat. By 10 am, we had reached our destination: the town of Borrego Springs. We celebrated our arrival with some ice cream and then spent the rest of the afternoon and early evening waiting out the intense heat of the day at the Anza-Borrego State Park Visitor Center. We had a lot fun hanging out with the staff and learning about the park. Around six, we headed out on the road again bound for Coyote Canyon in the northwest corner of the park. We rode past acres and acres of citrus orchards as well as dry wasteland that was at some point agriculture land of some sort. Soon enough the road turned from pavement into sand and we pressed on.


Riding in the sand was no easy task and as the sun went behind the mountains, a fierce headwind sprang up. We continued on in the dark for some time, fighting our way up the road, but before long we gave in for the night, not quite knowing our destination or how far away it was. There was little shelter to be found from the strong gusts but we were able to tuck our heads behind a sign by the side of the road and get a little sleep, in spite of the light of the moon.




In the morning we awoke before the sun and rode on and in just a few minutes came to a place where a running stream crossed the road. Incredible! To find running water in such a barren place was truly astonishing. Even though we had heard that water might be running in the canyon, it was something different to see in in person. 


We continued to the end of the road and spent the rest of the early morning hiking about, past an oasis and along the creek, exploring the incredible, surreal landscape before returning to the first water we had found.


Here we passed the afternoon, soaking ourselves in the creek and hiding in the bushes under the shade of a makeshift tent structure. When the time came, we got back on our trusty steeds and headed back for Borrego Springs. This time we took a different route, past a different camp that fortunately for us still had running water in the faucets despite the season. We rode out of the camp and found ourselves again surrounded by orange orchards. Thinking that we could take a shortcut by riding  through one of the orchards (on a road that looked no different than the roads which we were to travel on) we cut through a line of trees and started riding, only to be caught moments thereafter by the farmer himself! At first quite angry with us for trespassing he berated us for being on his property and for being out in the desert on bikes at this time of year. He escorted us back to the spot where we entered the orchard and I apologized again as we headed for the cut. He was checking on an enormous irrigation pump and as he did he explained his anger which stemmed from the disrespect and damage caused by people who had trespassed before. We expressed our sympathy and got to talking a bit more. Soon enough he offered to drive us out to the main road (the destination of our original shortcut) as he was headed that way anyways. On the road out he stopped to let us pick a few handfuls of figs from one of his trees and told us even more about his place and life. By the time we reached the road we were quite friendly and we stood around the truck talking, sharing the stories of our adventures as well as hearing the stories of his life and the wisdom that he had gained. After a good long while he hopped back in is truck wished us his best and bid us goobye, all three of us expressing great gratitude for having met one another. Off he drove and we rode on. This was possibly the best trespassing experience I’ve ever had.


In all our conversation about heading  into the desert we had talked of Anza-Borrego but also of the Salton Sea. Now only thirty miles away, we couldn’t resist the continued eastward pull and we turned left before reaching Borrego Springs. A darkness fell, we rode down and down, across great desert plains, and through vast canyonlands before reaching Salton City around 9:30 pm. We were throwing caution to the wind in continuing so far east to a place much hotter and desolate than Anza-Borrego but the downhill ride made it all worth it. At dusk, as we sped down out of the mountains down to the great flats below, I could not help but feeling like we were in some prehistoric land, devoid of humans but full of ancient creatures living in a land that was still young and raw, forming before our eyes. Truly amazing.


After another celebratory ice cream at the gas station we rode several miles through the abandoned subdivisions of Salton City. The land between the freeway and the lake had been developed, gridded out with streets and powerlines, but the project had flopped for some reason and the land has been left just so ever since. We got an eerie sense from the place riding though under the full moon, pas the few inhabited houses and even one that had been burned, seemingly obvious to us, in order to get insurance money for a house that was worthless. Again we rode until the pavement turned to sand and although we could sense that we were near the beach, we stretched out our bags and fell asleep.
Know full well how hot it was going to be in the morning, we were up at the crack of dawn and continued riding towards the beach. In only a matter of minutes the lake stretched out before our eyes and soon we were standing on the shore.


Although it was only 6 am, it was already quite hot and we could smell a stench coming off the lake. The flats approaching the beach as well as the shore consisted of a very slimy mud that caked on our shoe s and smell quite foul. There were “tidelines” of thousands and thousands of fish skeletons as we approached the water, along with a number of dead birds and fields of crystallized salt. We walked to the water, tested for salinity, and quickly resolved to get out of the hellish place. We made our way along the shore and then along a road back out to the freeway. In the light, we could see even more of the crazy place: empty street after empty street named after Hawaiian island or foreign countries and vast tracts of bulldozed earth under miles of powerlines. Apparently the water level has dropped significantly since development was done as we saw boat launches that came far from touching the water and docks that lay high and dry on the mud.


When we got to the freeway, we rode a few feet up the road back to Borrego Springs and stuck out our thumb. It was now 8 am and the temperature must have been climbing up to 100 degrees. We laughed and joked about our situation, and then talked seriously, reassuring ourselves that it would indeed be possible to ride all those miles back up the hill after things cooled down in the night. All the same, this sounded like a dreadful prospect. We waited and waited, put on more sunscreen and drank more water, and then suddenly a truck stopped. The driver asked with a smile where we were going and said he could take us. With threw everything in the truck and we were off! As we drove the man told us how lucky we were because he was actually driving up and over the mountains from Borrego Springs. For several hours he talked on and on about his life, the wisdom he had gained and his views of the world. Although such cases can often be thoroughly overwhelming, the man seemed to have enough interesting things to say and life experience from which to draw. He dropped us off in Jenner and we rode down the boulder-covered hills, into the suburbs of San Diego, catching the trolley and riding all the way back into town.

For many more pictures of the trip visit our Picasa site at:

Friday, July 6, 2012

Respite in San Diego



Upon arriving in San Diego Bay we planned on staying a few weeks but all told, we ended up spending over a month on the hook. During this time, we got to know the city quite well and were able to make a few new friends. A few of us took the time to travel by land back up to San Francisco for a visit but most of all we mostly just relaxed. After our big bang departure from SF and the months of work that led up to it we were a bit worn out but hadn’t really taken the time to decompress, staying busy on our travels down the coast.


Although a bit of cleaning was in order and we had a few small boat projects to address, we hardly even did much work on the boat itself: a major gear shift from our sedentary time in Berkeley. We borrowed another bike and spent much of our time exploring and hanging out around the town and on the boat itself. We spent a lot of time in the large Balboa Park, riding bicycles and relaxing on the grass, and some of us even made a trip to the zoo. We all took the trolley to Tijuana for the day, a short scouting mission into Mexico for fun and dental work, and had time for doing things like finding mushrooms in the park and identifying them.


The cruising anchorage was just fine, well protected and safe in all regards. The drawbacks to the spot were the long row (15 minutes or so) to the dinghy dock and the noise of the place. Loudest and most constant was the San Diego airport, located on shore just over a waterside road. Throughout the day, the air was filled with the sound of jets landing and taking off. If that wasn’t enough, helicopters took off and landed at the Coast Guard Station several time daily. San Diego Bay is, of course, home to an enormous naval base and the nature of the highly militarized harbor had us feeling uneasy. Harbor Police boats would pass by frequently just added to the feeling of the place, although they probably helped to keep things mellow on the bay. What’s more navy personnel were out in large skiffs slowly motoring around calm anchorage as they worked with specially-trained Navy dolphins and sea lions. Very weird!


We were fortunate to have a few connections in San Diego, mostly through Lowell’s dear friend Pria, who he befriended in India many years ago. We spent a fair amount of time at her place and with her housemates, taking showers, using the computers, and getting to know everybody. After spending so long in the familiar San Francisco Bay, we couldn’t help but feel that San Diego was a bit of a social desert and we were happy to have a few friends.


Of great interest to me was a trip made with Pria to the International Rescue Committee’s refugee garden. Pria has been coordinating the garden for several months and we were happy to come on a volunteer day to see the place and help out with a few projects. The garden is a couple of acres a few miles east of downtown that is divided into many plots that are tended by refugees from around the world.


Some plots serve the function of a home garden while others are used to grow food for sale at farmer’s markets around town. Some of the refugees had even been contracted to grow mint by a local chocolate company interested in sourcing local ingredients.


The diversity of types of gardens and ethnicities of gardeners made for quite the collage of plots, styles, and plants. There were beautiful, intensively-cultivated beds of water spinach and other greens next to plots of more perennial-heavy, wild-looking home gardens. Of special interest were several large perennial eggplant bushes covered with hundreds of berry-like eggplants. Incredible!


We spent the morning reorganizing the collective composting system in preparation for a large operation that would accept compost from several local grocery stores, mulching bananas, spreading wood chips, and talking with a few of the other volunteers before heading off to the farmer’s market. After the market we wandered down the street and got a chance to have a look at a nursery and aquaponics system in nearby City Heights, also affiliated with the IRC. We were all quite impressed by the clean, organized, and abundant operation. Thanks to Antonio for taking the time to show us around and congratulations to the IRC for running a garden program that is obviously extremely valuable to farming people from around the world who are dropped into an apartment in the concrete jungle of San Diego. As Pria explained though, the need for gardening space greatly outweighs the space available in refugee communities. It seems the same is true for all people in places like San Diego!


We whiled away the rest of our time in San Diego doing much of the same. I had great success busking (playing banjo and singing) up in Balboa Park and had a lot of fun while making a pile of dollar bills over the course of our last few weeks in town. Although it was nice to relax, we all began to get a little restless in the setting of San Diego and so a few of us decided to head east to see what adventure awaits us in the mountains and beyond.

Fo more pictures visit our Picasa site at: https://picasaweb.google.com/103461058936929561161/SanDiego