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Traian
10-14-2005, 11:13 PM
I wanted to mention this because I figured y'all would be an appreciative crowd. My only other post was about a big trouble I'm having with my car (and it hasn't been the only one!), but I feel I should write this becaue I've been terribly impressed with my 540.

Last month I went on a trip to Merida, Mexico, which is in the Yucatan peninsula about 3h from Cancun; I live in Toronto, Canada. It was a long trip. By the time I got back home, I'd driven more than 11,000 km, 4000 of which were over some of the worst roads I've ever seen in my life (possibly an explanation to my other thread :)). I saw 190 km/h a couple of times on smooth US interstates, and regularly drove 1500 km (~950 miles) in one day. On the way there I made the entire 5500 km crossing in 4 days, and passed through Detroit, Cinncinnati, Nashville, Memphis, Little Rock, Dallas, San Antonio, Brownsville, Matamoros, Tampico, Veracruz, Villahermosa, Ciudad Carmen, Campeche and finally Merida. The Bimmer ran flaulessly, I added about 1.5L of oil (pretty sure I overfilled the crankcase a couple of times) and that was it. Didn't even need to add air to the tires. Btw, Mexicans seem to really love the car, and I got pulled over at a couple of military checkpoints just so the guards could pour over the engine bay and interior. After a performance like that, I could forgive a lot of my car's faults for a long time to come :)

shogun
10-14-2005, 11:22 PM
Wow, that must have been a nice and interesting trip. I wish I will have time for that when I retire in a few years.
My dream is still to rent a campervan and drive thru Australia for some months.
If you have pics from your trip, please show to us.
Thanks

Torque
10-14-2005, 11:34 PM
Do show pics if you have them. :)

bimmerd00d
10-15-2005, 12:07 AM
very large thumbs up. Was it just a vacation?

uscharalph
10-15-2005, 01:06 AM
Very cool trip!

bahnstormer
10-15-2005, 09:08 AM
that is some good saddle time!

Gayle
10-15-2005, 09:26 AM
You are frigging lucky that the guards didn't trump up a charge to arrest you and keep the car. I live in San Diego and it is common wisdom here that the police there are very corrupt. My husband took our wrangler there once and almost lost it to the police.

One stolen San Diego Suburban was spotted on the evening news in its new role as a Tijuana police vehicle--Identified by the former owners by the unique do-da still hanging from the rear view mirror. Our next door neighbor had three attempts of people trying to steal his suburban to take it across the border. One time they got his suv all the way to border but the police were in pursuit so they dumped it right before the crossing. This was back before SUV were ubiquitous.

A person I know who is a body builder was kidnapped by the Tijuana police from an atm machine and driven around for 12 hours in their back seat as they tried to get his PIN number from him.

All that said, I feel safer in Mexico than I do in LA but we make a point of taking our least desirable car across the border.

I take it that you didn't experience any "pay on the spot" tickets.

Guapo
10-15-2005, 12:21 PM
You are frigging lucky that the guards didn't trump up a charge to arrest you and keep the car. I live in San Diego and it is common wisdom here that the police there are very corrupt. My husband took our wrangler there once and almost lost it to the police. ... All that said, I feel safer in Mexico than I do in LA but we make a point of taking our least desirable car across the border.

Tijuana is not representative of Mexico as a whole. The border towns are notoriously bad (Tijuana, Juarez, Nogales), but the interior is not as bad. Wonderful people and a beautiful country. My wife is from a very rural area of Mexico, and we have never had any problems other than being stopped by Federales doing random drug/weapons searches. Never stolen anything.

Just using a little common sense (just like in the US) can go a long way toward protecting yourself and your property.

Gayle
10-15-2005, 01:36 PM
Tijuana is not representative of Mexico as a whole. The border towns are notoriously bad (Tijuana, Juarez, Nogales), but the interior is not as bad. Wonderful people and a beautiful country. My wife is from a very rural area of Mexico, and we have never had any problems other than being stopped by Federales doing random drug/weapons searches. Never stolen anything.

Just using a little common sense (just like in the US) can go a long way toward protecting yourself and your property.


In general I agree but have known lots of people who have had trouble driving to Ensenada. And Mexico doesn't have anything on the US in terms of corrupt cops--look at New Oreleans. Not trying to bag on the whole country.

Paul in NZ
10-15-2005, 01:50 PM
and here was me thinking that 1100 kms plus a drivinr training day plus a visit to my mums house betwwen 3 am saturday morning and about 7 pm on a sunday night was crazy!


My dream is still to rent a campervan and drive thru Australia for some months.
But what about the Australians ?:p

Jeff N.
10-15-2005, 01:55 PM
... the only problem we had was trying to find high octane gas to keep our reworked high compression 2002 happy.

I don't really think Baja California really qualifies much as "Mexico" with the exception of quiet towns like La Paz, etc. I spent several weeks working in Mexico City and found it an amazing place full of wonderful and generous people...

The Americans I saw in Ensenada were mostly awful. Rich California kids driving expensive new cars and basically treating the town like their own little party haven. It was embarrassing and if I was a local I think I would have wanted to take their money and just get rid of them quick. Not that this excuses lawless behavior (on both sides)

...ah..'nuff of that. Back to cars for me.

DCR
10-15-2005, 03:27 PM
But what about the Australians ?:p
You do realise the New Zealand is the 7th state of Australia dont you? :p

Traian
10-15-2005, 03:56 PM
Thanks for the comments y'all, I will post some photos in a bit, but they'll probably pretty murky as my scanner sucks.

I crossed the border in the east at Matamoros, which is not a pleasant place by any means, but no so bad as Tijuana from what I've heard. I was stopped by the police 4 times (aside from the military checkpoints) and it was usually because I was stranded at the side of the road trying to read an upside down map. They were always helpful and respectful. In fact most people I met were far more friendly and helpful than anyone would be at home (one storeowner volunteered to leave this shop and drive in front of me till the outskirts of town where the highway branched off). Most parts of the country are really beautiful, especially the centre and south, and in some places even the roads are entertaining, especially the narrow twisty bits through the mountains. The bureaucracy is mind-boggling though, and for some particularly bad stretches of road you even have to pay expensive tolls.

Traian
10-18-2005, 01:52 PM
Sorry to bring back an old topic, but here is my guide:
http://www.fantasycars.com/sedans/column/index.html
I took all the photos save for 2 (you can tell mine by the dark muggy fuzzy look :)).

uscharalph
10-18-2005, 01:56 PM
Sorry to bring back an old topic, but here is my guide:
http://www.fantasycars.com/sedans/column/index.html
I took all the photos save for 2 (you can tell mine by the dark muggy fuzzy look :)).
Nice write-up!

Gayle
10-18-2005, 02:01 PM
Lovely write up and pictures. Could you share the story about when you got to use this helpful phase? "Hay un pollo en mis pantalones"

moogplayer
10-18-2005, 02:14 PM
Another San Diego resident, and I agree that the border towns can be rough. I don't think I'd take my bimmer down there - especially TJ. Drivers can be maniacs, plus theft is a major concern. The drive to Ensenada is nice but so many drunken/partying college kids take that route so it's kind of ruined it for the rest of us. I still think it's one of the more beautiful drives around.

Hats off to traian. That's an awesome trip