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Between these two guidebooks the
entire Baja Peninsula is covered from tip to tail with many options to construct
hundreds of different trips for 'years' of riding. For the true hardcore
off-roader these are a must have!
Baja GPS Guidebook Volume 1
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For the most part, this guide will lead you through
some really awesome trails avoiding ranch gates
(where possible) and keeping you off private
property and national parks (where you shouldn't be
anyway). There is an environmental section with
warnings and the usual "give a hoot, don't pollute"
speech that we hope to cultivate no matter where you
are riding. We list the best places on the border to
take your broken bikes and bodies, but don't look to
the guide for pansy-butt four-star luxuries unless
you're looking for where to get the coldest Negra
Modelo!
This guide was formulated to get you off the main
dirt roads and onto the fun stuff like faded two
track, dry washes & rivers, single track, no tracks,
mountains, beaches, deserts, Baja 1000 courses and
Baja 500 routes, YOU NAME IT; by providing Baja GPS
routes. Some routes are point-to-point and some are
loops that will return you to your starting point.
You can plan day trips, weekends, weeks, or months
with this GPS guide.
Included in Volume 1:�
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Instruction on Global Positioning System
navigation with the guidebook
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58 GPS routes from the border to San Ignacio -
Northern Baja
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Written Course Descriptions with mileage and
waypoints
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GPS Routes and Waypoints (for your GPS)
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Topographical log map - each "leg" is shown in a
different color (design new routes every time by
linking different legs to new areas). You can
design hundreds of different one-way or loop
routes.
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Skill level Ratings from basic to expert (1 to
6+)
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Warnings and special tips
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About the starting and ending destinations
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Information on Baja, politics, and staying out
of trouble
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Gasoline locations
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Needed equipment
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Water concerns
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Environmental Issues & respecting Baja as an off
roader
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Yellow Pages with border hospitals & off-road
connections in the USA
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About upcoming GPS navigation events in Baja
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And some pretty funny stories and photos (color
and black & white)
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The Guidebook Tab Names:
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Border Crossings
Bahia de Los Angeles
Catavina
Gonzaga
Highway 1
Laguna Hanson
Mike's Sky Rancho
Mine/Calamajue Junction
Ojos Negros
Puertecitos
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Rancho La Ponderosa
San Felipe
San Francisquito
San Ignacio
San Matias
San Vicente
Santa Veronica
Santo Tomas
Valle de Trinidad
Yellow Pages
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How it comes:
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8 1/2 X 11 Size
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Shrunk wrapped with 3-ring binder holes (buy
your own binder)
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Each tabbed section represents a starting
location, which is separated by tabs for
easy use
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58 Course description charts have waypoint
names, mileage, and descriptions and are
designed to fit on the handlebar map holders
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238 pages of everything an off-roader would
need to know about traveling Baja, learning
to use the GPS with the guidebook (also see
GPS Cheat Sheets for
Garmin or
Magellan), photos and stories, and 58
GPS routes that can be inter-connected
making up hundreds of different loops and
routes.
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Baja GPS Guidebook Volume 2
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The V2 Guidebook is a supplement to
V1 and is an E-book (a book on CD). You'll print the
book and add it to Volume 1.� You will have preference
on paper type, font, size, colors, and there will be a
plethora of suggestions that will make this version
extremely flexible for your needs.� You must have V1 to
understand, use, and organize V2 (it adds routes to the
guidebook).
Volume 2 will include �NEW
routes in the� NORTH from:
Rancho Santa Veronica
Rancho Tecate
Mikes Sky Rancho
San Vicente
San Quintin
It will also add "THE VISCIOUS
CIRCLE" ( CENTRAL BAJA ):
Puertecitos to Catavina (over the Mnt. single
track)
Catavina to El Rosario (single track on west coast)
El Rosario to Puertecitos (gnarly rocky 2-track to
gnarly rocky single track)
*or reverse these routes!
SOUTH:
Where V1 stopped at San Ignacio,
routes�continue south�to Cabo leaving:
San Ignacio (awesome RTE you probably don't know-
2-track & single track)
San Juanico
Mulege
Loreto
Ciudad Constituction
La Paz
La Ventana
Todos Santos
Cabo San Lucas
*the last three make a loop so you don't have to
backtrack!
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| Why GPS Guidebooks?
A statement from the author. |
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"We started the Baja GPS Guidebooks
because we wanted to keep people safe off-roading in Baja,
Mexico. While that has always been the main course, a lot
has developed beyond this mission. We spend most of our
time researching private property (and gather permissions in
areas like Santa Veronica for our Events) and try to keep
the peace between off-road pleasure and the increase in
Baja's wealth, land development, and community growth. We
research and publish only the areas we feel are safe for
travel (unlike illegal plantation areas and private
properties that do not wish your presence). We keep you on
safe trails and lead you in a path without locked gates,
dead ends, and warn you about potential terrain dangers like
unexpected sink-holes and 2 way traffic areas or surprise
blind turns, cliffs, and other obstructions. Baja is a 3rd
world country and travel there should be well thought out.
We aim to gift off-roaders all the critical information one
could study prior to your trip and offer safe, accurate, and
simple routes leading you in directions you may never have
found without us! The guidebooks offer a kind of treasure
hunt fun with a plethora of options to loop epic rides all
over the peninsula. With just novice GPS navigation skills,
our routes move you fluidly without needing to stop and look
at a map. Not only do we keep it safe, accurate, and simple
but we make it affordable too! Compare our guidebooks
($125) with hundreds of inter-connectable routes to the
cheapest ONE TIME 3-day Baja tour ($2,500). If you plan to
take a self-guided tour in Baja or just want to learn some
new routes you may not already know, the Baja GPS Guidebooks
are the best".
Our Statement & Quest
Changes are bound to occur in everything.
Life isn't about careers, money, pleasure, or concerns, it's
about how we handle all of the above. Attitude counts no
matter what we do in life. Act POSITIVE, communicate
POSITIVE, and react POSITIVE. Keep trying, nobody is
perfect; that is our quest.
Here are a few tips along with many
you've heard before. PLEASE use them no matter where you are
(especially Baja):
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1. Share trails -
Discriminating against other recreations only hurts our
fight to continue keeping trails open to the public.
Sharing is an ancient formula to resolution; a basic
rule we were all taught by our mothers.
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2. Smile! A good attitude goes a long
way, even if the other person isn't playing the same
game.
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3. SLOW Down for oncoming
traffic, hikers, mountain bikers, animals, cowboys,
and Lizards. Smile and wave. This is sooooo
important.
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4. Use Hand Signals - It's an old
law that isn't used enough. If you have 3 riders
behind you, hold up 3 fingers to oncoming traffic so
they are aware of how many are behind you. Each
rider after the first should hold up 2 fingers then
1 and the last person should hold up a fist (zero)
to show they are the last one. EVEN Spanish speaking
individuals can understand; it's universal. The more
we use it, the safer we are.
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5. Understand Private Property -
It changes all the time and it's hard to know,
especially with single-track, what is private and
what is not. Research your areas; know where you are
allowed by asking questions in the area. If you make
a mistake, always stop for people waving you down.
Apologize and understand your limits. Ask for
permission, if possible, and take no as an answer if
you are unwanted. People are cool if you care, but
they still may not want you there, and it's their
right. Our GPS Event routes are on private property
and we spend months gathering written approvals from
each ranch owner. We announce the trails are not
open to common users and we appreciate that they are
not being used after events (our route from 2 years
ago are grown over and hardly used). Our guidebooks
are specifically designed to keep you out of areas
you are unwanted and off private property.
Unfortunately, property is being bought in many of
our popular riding areas creating new issues all the
time. TO THIS DATE, THERE ARE NO ROUTES THAT HAVE
BEEN CLOSED DUE TO OUR GUIDEBOOKS OR EVENTS! Please
watch for updates per each guidebook on this site
for new information.
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6. Be a Tree-Hugging Motor-Head -
While recycling may not be the long-term answer, it
is the best way to handle waste, especially oil,
antifreeze, and other toxic fluids. PLEASE find out
where your nearest recycle center is and use it.
Baja's waste management is pretty grim and recycling
there is bleak. Ask the cantina, local garage, gas
station, or grocery what to do with toxic waste.
Baja's remote areas burn almost all wastes whereas
major cities have other programs. You will find
Baja's proper disposal if you ask. Dumping toxic
fluid on the ground is inexcusable and tossing it in
garbage bins in major cities puts employees at risk.
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7. Support Your Sport - As we
continue to experience hatred from the extremists,
keep a balanced attitude. It takes large groups to
make impact and that means we have to stick together
as positive trail users. Don't play the blame game,
just get involved, urge others to implement these
ideas, and support your sport so our voices can be
heard loud. Be a member of the Blue Ribbon Coalition
(http://www.sharetrails.org), AMA (http://www.ama-cycle.org),
and/or NOHVCC (http://www.nohvcc.org). It is all of
these associations that keep our trails open and
fight for our ability to recreate legally. Get on
the newsletter list for "American's for Responsible
Recreational Access" (ARRA) at http://www.responsiblerecreation.com
. Check their site to get informed quick and easy in
lay-terms! They also have easy links and sample
letters making it easy to stay involved. REMEMBER,
it takes "all of us" to make a big enough impact to
keep public lands open (mountain bikers, hikers,
motorists, equestrians, 4X4's, and picnickers). Make
friends.
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8. Buddy Sport - There is no "i"
in "team". It takes two (minimum) to have a safe
trip and nothing less. Be safe.
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9. Pass Information On - If you
see a fellow activist breaking these common laws,
reach out and educate them. Helping one another be
better consumers, off-roaders, and public land users
creates constructive patterns. Support one another
and help create an important standard of positivity.
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10. GPS is environmental,
provides security and safety along with the
guidebooks, and offers you a safe, accurate, and
simple resource to Baja. Support your sport by
keeping a good attitude while accepting other types
of off-road vehicles, navigation, and new ideas.
© 2008 BajaGPSGuide.com All Rights Reserved
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