Sometimes there are reasons why there are roads less traveled…..car sickness is one reason. Pat had a tough time handling the twists and turns of this “highway”. Not unlike her first day out on a sailboat. Seasickness.
We had read where Hwy 175 is one of the better roads from the Pacific Coast to Oaxaca but it was the windiest road we’ve ever driven on…and that’s saying something since we drove all those roads in the Yukon and Alaska. There were literally 4-5 turns every minute and we knew it was going to be a long day when it took 3 hours to cover 60 miles. The complete 145 mile route took 6 hours. The road straightened out the last half of this journey. We went from sea level to 9,000 feet then back down to the Oaxaca City elevation of 5,000 feet. At the very top of the climb was a beautiful city built on the side of the mountain.
Photo: Finally the road straightens out.
Prepared not to get lost, like we usually do when arriving in a large city, we had our two main resources on the computer ready to guide us: Garmin Laptop GPS and Garmin Map Source. I don’t’ think we could get by without these but it never fails that we get lost for several reasons: the cities street signs are posted on the sides of buildings, often not clearly posted or not posted at all, if posted the street signs are obscured with dirt, paint, lack of maintenence, grafitti or vandalism, and our GPS and Mapsource do not tell us which roads are one way.
After the first 5 or so cities we find this is the norm and we have found a way to maneuver our “coche” through the Mexican city streets. My driving has taken on a new edge and margins of misses are about an inch. Pat just closes her eyes and trusts me completely. Many times the streets are so narrow that we have to pull in the side mirrors just to squeeze through. I find it challenging and exciting. For protection we bought a Virgin de Guadalupe medal and hung it from our mirror.
Photos right: The reward of Oaxacan food and Mexican bread!
Early morning empty streets, by 10am the venders line the sidewalks and autotraffic fills the streets.
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