Chacahua is a very isolated in many ways, and quite autonomous as well. Although Chacahua is only an hour north of Puerto Escondido, it’s as though time has stood still in this quaint village situated on a point inaccessible by car and engulfed by a crocodile infested, mangrove entwined brackish lagoon. Internet existence in non-existent, and there’s only one phone for the whole town located at the convenient store. When someone has an incoming call the clerk gets on the megaphone and announces to the village “Jose, your uncle Pablo wants to talk to you”, or something to that effect.
Eva Tommy and I on our way to Chacahua |
Once we got there, we found a reeling right-hander that made Barra look like a kiddy pool. It’s a full-on barreling wave that, on the right swell, will take you on the quarter mile ride of your life. I counted one guy get five solid barrels on one wave, I managed to get barreled three times on one wave which is definitely a landmark in my surfing career. Unfortunately the swell only held for the first two days and then dropped off dramatically. Chacahua needs solid swell to really work, so after three days we decided to head back to Puerto Escondido which always seems to produce regardless of swell conditions.
Kay and Zac, I know one of you can identify these beautiful birds, I sure can't |
I got to thinking, and then concluded, what leg does this gringo have to stand on? He doesn’t live there, he just takes a jet-fuel guzzling plane down to this spot, acts like he owns it, and then probably goes back to the states to drive his SUV around L.A. or something. I wanted to tell him to back off, but you can’t change people’s minds, and trying to usually just ends in another pointless altercation. And really who cares? It’s an Iguana, I saw the guy eating a fish for dinner the night before, both animals part of a food chain with us at, or near, the top.
Maybe he was just a jerk, or maybe he really felt like he was going to change this guys mind and help the environment. My conviction is…well I don’t know what my conviction is, I just felt like this overzealous gringo should chill out and let the guy kill the Iguana if he wants, it’s not like it was a Silverback Gorilla or something. You see Iguanas everywhere, there like reptilian rats as far as I’m concerned; heck I already ran one over with my own gas guzzling tourist chariot. Just something to think about when your traveling, there’s so many different ways to live, and as long it ain’t bothering me I figure leave well enough alone, especially when your on someone else’s turf.
The sunset from Dan and Carmen's |
Tomorrow were driving to Saladita in the state of Guerrero to stay at a house my neighbor Steve from Santa Cruz owns and has so generously allowed us to use while surfing one of the longest left hand points in Mexico. Thanks for reading!