Well, we had to find a place to stay.
I had read about a nice little beach hamlet north of
Bucerias, called San Francisco, so over the mountains and up the coast we went. We found a very crowded, claustrophobic
San Francisco all right, with expensive places to stay. The tourists had found it. Drat.
There was nothing for it but to continue to drive north. The boys were still lost to the world, unaware of the growing discomfort Deb and I were feeling at not really being sure of what wewere doing. Over another mountain, down into a valley we drove. I came to another hamlet, and just decided to turn left. Right away, the vibes were better. This was a quieter, cleaner, less touristy place. Half a mile into town I came to a nice looking bungalow, called Tortuga, The Turtles. It had the most beautfiful VACANTE sign out in front! Better, it had prices that were half what we
were paying in PV! Not a word of English was spoken by the elderly manager, but he showed me a nice two room bungalow with a nice kitchen, back patio, right on the pool. Sold. The room wouldn't be ready for an hour, could we come back? Somehow the idea was conveyed. So off to the beach we went. The boys we depostied under some palms trees, took a swim and a walk, and then headed back to claim our room. And there we stayed for three comfortable, interesting, relaxing days. Aside from the nail I took in a tire, requiring the services of the local nail-in-tire-repair guy (No, really. He knew what he was doing!), it was all good. Colin became the bungalow’s residence translator, and Deb, Colin and Jeremy took part in cooking enormous Mexican breakfasts: refritas, fresh hot corn tortillas from the local tortilla factory, fresh mango and pineapple, eggs with hot peppers, and mucho hot salsa. Camp coffee, Mexican pastries, and guacamole. Feasts, my friends! Feasts.
4 comments:
That's awesome!!!
I was wondering how Colin would end up liking it in PV. I recommended he check it out while down in Guad since it was just 5 hours or so by bus to get there. You guys look right at home in your little orange bungalow. I wish we had those in Michigan.
Just out of curiosity... how did you know the chef was gay?
Swish.
Plus, we were most definitely smack dab in the middle of PV's gay section. The boys had already been propositioned a dozen times by the time we arrived.
PV is Mexico's Wisconsin Dells, if you know what I mean. Worth a quick look, then get outta town. Lo de Marcos, where we ended up, was much more to our liking.
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