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Moon Handbooks: Baja (3rd Ed.)
 
 
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Moon Handbooks: Baja (3rd Ed.) [Paperback]

Joe Cummings (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 1998 3rd ed
The Baja Handbook has recommendations on eve ry hotel, motel, resort, & campground in the region, it also features restaurant reviews, details on kayaking, scuba div ing, fishing, hunting, cycling, hiking & other recreational activities. '


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

A good part of Joe Cummings' childhood was spent in San Antonio, Texas, and he ate his first taco in the 1960s in one of the Mexican border towns his family visited frequently. Joe is now the author of Moon Handbooks to Baja, Cabo, Mexico, Mexico City, Northern Mexico, and Texas. As a freelance journalist Joe has also contributed to dozens of periodicals, including BBC Holidays, Geographical, The Guardian, The Independent on Sunday, Los Angeles Times, The Nation, Outside Magazine, San Francisco Examiner, South China Morning Post, Via, and the Wall Street Journal. He has twice received the Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Gold Award, and twice been a finalist in London's Thomas Cook Guidebook of the Year awards. In 2001 he received Mexico's Pluma de Plata award for outstanding foreign journalism, for his work on Moon Handbooks Mexico City. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 540 pages
  • Publisher: Avalon Travel Pub; 3rd Rev edition (September 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1566911206
  • ISBN-13: 978-1566911207
  • Product Dimensions: 7.2 x 5.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,690,792 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Joe Cummings was born in New Orleans, and raised in California, France and Washington DC. In high school he developed a taste for rock guitar and subversive politics, playing in a succession of garage bands while publishing an underground newspaper. After he graduated from college, the Peace Corps granted his request to be posted to Thailand, where he served as an English lecturer at King Mongkut's Institute of Technology in Bang Mot, Thonburi. He later earned a master's degree in South Asian Civilization from the University of California at Berkeley, and was a scholar in residence at the East-West Center in Hawaii. His Thailand guide for Lonely Planet was the first guidebook to that country written in English since 1928. An instant success, it remains one of the bestselling guidebook ever published. He has authored over 35 other books, including coffeetable books, phrasebooks and travelogues. Joe has twice been honoured with the Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Gold Award and is also a recipient of Mexico's Pluma de Plata (Silver Quill) for outstanding foreign journalism on Mexico. He never gave up the guitar, and continues to jam regularly at clubs in Thailand, where he makes his home.



 

Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cummings Covers the Waterfront...And the Backroads, October 16, 2005
This review is from: Moon Handbooks Baja (Paperback)
You couldn't ask for a better travel book on Baja. I found myself reading it repeatedly on my trip, not just for hotel and restaurant info, but like a novel--for the sheer pleasure of it. The sidebars and thumbnail histories are so well-researched and expertly delivered that I rank it not just among the best travel books on Mexico, but among the best books of any kind. The concise discussion of the ejido system and of the changing rules for foreign real estate purchases are just two small examples. Cummings touches on every aspect of Mexican society and its interaction with the people to the north, in addition to giving the essentials on gas stations and bus schedules and airports and resorts-all in the delightfully understated style that has become his hallmark.

Especially useful for me were his mention of side roads that lead away from the transpeninsular highway into the mountains of the interior. I took a number of them and often found pristine desert, unchanged for centuries. The route from Loreto to the Mission of San Javier was particularly good. The landscape was similar to Arizona, except that many canyons had oases of palm trees with only the cries of roosters and goats breaking the silence so that you could feel you were in a bygone time in ancient Mexico or Mesopotamia. Cummings calls the road suitable only for 4wd high clearance vehicles. It must have been improved since, because I drove it with an economy rental car with wheels the size of oreos and a hefty 3.5 inches of clearance. If one proceeds slowly and carefully there is no problem, though I would not have gone on if there were any sign of rain.

The best beach by far that I found was that of Todos Santos. It is very clean and unsullied by automobiles, probably thanks to a sign near the parking area that not only warns against taking vehicles onto the beach, but also notes the amount of prison time assigned to violators. And the waves are fabulous: 15' rolling tubes that explode into 40' towers of spray, a natural drama one can watch for hours with only pelicans and the occasional crab for company. It's typical of Cummings' sense of the drama of travel that he tells the best way to get to this great beach: "follow Calle Topete across the palm-filled arroyo...the first sand road on the other side...turn left just before the low rock wall...", but let's you find out on your own what a delight the access road itself is: an inconspicuous lane that runs about a half mile between high stone walls on one side and a line of mango trees on the other, ending in a tunnel through a thicket of bamboo that emerges onto the parking area (shaded!). Bicycles and walkers are on an equal footing with autos, and the tiny scale of the sandy track almost compels you to roll down your window and say hola. Ojala that it stays that way.

Playa San Pedrito, a dozen miles to the south, is also charming and unspoiled, but far from any place to buy food and drink. Punta Conejo, sixty miles to the north, is the most desolate section of Pacific coast I've ever walked. In three days I saw not one person, nor one bit of shade of any kind: no palapas, no trees, no cliffs...even the towering cacti keep at least a quarter mile between themselves and the surf at all times. If Mexico were a nanny state, one would be required to purchase a parasol before venturing onto the beach.

The beaches on the other side of the peninsula are also very nice, but lack large waves, the Sea of Cortez being much like the Red Sea, a huge body of saltwater separated from the ocean by miles of desert. I was there in September, and I often had to get out of the water to cool off, rather than the reverse, which holds true on the Pacific year round. The eastern coast of Baja is probably ideal in January and February. Here, too, Cummings is comprehensive. Nothing escapes his notice, with the exception of the exceptional qualities of the Hotel Moro just outside Santa Rosalia. Senor Espinosa's rambling hacienda style hotel is a work of art. Cummings makes unjustly short shrift of it in calling it "tourist-oriented". I would call it beauty-oriented, with its elegant terrace overlooking the water, and its aviary, and its cool pool set in a profusion of tropical flowers. It's a far greater value than the "venerable Hotel Frances", where you pay twice the money for a room in the midst of a lovingly restored industrial plant far from the water.


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Concise, accurate and something for everyone., May 17, 1999
By 
Stephen H. Olsen "Captain Steve" (Wichita, Kansas when not at SEA!) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Moon Handbooks: Baja (3rd Ed.) (Paperback)
As a 30 year traveler and home owner in the Baja, I have quite a collection of guide books covering the entire peninsula. I was suprised to find that Joe Cummings has written one that covers everyones interests. There are too many travel books that concentrate on the authors specialty ie. geology, boating, history etc. However, Cummings gives a book that works from the budget traveler to the exceptionally rich. His historical, ecological, and other interesting facts makes the book one that I recommend for the first time traveler to the seasoned baja explorer. More importantly his information on pricing to condition of the roads is current which so many Baja guide books are lacking. A big applause for Joe Cummings for writing a good read and and an accurate travel guide for us all.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must have for any trip to Baja, June 26, 2000
By 
Marceau Ratard (Metairie, LA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Moon Handbooks: Baja (3rd Ed.) (Paperback)
This book is just great. It starts out with a good basic overview of the area. I used the book on a recent trip to La Paz. The maps are excellent and very easy to use. The prices are a bit off at times but still in the range. The hotels are broken down into price categories, that was very helpful. The book helped with getting around by bus and the restaurant sections gives good accurate descriptions. This book was just super. If your going to Baja, anywhere in Baja, get this book it is well worth the price.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
The first maps of Baja California, drawn by 16th-century Spanish explorers, depicted it not as a peninsula but as an island. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
temporary vehicle import permit, right point break, palapa restaurant, peninsular coast, white seabass, mural sites, comida corrida, forgotten peninsula, full hookups, zona hotelera, northwest swell, southwest swell, sportfishing trips, sportfishing fleet, palapa roof, guided fishing trips, reef break, mercado municipal, route taxis, state tourist office, state tourism office, eastern escarpment, carne asada, fish tacos, adobe ruins
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Baja California, Cabo San Lucas, Sea of Cortez, Todos Santos, San Diego, San Felipe, San Ignacio, Cape Region, Mexico City, San Miguel, Guerrero Negro, San Francisco, Agua Caliente, Isla San, San Antonio, Sierra de la Laguna, Santa Maria, Cabo Pulmo, San Quintin, Santa Rosalia, San Carlos, Calle Zaragoza, Espiritu Santo, Avenida Revoluci, United States
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