With the hut built by the end of the second or third day, we
settled into the Baja routine. Awake with the sun, about six,
unable to sleep because of the flies, reading and playing in the
shade behind the hut while mom made breakfast and dad fished for
dog food, swimming before lunch and looking for shells on the
sand, exploring for sea creatures trapped in the rocks as the
tide went out, mid-day snacks and naps, afternoon swimming,
short hikes in the hills, now known as the Three Brothers,
behind the hut. In the evenings we read and the boys drew or
sometimes painted smooth round stones with water-colors. We ate
early dinner, read some more and occasionally listened to a dim
radio station floating south from Utah and broadcasting old
Whistler mysteries. We'd get the boys ready for bed, play some
quiet music and drift off to sleep under the magical influences
of Las Cuevitas.
It was a wonderfully warming experience to become this close to
each other again; to rely on ourselves not just for a ride to
school or to take care of elbow scrapes or to provide a warm hug
when the need arose, but to actually participate on a moment to
moment basis in each others lives. We had all the privacy we
needed individually and collectively, but isolated as we were we
began to find other needs. Simple things were missing from our
environment. The business and bustle was gone, friends were
gone, television was gone. These were major adjustments. But
we took them together in stride. Reading was the order of the
day. Music was the dominant nighttime medium. The four of us
shared the time and space equally and alone.
After the hut was complete I was looking for a simple,
short-range task that would give me an objective each morning,
until I had adjusted enough to need no assignments. I decided
that our beach would be improved with a set of wide and deep
stairs going down the several steep meters to the water.
Presently we were stumbling through the smooth and rounded beach
stones, which were slippery and awkward.
On an exploratory trip into the local hills I had noticed an
outcropping of flagstone. Early one morning I took the Land
Cruiser back to this place and loaded twenty or thirty large
flat rocks, fifty pounds apiece, into the back. I drove back to
camp and dumped these onto the smaller stones in front of the
hut. Before it was too hot I had worked them into stairs in the
stones, steady enough to walk on. For several mornings I
repeated this process. We soon had a rock staircase five meters
wide and leading the short slope to the sea. The rocks were
large and heavy enough that the small waves didn't disturb them.
By the time we needed to do laundry we had built a large fire
pit into one side of the stairs and would carry seawater easily
to the large bucket used for heating it for showers and clothes
washing.
In the eleven years since Mary Ann and I had last lived at the
Bay, before the boys were born, the village had expanded
considerably. Ice had become almost always available.
Electricity was generated by the Diaz family and available to
the rest of the town. A second generator was about to be
installed and as much of the village as wanted it had power
during the day. The hours of operation for the generator were
from six in the morning until ten at night. Ice was usually
trucked in from Ensenada, but it was offloaded into smaller
refrigerated local storage and sold to the locals from there.
Every few days we would take the ice chests to the village and
fill them. They would sit under the counter in the kitchen
chilling sodas, kool-aid, juices and beer and whatever fresh
food we had. When the ice melted it was drained off to give to
Lassie to drink or to rinse ourselves with after our baths in
salt water.
By the time we had been there a week Michael and Kevin were
bored and having trouble settling down. They were used to TV
and computers and school and friends and always having something
to do. Looking back on this fact I wonder if all the computer
games we let them play back home had been a good idea; they were
too used to being entertained constantly. They needed to learn
to entertain themselves.
We needed to make a trip to Black Warrior for supplies, a full
day's trip, there and back, through the desert and across the
peninsula. We left early one morning, arrivied two hours later
and made our purchases just before the stores and shops closed
for siesta. We asked several locals where we might buy live
hens, because eggs were hard to come by in the village at Bahia.
We were told that there was a lady who sold chickens in Laguna
Manuela, twenty kilometers north and on the way home. When we
passed through Laguna on the way back we found her house. She
had a number of chickens for sale and we agreed on two dollars
each and she spent half an hour chasing hens around her sizable
property with a hooked stick to grab them by the leg. Soon the
boys were racing after the hens and several local dogs got
involved. By the time we had the chickens they were not too
happy. We put them into a large cardboard box with a cover and
tried to find a corner of the Land Cruiser that was out of the
sun for their ride home. By the time we made the two-hour drive
back to the hut the poor birds were exhausted from the heat. We
opened the box and they wandered in a daze around the beach for
a moment, and then scampered for the nearest shade. That
afternoon we built a small roost that we could close them into
during the nights. This was early in our stay. The coyotes
that hounded us shortly had not yet discovered the enticing
entrées we were unwittingly offering up. But for the mean time,
the five hens and single rooster, Hot Stuff, made themselves at
home. By that evening, well before sunset, they all found the
roost and wandered in on their own. Chickens may or may not be
smart, but they are certainly programmed.
After they adjusted to the climate (we had relocated them from
the west coast where the weather is relatively cool and damp
during the nights, to the east coast where it seldom drops below
eighty in the summer and is relatively dry) the five hens
produced an average of four eggs per day. We were all
entertained by the foraging they did on the beach in the small
piles of seaweed that accumulated along the tide lines. Lassie
chased them at first but never tried to hurt them and soon grew
bored. These animals too we integrated with. There are so many
things to experience when you aren't just too busy.