One problem with hitchhiking. In a metro area of 3 million (in this case, Puebla) without subways, you’re going to lose the first couple of hours trying to get to a decent spot beyond the edge of the city.
I was lucky enough to get a ride to the main (and quite hectic) bus station. After several well-intended misdirections, I found the gate for a bus to a (presumably) good spot on the road to Oaxaca. I bought my ticket. “The bus leaves in 50 minutes,” said the ticket guy. I didn’t want to lose another hour, so I walked out to the buses and asked a few drivers from the same company. “Leaving right now,” said one, and I boarded. I find this rather typical in Mexico. Everyone is incredibly kind and eager to help, but it is difficult to help with much clarity because the whole world is winging it. It ain’t Germany (though I love both equally – and both are great for hitchhiking).
The bus dropped me right at the toll booth of Hwy 150D. The toll takers were busy, so I just walked through the gates. Like everyone else. Yes, inside the toll booth of what we (in the US) would call a “controlled-access highway,” there is a mini human ecosystem on the shoulder: tables set up selling tacos and jugos, guys with flags offering to change tires, hitchhikers (me), people walking around selling M&Ms, toll workers on break, and some people just hanging out.
It took me 5 minutes to get set up, getting my highway info out so I could stuff my daypack into my backpack, get my OAX sign ready, stake out a spot at a safe distance from the vendors and such. Lots of big trucks coming through in the right lane, making it difficult. But in just 15 minutes, someone risks life and limb to cut through the trucks. A fiftyish couple, Lalo and Erika, heading from Xalapa to … yes, to Oaxaca. One ride. Hitchhiking is too easy in Mexico. Going through Guanajuato state and then here, I have never waited longer that 20 minutes for a ride, the people on the side of the road were all helpful (none of the hawk-eyed judgement leveled at hitchhikers in the US), and my drivers all relaxed and friendly, including couples more often than not (as opposed to the US, where it’s almost all single, blue-collar men that pick you up).
At Tehuacán, we turn right and go into the mountains. Lalo and Erika speak almost no English, for which I am grateful. My hitchhiking immersion strategy is working. The flora changes dramatically from agave and organ pipe cactus to big trees. Then we slope out into white sandy, rocky terrain dotted with individual trees standing dark and green in relief. Then red clay terrain. Then fully green mountains again. We are getting near Oaxaca.
“Watch out for the negra,” says Erika. “The yellow mole and the red one, the one they call ‘coloradito,’ are great. But the negra, the negra is spicy. Really spicy.”
I doubt anyone can beat the dark, chocolaty mole I had in a middle-aged woman’s home in Puebla, but since I’ve been in Mexico, half the people have told me that Puebla has the best food and half say Oaxaca. I would find the negra not spicy at all, but in any event, I took Erika’s comment under advisement.
(One final note about the people of Oaxaca — and my new friends there can reply as needed. They are among the nicest, friendliest, most relaxed people I’ve met, but put them behind the wheel of a car and it’s like their hair is on fire. Visitors beware when crossing those streets!)
PUEBLA
ON THE ROAD
OAXACA
(Click images below for links)
We’ll be back in Oaxaca in October/November (via plane, not hitchhiking 🙂) and we are so looking forward to it. I never warmed to moles, but most of the other food was incredible. Did you get there in time to see the Guelaguetza? Looking forward to your updates!
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Guelaguetza was up on the hill, but I never made it. Too busy wandering the streets in town. You can email me through my About page if you want any tips on free art exhibits, best craft beer place (they make their own mezcal there, too, but if you’ve been to Oaxaca, you probably have your mezcal spots already), etc. You may know more than I do, but feel free to ask (however, I’d be lying if I didn’t say my highlights were hitchhiking and mole) 🙂 Gary
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So are you safely home so that I don’t have to worry about you hitchhiking alone in Mexico? (The fact that I don’t know you is irrelevant here.)
But I did enjoy both words and photos—especially the look out the window that appears to be a lovely framed landscape.
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I am back home in New Orleans for now, Annie. “Safely,” though, is relative. I think my odds of being shot in New Orleans are about twice as high as in my adopted Mexican city of Guanajuato and about eight times as high as in Aachen, Germany, where I lived last year. Glad u like the pics 🙂 Gary
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I hitchhiked to Chiapas in the 70s.
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Oh man, the golden age of hitchhiking!
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There were hitchhikers everywhere you looked back in those days.
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I actually hitchhiked into San Miguel de Allende a few weeks ago, up in Guanajuato state, where Neil Cassady died beside the railroad tracks in 1968.
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I had to look up Neil Cassady. He was quite an adventurer. I used to hitchhike purely for adventure. And I sure found a lot of them.
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me too 🙂
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Do you hitchhike in the US too?
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About 50,000 miles (35 states) between 1974-1993. Then after a 23 year gap (post-2016), I’ve hitchiked 12 countries but only one stretch from New Orleans to St. Louis in the US.
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My US experience is similar but nothing more recent than 1995. I don’t meet many people who have done this much.
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Yes, David, hippies aged and things tapered off by the 1990s. I’m out here trying to make hitchhiking cool again, but I have my work cut out for me, especially in the US. (In Europe, I cross paths with young hitchhikers, and in Mexico I see few hitchhikers but the culture seems quite easy for it.)
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I cracked up at your, “Visitors beware when crossing those streets!” The safest place to cross the street here in Oaxaca is in the middle of the block — that way you can see them coming!
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Hahaha. That sounds like the voice of experience! (Perhaps like me, you found the traffic lights on the intersections amazingly well-camouflaged as well.)
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Not only well camouflaged, but with all the one-way streets, nobody stops before making a right or left turn. And then there is the condition of the sidewalks… Never walk and gawk at the same time. 😉 But love it here!!!
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Hahaha. I love it there too. Can’t wait to go back. First stop when I leave New Orleans, though, is Guanajuato.
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