Baja Trip Report
Overview:
Rode my `93 Kawasaki KLR 650, single cylinder thumper, from
Arkansas to Santa Barbara, California then to La Paz, Baja California
South, then back to Arkansas. 6,700 total miles with no major
problems.
Motorcycle Preparation:
Aside from normal maintenance before any long ride, I
installed stronger bolts holding my rear sub-frame to the main frame
since adding hard saddlebags and top box loaded with tools, spare
parts, camping gear and clothes would put considerable stress on this
weak link of the frame. Also spooned on a new set of "el
cheapo" Duro
HF904 Median Dual sport tires with heavy duty tubes. Changed the fork
oil to 15 wt. to stiffen it up. Installed a headlight ON/OFF switch
and battery voltage monitor so I could use my electric vest and
gloves when required. Bike already had a skid plate, radiator guard,
highway pegs, tall factory windscreen, center stand and Corbin saddle
installed.
Phase 1: Arkansas to the Tijuana/San Diego border
Rode the super-slab I-40 the entire way since I was in a
hurry to get to the West Coast. After stopping at the Big Texan in
Amarillo, Texas for a ritual steak dinner, I noticed the rear Duro
tire was showing some unusual wear. Most of the center knobs on the
tire had cracks at the leading edge base of the knobs. These cracks
were about 1/16" deep and 1/8" wide and ran the width of the knob
itself. Tire were inflated to 28 psi front and 32 psi rear...hmmmmm.
Thought about sending them back with a nasty note once I got to Los
Angeles but never did.
Next interesting event happened just West of the Texas/New
Mexico state line. I pulled off the super slab onto old Route 66 at
one of my favorite rest stops, an abandoned motel/caf /bar that
offers shade, wind protection and a quiet place to rest. As I was
traveling up the off-ramp, the engine sputtered due to lack of fuel,
I thumbed the lever over to "Reserve" and nothing happened! A
flashlight inspection of the fuel tank showed about 2" of gas in the
bottom of the tank and I could clearly see the hole for the reserve
was covered in fuel, so what's the problem? Seems the vacuum
operated
plunger in my fuel petcock was stuck not allowing reserve fuel flow.
As I was contemplating a little roadside fuel tank removal/repair a
fellow motorcyclist on a BMW GS1100? pulled up. He had left the
highway to explore Indian ruins and noticed my dual sport bike and
decided to ride on over for a chat. Glad he did! I laid the bike way
over on it's left side to get some fuel to transfer from the
right
side of the tank to the left and set off down the road with my
"chase
rider" following. That technique worked for 12 miles. Tried the
same
thing again only this time actually laying the bike over onto the
left saddle bag, that gave me another 6 miles...then nothing. BMW
rider rides to the nearest gas station (about 10 more miles down the
road) and returns with a quart water bottle filled with gas. This
gets me to a fuel station. Thanks Brett! You meet the nicest people
when you run out of gas. We ride together to Tucumcari for a Mexican
dinner to help repay his time and kindness. Tucumcari is the
"town
that time forgot" on old Route 66 and one can find a very
comfortable
motel room for under $20, one of my favorite stops.
Now nearing Flagstaff, Arizona and have been dodging rain and
dark clouds all day. About 30 miles east of Flagstaff, I can see the
storm front is heading straight for me so I pull off the highway and
put on the rain suit and electric vest. Riding into the storm,
I'm
dry but getting cold fast. It's then I notice the snow almost
down to
the roadway. I can't tell if I'm getting snowed or sleeted
on, but
all the same, it's wet and cold. My fingers are frozen and can
barely
feel the tips but I ride on because the semi-trucks are hectic,
(whatever happened to the concept "Knights of the Road"?)
the
weather is getting worse and I figure it will clear as I lose
elevation. Around Williams, Arizona, the skies clear and it gets
almost warm! Yeah! Peel off the cumbersome rain gear and follow Route
66 along my favorite stretch to Seligman, Arizona, another "town
that
time forgot" on old Route66
Rest of the ride to Santa Barbara was uneventful unless you
count getting lost in Palmdale...ha! While visiting my best friend in
Santa Barbara, I replaced the "new fangled" vacuum operated
fuel
valve with the "missing reserve" with an old fashioned manual
type
from a `83 KLR 600, which fit perfectly, end of my reserve fuel
problems! Duro rear tire is still cracked but can't tell if they
are
getting worse, decide to ride them until the knobs fly off and then
cuss Duro for the rest of my life, I just love adventure!
Crossing into Mexico was easy at the Tijuana/San Diego
border. I was using Clement Salvadori's book "Motorcycle
Adventures
Through Baja" and Neal Davis's book, "Motorcycle Journeys
Through
Northern Mexico" as guidebooks. As I was dismounting the bike at
the
Mexican immigration station, another KLR rider flew by in a full
wheelie. I took that as a good omen for the trip! Getting my tourist
card was no big affair (go to the most northern most office in the
immigration complex), simply showed my passport, payed a few bucks
and stamp, stamp, I'm legal. The temporary importation papers for
the
bike were a different story however. What neither book mentioned is
the Banco Ejercito office where this paperwork must be done was
located three blocks west of the immigration offices. The nice
immigration folks told me to just go ahead and leave my bike parked
in front of their offices (the equivalent of the US Customs search
area) and they would watch it, besides, they told me, they had guns
to keep anything "bad" from happening to my
bike...alllllrighty then!
The immigration guy even left his cushy office to personally walk me
to the Banco Ejercito's offices. We enjoyed a nice cold cerveza
since
it was a long walk and thirsty work! The Banco Ejercito was your
equivalent of our Department of Motor Vehicles but more
helpful/friendly/prettier women. A slight glitch in my paperwork
injected some adventure. Seems my ownership and registration papers
(must have the originals and not copies, but you will need to hand
over one photo-copy of each, copies readily available at Banco
Ejercito) had "Chuck " on them while my passport had
"Charles". A
cute woman in a tight uniform (gotta love those Latin women!) Took me
to the `head manager's office (also a good looking woman who
seemed
to enjoy her job. US DMUS should take note). As I was convincing her
that "Chuck" and "Charles" are the same name and the
addresses on
both sets of papers matched, she noticed my driver's license
had "Charles" imprinted but I had signed it
"Chuck"...problem solved,
a yellow highlighter made "Charles" and "Chuck" the
same person! Used
my VISA card as required (American Express not accepted here) to pay
the $24.50 fee and my bike is now legal to ride anywhere in Mexico
for 180 days. Insurance is not required (is this a great country or
what?) But I did buy one day's worth on the US side just so I
would
have the impressive looking sticker on my windscreen and changed some
money in the office (Thanks for the good advice, Rick!). I'm
cocked
and locked for the trip South!
Heading South:
Took the Tijuana/Ensenada toll road out of TJ because it's
easier and faster and I have traveled to Ensenada hundreds of times
and wanted to get past this "Americanized" part of Baja as
quickly as
possible. Rode down a dirt road to Salsipuedes (about 30 Km north
from Ensenada) to enjoy an old favorite surf spot and take a
break/nap among the olive trees. Ensenada hasn't changed any for
the
better. Now looks like any seaside tourist town in California to me.
Lots of traffic running south from Ensenada to Santo Thomas and then
started thinning out quickly. Nice two lane highway through tomato
and strawberry fields. I'm now in virgin territory for me.
Between
El Socorro and El Rosario, the highway closely follows the coastline,
beautiful! Imagine riding from Los Angeles to Santa Barbara without
passing through a single town and actually enjoying the ocean view,
free from houses! Nice!
At El Rosario, the road leaves the Pacific Ocean and heads
inland. It's at this point the"Baja Highway" built in
1973 starts. I
immediately fell in love with this road. It has a Route 66 feel to
it. It was built to lure the rich gringo dollars to Baja yet the rich
gringos never came in great numbers, they all fly to Cabo San Lucas
now. The Mexican government built huge gas stations, restaurants and
hotels but they are now mostly abandoned. Even though Clement's
book
is only 5 years old, do not use it to plan gas stops as some of the
places he recommends are now closed. The road itself, is two lane
and well maintained, some occasional potholes but usually well
surfaced (it puts I-40 in Arkansas to shame!). I could have easily
ridden the entire route on my Honda ST1100 but would not have been
able to enjoy side trips on dirt roads leading to deserted beaches
without the KLR (too sandy and rocky for the ST). Like Route 66, the
Baja Highway used 1930's technology of road construction. They
didn't
blow holes through mountains for "safety radius curves" but
contoured
the terrain around them in the most delightful twisty way. Just when
you are getting bored with straight line riding through the desert
along comes a mountain range and twisty, turny fun! Oh, and by the
way, when they say "30 km/hr" for a corner, they mean it! I
also
noticed the severity of the corner is not only marked with speed
signs but also lines of "bots dots" and/or painted lines
across the
road prior to the curve. Rule of thumb, the more rows of "bots
dots"
or painted lines, the tighter the curve. Just when you are about
motion sick of twistys, the road straightens out into the desert
again. definitely an "E- ticket" ride! The Duro tires stick
very well
in curves on pavement and the KLR handles aggressive cornering well.
Have I mentioned no traffic, no speed enforcement and excellent road
surface? Look, lean and roll on the throttle!
Stopped for a late lunch at La Espinita (the Little Thorn), a
former bordello on the border between Baja California North and Baja
California South...excellent food. They still have the rooms out back
but they are now for road weary travelers and not "customers"
anymore. There is a huge "modern art" sculpture of the
Mexican eagle
(I guess) marking the state line but is enclosed by a new military
compound, so you can't take pictures of it.
I began to notice lots of high speed off road racing type
vehicles on the highway. Seems lots of racers were in Baja to set-up
for the upcoming Baja 1,000. Lots of nice hardware running down the
road at unbelievable speeds. The course was marked in places and I
rode about 75 miles of it. Great to imagine myself as Malcolm Smith
in the film "On Any Sunday" as I road across the dry lake bed
of
Laguna Chapala. I enjoyed many off road excursions to secluded
beaches and the KLR and Duro tires handled the terrain with ease. The
Duros still have all knobs intact and the cracks haven't seemed
to be
getting bigger, maybe they aren't junk after all. Note to self;
if
you pack heavy, the rear end tends to wag during quick direction
changes. The KLR is too heavy, fully loaded, for serious off road
antics, just remember, the throttle is your best friend! If in doubt,
gas it! (Thanks for the great advice, Bill!)
I never rode past dusk as the sides of the road were littered
with dead cows, horses and donkeys, who were apparently standing in
the roadway at night soaking up the contained warmth from the
asphalt. I stopped for night #1 in the center of the "Natural
Central
Desert Park of Baja California" in the almost ghost town of
Catavina
at sunset. There are two hotels in this town, the "La Pinta",
a chain
all over Baja that caters to "rich American" tastes and the
"mini-
hotel Linda" which caters to everyone else. Room was $7/night and
had
a clean bed and bathroom with hot water. The manager warned me the
electricity went off at 22:00 but I didn't think to ask the
important
question of when it came back on. Arising at 07:00, I realized that
no electricity also meant no water! Lesson learned. Note: the Pemex
fuel station in Catavina has been closed for some time but there are
usually guys in trucks with drums of fuel that can be purchased for
twice the regular cost. Same is true at the intersection of Punta
Prieta. Be sure to fuel up at El Rosario. Your next "regular"
station
is just north of Guerrero Negro...you have been warned!
Traveling through the "Natural Central Desert Park of Baja
California" was an experience to see. There are species of cacti
there that exist nowhere else on earth. The landscape looked like it
had been lifted from the set of "Star Trek". Weirdest plants
I have
ever seen. My favorite was what looked like an upright single 40'
tree limb covered in green hair with a bush on top. I think I saw a
total of three other vehicles in 90 some miles. I passed a few
military checkpoints but they all waved me through without stopping
me. Clement mentions a particularly dangerous curve/arroyo which I
had to stop and look at. I counted 23 crosses, signifying highway
deaths, dating from 1973 to last year. About ten wrecked and rusting
vehicles littered the small arroyo. Very spooky, I considered
spending the night to see if there where any ghosts lurking but the
place just creeped me out. Long stretches of road with no cops or
speed limits but also keep in mind, no ambulances or hospitals
either. Late afternoon found me in a wonderful section of mountain
twistys when the Sea of Cortez came into view. Wow! Deep turquoise
blue water and brilliant white sand beaches, right off a post card.
Spent the night in Mulege (pronounced mule-ah-hay) in a cheap hotel,
should have camped in the desert instead. The owner insisted I park
the bike in his courtyard but the only entrance was through the
attached restaurant. In the middle of the dinner rush, he moved
tables and patrons so I could ride through to restaurant to park the
bike in the courtyard! Try that at Motel 6!
The road from Mulege to Puerto Escondido was the prettiest
section of the entire trip. It was a desert in full bloom. All the
desert bushes were a lush green and so tightly concentrated, you
could barely see between them. Brilliant flowers of red. orange and
purple added color to the vibrant greens, not to mention the Sea of
Cortez in the background...just awesome! This three hours of riding
was worth the entire trip. Nothing much between Puerto Escondido and
La Paz except flat desert with an occasional twisty mountain section
thrown in so you don't go to sleep. Be sure to wave back at the
soldiers manning the security checkpoints as they wave you through,
imagine how bored they are in the middle of the desert.
La Paz:
Just before you arrive in La Paz, you pass by another
military checkpoint (waved through) and an immigration stop just
afterwards. This was the only me I was asked to show my tourist card.
No problems, the immigration man was very friendly and spoke English.
Bien viaje! La Paz is a fairly large working port city but easy
enough to navigate on motorcycle. Most Latin countries are used to
seeing motorcycles and acknowledge bikes are legitimate road users.
Lane splitting is considered your right when you ride a bike. Passed
two motorcycle shops where I got free stickers for the bike and a can
of chain lube (normal US price). Spent the night in a "hippie
hotel",
Hotel Yeneka, for $21/night. Interesting rooms as each is completely
painted with a theme as depicted by the room name on the door. I
stayed in the "Sun and Moon" room and one wall was painted
with the
sun flowing into the opposite wall painted with the moon. Very arty
in a 60's sort of way. The courtyard was packed with "art
junk" and a
1930's truck body. The owner insisted that I park my bike in the
courtyard for safekeeping but I chained it to the outside post
instead. Note to self; avoid saddlebags that make the bike too wide
to fit through a doorway. La Paz is also a tourist town and has a
great walkway at the waters edge where you can enjoy the view of the
clean bay and fishing boats. Lots of "gringo" type bars and
excellent
seafood restaurants. Enjoyed my first lobster burrito (lobster tail
rolled in a tortilla with lime sauce). Three lobster burritos with
rice, beans, salad and beer for $12...burp! Another street vendor was
selling "roasted corn in a cup" so I had to try one. He took
a
roasted ear of corn and removed the kernels, mixed them in a plastic
cup with a sour cream/cream cheese type stuff and toped it with some
grated white cheese. You can add chili sauce as you like. Sounds
strange but was sooooo good! Too bad we don't have cool foods and
street vendors still in the States..our loss. By the way, I ate
whatever I felt like, drank anything I wanted, including "natural
flavored waters" (the Mexican equivalent of kool-aid but made
with
real stuff like pineapple, strawberry, vanilla beans, even hibiscuses
flowers!) And never got sick.....your results may vary. Oh...did I
mention, the usual price for a cold beer ran about 60 cents? Just
stay out of the "gringo bars" where you will pay upwards of
$2.50/beer.
My plan was to take the ferry to Mazatlan to ride the road to
Durango and visit the Copper Canyon. Plans change as did the ferry
schedule and prices. The cargo boat left the next afternoon. I could
ship my bike but not me. The regular ferry "might run in three
days"
but they were "having some problems"with it, and the cost was
double
what the guidebook suggested (it was $235, which included passage for
the bike, a "tourist class" stateroom for me, non-private
shower and
bath, and a meal for the 19 hour voyage) Damn...too much time and too
much money for my plans.
Heading North:
Rode from La Paz to the seaside port town of Santa Rosalia on
the Sea of Cortez where my maps and guide books said another ferry to
the mainland, Guaymas, was available. Ha! Outdated information again!
The ferry office and ship was there but hasn't run for two months
and
probably never will again. Spent the night in this old French
colonial copper mining town. This was a "real Mexican" town
with very
little tourist influence. All the old French mining equipment and
smelter is still there and nobody said a word as I explored about.
This is a working port town but takes on a definite party atmosphere
at night. Most folks stay up in the town square until 2 am or so. I
stayed in a ratty old motel that reminded me of one of the boarded up
ones on Route 66. Price was $10/night. This was the only time I used
my sleeping bag instead of getting under the hotel sheets. This town
is unique in that the town church is a metal prefab building designed
by Mr. Eiffel of the Paris tower fame. This church was originally
displayed at the Paris World Fair in 1889 and then shipped to Baja
where it is still used daily.
All of the military checkpoints that waved me through on the
way down now stopped me on the way back. No big deal, in fact, I
looked forward to them. Imagine being a young soldier stuck in the
middle of the desert with the "important duty" of searching
cars for
contraband. I speak Spanish and am retired from the Army so every
stop turned into a social conversation (often with free coffee and
food). Traded my camp flashlight for dinner with one ill-equipped
squad who didn't have a working flashlight to use at night.
Another
platoon sized element had their bunk beds neatly made up and
footlockers dressed right dressed in the desert sand but lacked a
tent! Sure sucked to be them! At no time did I ever feel threatened
and everyone went out of their way to be friendly and helpful.
I'm
not recommending this, but taking a pistol would have been no problem
as no one ever searched my person and the "searches" of my
luggage
was just a formality. Warning!! Taking of ANY firearm or ammunition
into Mexico is a very big deal (prison time) if caught! I will say
that I never felt the need for my usual "personal protection"
and
felt much safer in Baja than I do in my hometown. No
"banditos", no
cops looking for bribes, no attempted theft. In fact, the cops gave
me the impression they were there to help. Never once saw one hiding
on the side of the roadway to "catch a speeder" as they do in
the
States. Ride down a one-way street? No problem, the cop simply waves
you the other way. Going too fast in town? The cop gives you
the "slow down" signal, he knows the speed bumps will do they
rest.
Radar speed traps? We don't need no steeeeenking radar or speed
traps, the curves take care of the careless/stupid people. Viva
Mexico! My only traffic problem the entire trip was being cut off in
La Paz by a SUV driven by, I swear, a cell phone using woman....guess
they are a scourge everywhere!
Did the "Iron Butt" 725 mile ride from Santa Rosalia to Los
Angeles in 11 hours. Big surprise at the border. Since I was in a
hurry, I didn't cross at the mellow town of Tecate as my usual
practice, I chose the busiest crossing point there is, the
Tijuana/San Diego border. The wait on Saturday night at 20:30 was
about 3 hours, but not on a motorcycle! While at the end of the line
of cars, I noticed the street vendors who hawk stuff between cars
were all motioning me forward. Lane splitting on a bike is a very
accepted practice in Latin America. The vendors would even knock on
car windows to ask them to move over so I could lane split through.
Once, at the head of the line, the U.S. Customs officer stopped the
next car in line and motioned me through! Total time (including
a "refreshment" before I entered the line of cars) was 7
minutes!
Viva Mexico! Bikes rule!
Within my first half hour "back home"on the super slab to
Los
Angeles, I was cut off by cell phone yacking idiots too many times to
count, paced by the California Highway Patrol and hassled at the
immigration checkpoint near San Clemente. So good to be home in
a "civilized society"! Note to self; I DO now feel the need
for
my "personal protection".
California to Arkansas
Followed Route 66 and some nice dirt sections through the
Mojave desert. Perfect sunny and warm weather! Duros still holding up
although I am making a concentrated effort to ruin them. Hard
cornering on pavement and spinning the tire every chance I get off
road, still, no bad cracks or punctures. Ate lunch in Oatman,
California on old Route 66. The road to and from Oatman is fantastic!
Imagine doing it in a `59 Ford station wagon behind a long line
of
traffic in the "old days"! Walking down the street, one of
the burros
that roam the town tried to nip me, quick punch in the nose changed
his mind but what worried me was the tourist lady who acted surprised
that I would strike a "poor animal". Guess she's never
been bitten by
a horse or mule!
Spent the night in a toasty warm and dry night in a $20
motel in Seligman. Just gotta love those old fashioned 5' tall gas
fired wall heaters! Makes the room toasty and fast, perfect for
warming up and drying out. before crossing the mountains around
Flagstaff, Arizona in the morning. Cold but no snow this time. Just
East of Albuquerque, at Clines Corner's, right after sunset, the
road
was shrouded in fog even though it was windy. Not just any fog, mind
you, but the freezing kind that won't wipe off your face shield.
Yuuuuck! Cold and dangerous! I was following a semi-truck, figuring
people behind me could see his tail lights better than mine, when the
truck slams on his brakes and jack-knives the rig in front of me.
Glad I was on the KLR! Simply hit the dirt and rode around the
smoking tires and steel, never did see why the trucker slammed on his
brakes. I found a hole in the barrier fence and just beyond it lay
the vacant access road (good ole Route 66?) that I creeped along into
Tucumcari without further road drama. Checked into the
"Americana"
motel ($19/night) and enjoyed more gas-fired. wall- mounted heat and
hot water shower with a spray pressure so strong it could have peeled
paint off the walls. Stepped into a nearby cocktail lounge to enjoy a
beer and walked into a Halloween party that was five days late. Knew
I was in the right place! Was a local chapter of the Veteran's
motorcycle club throwing a late party with a live band...what luck!
One biker had actually ridden his motorcycle to the affair in 35
degree weather...his Harley looked cool parked next to my filthy
KLR...ha! Nice folks and a grand time was had by all.
Time to "Iron Butt" again from Tucumcari, 710 miles, back
home. Was disappointed seeing solid road construction on I-40 from
the Arkansas state line almost to Little Rock Baja Highway #1 was in
much better shape and moved faster too. Cops everywhere with radar,
wish I was back in Mexico! Thank goodness for kids in SUVs acting
as "radar deflectors"! No drama getting home except I really
missed
the weather protection of my ST1100 during the rain and cold
temperature.
Epilog:
The following week, I changed the oil, adjusted the chain and
removed all the hard bags and went local fire road busting. With the
luggage and hard bag weight off the rear, the KLR handles OK in the
dirt. The Duro tires are still sticking well on dirt, sand and rocks
(took them down a few stream beds trying to tear knobs off) and still
have plenty of tread to stick to the pavement on a spirited twisty
ride home. The cracks never did get worse since the first 500 miles
and no knobs tore off. The tires now have over 7,000 miles on them
and have at least another 3,000 miles of tread left. There is some
minor cupping of the front but I actually think it works better in
the dirt this way. The rear is squared off (understandably) but
plenty of center tread left. I surprises me to say, but I will buy
another set of Duros to replace these. The stick well for my style of
pavement and dirt riding, aren't noisy on the pavement, last
decently
and are inexpensive.
The Pelican case saddle bags worked well but were too wide
to fit through motel doorways. The GIVE case top box was just the
ticket for clothes and personal items, easy to remove to walk into a
motel with. The Wolfman tank bag is a godsend for convenience and was
easy to remove to prevent theft while the bike was left cable locked
to a post. Since my Mexican paperwork is still good for months,
I'm
planning on returning to Mexico right after Christmas. I need to see
the Copper Canyon, the road to Durango and get a Mazatlan tan! Bike
is all ready to rock, anyone interested?
Lessons learned:
1) All Mexican kids know the English word ,"Wheelie".
2) I feel "more freedom" in a "less civilized"
society than in the
United States.
3) The Kawasaki KLR is a very suitable bike for "combat
touring".
Lacks weather protection.
4) Baja is awesome for it's roads, it's scenery and it's
people.
5) Guide books are simply that, don't use them to plan. They make
great background info.
6) Cell phone users in moving cars suck! People who drive slowly in
the "fast lane" suck! Sneaky Highway Patrolmen with radar
suck!
People who "dress up" like "bikers" but never ride
over 15 miles at a
time suck!
7) Thumbs up to:
"Official" Mexican women in tight
Cheap/cold cervezas
"Helpful/friendly" Mexican cops and soldiers
Fellow motorcyclists on the road, who stop to chat.
Route 66 and the history it represents
Gas-fired, wall-mounted heaters in cheap motel rooms.
PS: I have pictures of this trip posted @ ????????.
Ride like your life depends on it!
Chuck Chiodini
Heber Springs, Arkansas
chiodinc@...
baja photos
baja trip repor t (long)
Chuck -
Great Ride Report!!!
Makes me want to take the trip!!
Thank you!
Paul
-
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2002 7:27 am
baja photos
Follow this link for pictures that go with the Baja trip report.
http://photos.yahoo.com/bc/chiodinc/lst?.dir=/Baja+Adventure&.src=ph&.
order=&.view=t&.done=http%3a//photos.yahoo.com/
ide like your life depends on it!
Chuck
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