Beyond the Border - Riding Solo in Mexico

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[Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] violence in Mexico has increased as has the risk of going there as Mexico's drug war spills into the streets the State Department is posting an official travel alert that bystanders have been injured or killed in violent attacks in fact there in the first eight weeks of this year more than a thousand people have been victims of the Mexican drug war I've always wanted to travel in Mexico but the news reports coming out of the country are pretty grim the violence and murder surrounding the drug wars is out of control and the US State Department just issued another warning about the danger of traveling south of the border I'm a motorcyclist in a filmmaker from Seattle Washington and I'm riding alone into the heart of Mexico as a motorcyclist my challenge is to survive the rough roads ahead of me as a filmmaker looking for a story about life in Mexico something beyond the doom and gloom reports associated with a drug war and know that there are other stories out there we just don't hear them I consider this trip a research expedition of neither scientists nor anthropologists but I do have a theory I believe that people around the world are basically good at heart if my theory holds true the strangers I meet along the way will help me if not something else will happen I don't know what the outcome of this journey will be across the border in Tecate and began documenting my ride into Mexico my method is simple since I'm traveling alone on a motorcycle I have to film everything myself the adventure the riding and my interactions with people I meet along the way I've never done anything quite like this on my own and I'm a little nervous about the trip ahead of me I'm avoiding the main highways when I can in part because I want to challenge myself but also because I want to experience life in the more remote parts of the country I'm not interested in tourist destinations but I am concerned about riding into the middle of a drug growing operation here in the backcountry accidents and mechanical breakdowns are also a concern and I plan on filming these as they occur there that's a significant chunk of barbed wire there is wrapped up inside the chain and there's still some more down in the sprocket here a little roadside surgery after removing the barbed wire from my chain and sprocket I continue down the road I'm looking for a place to spend the night I don't have an itinerary or any reservations [Applause] my ammo is sterling sterling sterling Hey - Nick cuantos anos vivre a sake all my life all your life and what kind of work do you do oh boy what's it like to be a cowboy you know hard this small ranch near Laguna Hansen is an ideal spot for a travelling motorcyclist like myself and it looks like I'm not the only biker who's been here the next morning ahead inside the restaurant for breakfast the family that runs this small Rancho is kind and generous and I leave with much appreciation for their assistance so far my theory seems to be holding true [Music] my next destination is off the main highway at the end of a thirty mile dirt road I didn't know there were mountains of Baja but the high plateau in the northern part of the peninsula is over ten thousand feet in elevation [Music] Mike Sky Ranch is a well-known destination for dirt bikers and off-road racers I'm looking forward to meeting some of them and having a few beers together in the evening [Music] oddly enough there's no one here except for the caretaker it's disappointing to travel all the way up to mics and be the only biker here but that's the way it is I wonder if this is normal or if they've been scared away by the stories in the news the next morning I head back down the long driveway to the main highway when I find an opportunity to get off on a side road I take it this is a dirt bikers playground but my overloaded machine is too heavy to maneuver really fast an evaporated salt lake in the middle of Laguna del Diablo it's a lot easier it reminds me of the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah where the land speed records are set [Music] [Laughter] San Felipe is a small town in the Gulf of California once a sleepy little fishing village today it's become a popular haven for American retirees in part-time residents leave a muchos años aquí on G on say on say on your take gusta San Felipe por que good [Music] [Music] from here a paved road had south along the coast past fishing camps and tiny outposts of civilization the pavement ends a little ways past a small town of cortecito and then the riding gets really spectacular every time I film a riding scene like this one I have to get off the bike set up the camera ride through the scene return to collect my gear and head off again it's a process that I'll repeat hundreds of times in the coming weeks by now I have the routine down pretty well although I'm always a little nervous to ride away and leave my camera on a tripod in the middle of the road [Applause] I found a perfect location to set up camp a deserted Cove right next to the ocean [Music] [Applause] there aren't any hotels or restaurants on this rugged coastline but that's okay with me I have everything I need to be comfortable out here all alone [Music] this is what I had in mind when I set out to explore Baja a deserted beach with a campfire right next to the ocean the only bad part of the experience is that I wish I had one of my riding buddies here to share it with me I know that they would really appreciate this place the same way that I do one of the benefits of traveling alone is that it forces you to step outside of your comfort zone and meet new people there's one person who lives out here that I've wanted to meet for a long time [Music] hi deputy this is cookie cookie hey hey although coco is a baja legend I found him very approachable and he agreed to an interview I've been here 19 years in here Conde she might tell you I open this place December 27th and 1990 after losing one of his legs in an accident Coco had a hard time making it in the city so he moved out here in the middle of nowhere a medical condition took Coco's other leg about six months before I arrived but that hasn't stopped him from living out here all alone nobody believed it coming back in here everybody said oh you know coming we'll go out there boys here they come in here I liked it at first his only visitors were those who passed by on the Baja 1000 race he became friends with many and the rest is history today Coco has quite a few visitors they come for a drink and often leave a souvenir behind John Sweeney and Kerri Speidel rode down here from San Francisco I'm on a dr 350 and john is onna KLR 650 and we left on January 17th for about two months of one row dual sport off-road and Owen Road riding what made you choose to come to ride in Baja their club members the San Francisco motorcycle club had been going down every year for years and I'd been a member for a long time and they just kept bringing back these wonderful stories about you know just what a unique and fabulous experience Baja is and so finally I I wrote in 1988 BMW 75 s the first year and the next year I bought a dr 350 and started riding with those guys off dual sport rides and then I bought the Kawasaki which of this is the third trip down to Baja and the KLR and it's remote the rural it's very rural you can you can jump off the road and you can get away from everything and but then you can come here in the middle of nowhere and and get a beer get a drinkin and you know and meet people like Coco which which seemed to be really what Baja is all about the people are just so so fantastic a little while later I got roped into helping Coco and another friend go on a water run makes you feel at home yeah it's made me feel at home you know the world here now it's your turn want me to take a picture up okay see you're helping Coco with his water run now leather guys tired coming here my house I got a thousand people like to come in here for seeing my face rigged up of cookers and go back horn this is my story this place for now I don't know what happened more [Music] after leaving koco's I get back on the main highway heading south to bahia de los angeles a spectacular bay filled with islands [Music] the road to San Francisquito is 75 miles all dirt and presents a wonderful display of desert life I ride all day without passing a single vehicle [Music] San Francisquito zweite sand beach is beautiful and there's several empty palapas for rent a claim one is my own and sleep like a baby in the morning I'm ready for a good breakfast there's only one place to eat but that's okay rice and beans with some eggs and coffee is all the fuel I need to get started getting fuel for my motorcycle is a bigger challenge there aren't any official gas stations in this part of the country here a family of ranchers is making a little extra money by selling gasoline on one of the remote roads between cities so that's the six all high speed cruising on the rough roads played havoc with every nut and bolt on my motorcycle everything rattles loose and I have to stop when one of my pan airbags becomes unattached my sleeping bag is ruined it fell behind the exhaust and melted you just can't predict what will happen on a trip like this and now I make sure to strap everything down even tighter than before this is really pretty incredible it looks like I took a wrong turn and ended up in Alaska or the far north but this is a salt evaporating pan and what happens is the ocean water is pumped in into these large flat areas where it evaporates and for this is salt and due to the unique characteristics of this landscape the readily available supply of ocean water high winds high heat it produces quite a bit of salt and it's pretty cool to ride around here this Lagoon is a special place for migrating grey whales I'd like to take a whale watching tour but I've lost a lot of time navigating my way through the maze of salt flats even though I'm riding with the GPS none of the strange roads out here are on my map a little further the scenery is completely different San Ignacio is a lush Oasis filled with date-palms in the middle of the Oasis a hotel and restaurant called rice and beans I'm born here 46 years ago and we started with this place in 1965 by my father's and now it's my turn to race this place and we tried to do the best possible tourists they love or rice and beans real Mexican food is the reason we decided with rice and beans and people like to stay like to come every year with us especially people are the rice Baja 1000 they love your place and always come back every year more and more people a mile off the main highway the road leads to San Ignacio a small Pueblo with a large Jesuit mission from the 1700s the town square is a perfect place to relax before heading south to the ocean [Music] [Applause] from here I'm heading out to the town of San Juanico the road is long and sandy and it takes all afternoon to get there [Music] San Juanico is a small Mexican fishing village on the Pacific coast of Baja when I arrived all of the shrimp boats are in scorpion Bay looking for protection from a recent storm the cantina outside of town is a popular spot for surfers to hole up and wait for the next set of waves to arrive bassist there's me relaxing surfing cervesas and relaxing a combination yeah getting used to traveling in Baja and the filmmaking is going well I find my location and set up my shots then I ride through the scene and return to collect my camera the rough mountainous landscape seems far less forbidding than at once [Music] [Applause] [Music] as I'm getting closer to the end of the peninsula I've decided to push my luck and try something different this time I'm looking for a road that can barely be called the road on my map it's listed as a primary rural route but in reality it's the worst Road in Baja or so it seems after extracting myself from a maze of trails through the brush and managed to find something that resembles the road but it's a tough one with lots of rocks and steep hills the only way to make progress is to keep moving slowing down only makes it worse [Music] what looks like a hillside covered in rocks is actually the road it's hard to get any traction once I'm stopped and I feel like I'm trying to balance a 500 pound motorcycle from bowling balls picking it up is harder than I imagined it would be [Music] a few miles later I fall over again by the third time I'm ready to give up this is really getting exhausting I think I'm gonna call it a day because I'm really getting too tired to even continue on this road and it's gonna be dark soon so the smart thing to do is going to be to try to find a place to camp here I make camp and fall asleep before eating dinner when I wake up the road remains like a bad dream but it's still here and I have to battle with it once more if I'm gonna make it out of here fortunately I'm a good deal refreshed and much of my strength is returned even if my technique isn't perfect I make my way to the top of a summit and look out at the valley below a fine reward for having survived such a difficult passage the road down into the valley isn't that hard and I soon arrive at Mission San Jose take a moonbow like a weary pilgrim [Music] there are more than 20 missions in Baja built by the Jesuits Franciscans and Dominicans in the 1700s I've heard that this is one of the most beautiful missions on the entire peninsula [Music] after the last section I feel like I've experienced enough of the bad roads and I want to get prepared for the second part of my journey so I take the main highway down to La Paz the capital of southern Baja La Paz is Spanish for the piece and it's hard to find a more peaceful city than the smell of pork near the end of the peninsula locating a good place to stay isn't difficult in this case a hostel in the center of town with secured parking for my motorcycle with great beaches and good food La Paz is a perfect place to relax and prepare for the next part of my journey one freshly-cleaned pair of pants my carburetors also need cleaning so I find a local BMW mechanic he invites me to his home on his day off he even helps me build a new pannier lid to replace one that I lost along the way [Music] after a week in La Paz I'm ready to go so I leave the city behind and board the ferry over to the Mexican mainland [Music] I arrived at the Port of Los Mochis in the middle of the night even though I've made it this far without any major problems all of my fears have returned at the thought of heading off into the Mexican mainland all alone dozens of US citizens have been kidnapped across Mexico in December this group of Mexican soldiers was found with their heads cut off and a note from traffickers warning for every one of mine you kill we will kill 10 Sinaloa one of Mexico's 31 States and the home of the country's largest drug cartels one of the major trafficking corridors the Sierra Madre Mountains which stretch almost a thousand miles from the US border all the way down to central Mexico my plan is to ride into the heart of the mountains to a region known as las barranca del cobre the Copper Canyon this is a rugged country made famous by movies like Treasure of the Sierra Madre with Humphrey Bogart villains and bandits like Pancho Villa called these mountains their home along with tribes of outcasts Indians miners loggers and ranchers in the modern world the drug war murder and kidnappings catch all of the headlines life in the Sierra Madre has never been easy and I'm heading right into the middle of it I stopped in el fuerte to gather information my source is Yvan Fernandez one of the three amigos an organization dedicated to providing travelers with information I asked Yvonne to tell me about life in the Sierra Madre Canyon Kansas is very interesting there's no law you come to many villages and there's no police they don't know they can't be police and the army just comes by every now and then you know with big machine guns in all that when they come into one of those towns that you probably visit when all men are out only females making tortillas you know in town and now that's just the way it is you know sometimes you come to a live event cheetah you know in the in a very remote los destination in the and if you're hungry well they very welcome we were very welcome to the real ranches and they give you whatever little they have beans and rice and in tortillas and in Grandpa comes you know with sandals in an ak-47 so it just leaves it up by the door like if it was a an umbrella and it's just fine you know and but yet this is the way they leave it and just as long as you don't question the the umbrella or the ak-47 you know or look at it they feel comfortable with you know have your beans in your tea and just walk walk out quickly one of the other groups living in the Copper Canyon are the Tarahumara Indians the indigenous population of the area is very interesting there are Amaury people being 70,000 they've been here for thousands of years and and a lot of people come and see them ever since the arrival of the Spanish you know the Jesuit missionaries have been trying to convert them and talking about the Romani people later on you know in the 19th century anthropologist and I came and they study them and the early 20th century as well so many books have been have been written about their Rama Indians you know naturally laughing on several occasions have written articles on on the indigenous population of the area and they are still very much the way they have been you know for ever is one of the most interesting Indian communities in the world so I would you know encourage you not to come in and see them and see them with respect understand that they have been there you know living like that you know for hundreds of years and then they have their own perception of reality they are all their own way of living and that um that a sport in miserable as they look you know and they are living in peace and and they don't necessarily have to look like us in order to to seem to to have a good life [Music] I'm leaving out birthday and riding into the Copper Canyon I'm hoping to be able to make a loop out of my ride and avoid any backtracking if possible there are a lot of dirt roads in going basically everywhere a lot of people come here you know and they they get lost definitely for motorcycle enthusiasts I would recommend it rumors of lost gold mines and buried treasure brought the first adventurers into the Sierra Madre today mining companies pull the wealth out of these mountains one truckload at a time [Music] after four hours of riding a pass-through ciabatta and the road gets even steeper by the end of the day have gained more than 7,000 feet of elevation and reached the upper Sierra snowfall is not uncommon in the winter temperatures can drop below freezing during the night although I can see the small pueblos of tzedakah wheat in the distance I decided to stay at a rustic lodge near the edge of the canyon [Music] [Music] after traveling more than 3,000 miles have finally arrived at the Copper Canyon with the depth of 6,200 feet this is the deepest gorge in North America even bigger than the Grand Canyon in the United States it's a breathtaking descent the 6,000 foot drop in elevation on a rugged Road with hairpin switchbacks steep cliffs and outstanding views and never make it out of second gear and carefully feather the brakes around every corner this has to be one of the most spectacular sections of road that I've ever been on steep sharp hairpin curves no guardrails dirt and just a magnificent view of one of the the canyons here in the Copper Canyon [Music] [Music] in the late afternoon I make it to the small city of the Rica it's hot in the bottom of the canyon and I'm exhausted on top of that the battery in my motorcycle is completely dead I'd find a small hostel on the edge of town run by an American named Keith it's a peaceful place but I'm feeling too sick to really enjoy it this is definitely not what I had in mind when I pictured myself arriving at my destination with little else to do I try to rest and reformulate my plan I wake up feeling better and proud of the fact that I made it this far all alone but I realized that I've only accomplished half of what I set out to do I'm still looking for a story about life in Mexico and I know that I'll have to find it here in the heart of the canyon but where to begin [Music] I start by walking out the door and search of anyone or anything that can help me in the afternoon my answer comes in a very unexpected way an American that I've never met or heard about before arrives and it changes everything I learned that his name is Myka true but in this part of the world he's known as caballo Blanco the white horse although I didn't know it at the time Myka is a legend in the sport of long distance trail running I asked him to tell me about life in Eureka Eureka is a small town rural Mexico in the bottom of a canyon 6,200 feet deep and it's a you know it's rough country and it's tough country and there's lots of mestizo Mexican people loggers expatriate Gringo's such as myself there's a few of us down here some people have a lot of money a lot of people don't have a lot of money but there's tropical fruit growing all over there's love the social system is people taking care of people and it's a it's a nice town mica comes to Yuri Kay every year to organize a very unique event I wanted to do something to encourage their ramoray which is star tomorrow word for foot runners and it's what they call themselves and I wanted to encourage them to continue to run free and continue their age-old traditions of running so I decided I would make a foot race it's been called the greatest race the world has never seen a 50 mile ultra marathon that takes place in Eureka each spring the race name is the Copper Canyon ultra marathon the people here have started calling it the Copper Canyon ultra marathon caballo Blanco but I just call it the Copper Canyon Oh on this seems like the perfect opportunity to learn more about the Tata Hamada and I still have enough time to explore the Copper Canyon further so I decided to leave Enrique and ride to another small Canyon City Fotopoulos [Music] [Applause] [Music] each year about 400,000 people visit the canyon most of them arrive on the Chihuahua al Pacifica Railroad the entire tourism industry in the Copper Canyon originated right here in Divisadero there's a fancy hotel and a great view of Arica Canyon kata Hamada women also come here to sell their handmade souvenirs to the tourists after 20 minutes the train leaves the station this is the only chance that the passengers have to actually see arica Canyon it's my only chance to see the train if Divisadero is the birthplace of tourism in the Copper Canyon the city of creel is the modern hub with services amenities and hopefully a new battery for my motorcycle tourism and the Copper Canyon has declined in recent months partly as a result of the global recession but also because of stories about the drug-related violence taking place in Mexico I don't I don't think that is a misconception I don't think it's a myth it's through its reality that's occurring here ago the drug gang violence and all that is is a real thing so it's certainly not happening much here in rural Mexico and in the bottom of the canyons it's happening more on highways and it's a cartel contra cartel violence is happening a lot in Juarez and and we're talking Mexico in general particularly northern Mexico despite the real or imagined dangers of traveling in Mexico and meet a couple of Americans who just rode into town from Arizona Kevin and John are on their way to Baca pilas which it's just terrible all of the negative publicity that Mexico is receiving but it's it's it's pretty much a function of the border areas you get a few miles away from the border and you're in to Mexico and really there are no more friendly people and more helpful than the Mexican people we're off to battle pilas and then we hope to do Arica Kevin said he wanted to come down here so we put the idea of the trip together ended up buying a used motorcycle which was full of its own surprises and now he is working on the three got a shitty chain that meet the famous new band chain lubricating device it's a tire entirely dude yeah it lubricates everything except the chain we agree to look for each other and got to peel us and then I get to work installing a new battery I purchased it doesn't fit right but I'm able to modify it and get it to work the road to pontipee las wasn't built until the 1970s the first half of the route it paid the second half of the breathtaking 6,000 foot descent is winding switchbacks and hairpin corners and stunning views of the surrounding Canyon [Music] [Music] in the bottom of the canyon the road follows the bots to peel off river for several miles until reaching the outskirts of the city [Music] at the turn of the century vato Phyllis was an active mining community known for some of the rich of silver mines in the world more than 1500 miners lived here and worked a network of tunnels that was 70 miles in length an early hydroelectric plant made batopilas the second city in Mexico to get electricity right behind Mexico City itself but tepee loss is spread out along a narrow road and one side of the river today less than 2,000 people live here and it's relatively untouched by tourism in the outside world [Music] I find Kevin and John at a local restaurant and we make a plan to head out the next morning getting gasoline isn't difficult but getting good directions please to be much harder turn at the house where Maria used to live now that's not a real specific way to get any place turn before the cemetery well I don't know what the cemetery other than that no complaints [Music] [Music] and the way out of town we passed the old mission at SETI bow and a truck which has been driven off the road [Applause] riding with Kevin and John is a lot more fun but it's also more challenging and takes a lot longer [Music] [Applause] [Music] so we seem to be a little bit lost we were looking for the road from bottle P last to wreak a and we've been told by more than one person that we need to go back to suck table which is a couple hours back and take the high road who knows the truth there seems to be a lot of traffic down here and as John was saying it doesn't look like Church traffic so seems like they don't want us in this area and we should be moving on by late afternoon we realized that we aren't gonna make it to Eureka so we turn around and head back to buy to P loss with no injuries to anything other than our pride in the morning we meet a group of dirt bikers who just wrote in from Yuri K on the route we were looking for they described the road as being very rough a lot of steep ascents and descents with loose rocks and six river crossings along the way that's something I wasn't expecting [Music] it's pretty much unknown territory that I'm heading off into today with a general expectation that I'll make it to your ek before sundown riding by myself on the good road I'm able to reach the upper Sierra in a few hours but I'm passing signs for roads going in different directions and I don't really know which one to take so I'm just baked making my best guess and pressing on heading downhill now eventually I believe I'll be coming to the river soon heading into the unknown brings with it a lot of fears and uncertainties and I certainly felt that on the beginning of the trip and I still feel that even today somewhat but it's changed and it's changing the longer I spend here the Copper Canyon so I'm gonna take it easy and head up and then down to Eureka this morning when I woke up I was so nervous about the last day of riding down in the bottom of the canyons here but I went through I made it and Here I am I've been here for a week and I've managed to ride all the way around and through the Copper Canyon without having to backtrack and now I'm here in the homestretch heading down into Yuri Kay down into the bottom of the canyon one last time to go to the race on Sunday [Music] the day before the marathon Tarahumara Indians from the surrounding villages began arriving in Eureka invite the were Emery from all over let sarah madre to come here and run with this it's their choice they want to come run with the gringos they want to come run a neutral turf they common so far a hundred and eighty people have signed up in a hundred and fifty where I Marie have showed up from all over the mountains about a dozen international competitors also show up for the race this race is an intercultural exchange of trail running people and it has its mixing the ideologies of gringo runners with the format of tar my runners and it's it's mixing it up it's got a little bit of everything [Applause] [Music] there's that 18 mile loop upriver an 18 mile downriver and finishing with an 11 mile out and back we encourage people to come run whether they're good runners or not even if they don't run anymore just to remember that it's the cool thing to do and we're encouraging the robbery to you know come out and run and if you you finished the race you win if you participate you win if you wake up in the morning and you feel good you win if you live the good life and eat the good food and have love for other people you win so the idea is is to realize that we're all winners although the race has drawn the attention of international competitors it's primarily a race of and for the Tarahumara Indians they're known to be some of the best long-distance runners in the world they've always lived in the boondocks and I've always lived in very remote places and to get around and to chase down their goat turds and it's just a natural thing to do we all used to be very good runners all of us all all cultures are just the most to us have forgotten how the robbery still live closer to their traditional a live closer to the earth that they live closer to their genetic memory if you will and they run some run faster than others some have to walk and others need help along the way but they all try to keep going make it to the finish line even when the daytime temperature in the canyon approaches a hundred degrees we allow 12 hours to finish and win 500 pounds of corn anybody who finishes the race wins 500 pounds of corn in addition to corn there's significant prize money involved funded by donations to the race event the primary sponsor of the race is a concept it's not a corporation it's a concept the word is core EEMA Sitaram are a word meaning sharing we have no corporate sponsors it's all about sharing the people or the sponsors and strace is for and by the people with the people so it's a it's very unique [Music] [Applause] [Music] after six hours the first racer stark across the finish line the first place a runner from the United States will Harley the second place the ropey Ishikawa from Japan the fastest Tarahumara across the finish line is our knoefel Kumari who took third place wearing his homemade Karachi sandals a couple of days before the race a neutral walked 40 miles to get to Eureka tomorrow to walk another 40 miles to return to his village so it was a great honor to run this race just to share the trail with them the world's best runners and even though I finished first I was wearing fancy shoes and fancy running here [Music] handmade sandals made a tire tread tied to their feet it's not a fair fight it's naughty it's two different races they're the real champions runners continue to cross the finish line for the rest of the afternoon and well into the evening in total a hundred and four runners finished the ultra marathon to win the minimum 500 pounds of corn that's awarded to all finishers there were ramree have it better off than many traditional indigenous cultures left because of being who they are because of a certain a certain proud humility that they carry seemingly a contradiction but not a contradiction at all they're proud in their humble at the same time and they exude this proud utility and I think people pick up that energy and I think a lot of people respect them for that the true champion of this race wears our watches and runs ultra marathons almost every day and so all of my winnings all of my corn and all of my money go to the real true champion of this race race our local community in the true spirit of karma the ten international competitors gave all of their corn and prize money back to the Laura Marie we like to promote and get out the idea that while they're at war we come together to make peace here in the bottom of the canyon so that's all we can do is do what we can this this race event is an example of that I began this journey as an experiment to see if I was capable of riding alone in a place like Mexico the news reports didn't stop me from coming here because I had a belief that people around the world are basically good at heart I now feel even stronger that this idea is true as I leave the Copper Canyon I feel like I've found the real Treasure of the Sierra Madre a way of life that I learned about in a part of Mexico I didn't even know existed even if it's just a few hundred miles south of the border that's the real story I was looking for and I absolutely can't wait to share it [Music] [Music] [Applause] [Music] my waking it okay [Music] [Music]
Info
Channel: Motorcycle Travel Channel
Views: 361,556
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: mexico, baja, copper canyon, gs, adv, adventure, travel, documentary, caballo blanco, micah true, runfree, tarahumara, raramuri, urique, chihuahua, sierra madre, bmw, bmwgs
Id: QDv09RL7KS0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 58min 0sec (3480 seconds)
Published: Fri Mar 08 2019
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