Welcome back to the sixth season of Living Loreto! Actually I have been back in Loreto for
several weeks by now, busy with moving back into my home here after a summer of
travelling in my Trailer around North America.
It was very good to get back home again, I arrived back a
couple of weeks after a Tropical storm dumped inches of rain in the mountains
west of here – which is a recipe for flooding, washed out roads and a big
mess! Fortunately, by the time I was
travelling down, the highway had been patched in the few places there had been
damage so I had no problems getting here.
But there had been some significant damage, mainly in town, with localized
flooding where the arroyo was breached.
As I have mentioned before, these arroyos are dry channels where
runoff from the mountains is channeled when it rains, to find its way to the Ocean. With a vast mountain range west of us, and a
limited number of arroyos to carry all the water collected over 100’s of square
miles of rocky ground, during a downpour, the arroyos can be transformed from dry riverbeds into
cascading torrents with frightening speed .
What takes a little getting used to, however, is what
matters is not how much rain we get HERE – but how much falls in the mountains
to the west, where most of the water is collected. This becomes more significant when you
consider that most of the storms at this time of year come from the Pacific
side of the peninsula to the west, and so the further west you go the more rain
there can be – much of which flows east to the Ocean.
Arriving as I did, a few weeks after that storm, the most
noticeable effect was the lush green grasses and leafy bushes along the side of
the road as I approached Loreto from the north.
In places there was even standing water in low spots beside the road,
strange to see given the normal desert-like conditions most of the year. Now the Sierra de la Gigante mountain range to
the west, is clothed in fresh greenery with the normally bare shrubs covered in
new green leaves that only sprout when there is enough water. The sides of the
road are thick with two foot high grasses, where most of the year there is only
the thin dry straw that is left after stray cattle have grazed it.
Next to the greenery, the most significant thing I noticed
on my arrival here in September was the heat!
Over 100 degrees and humid was typical for the first week or two, and
some air conditioning was necessary in the evening, while during the day the
slightest exertion was enough to soak even the lightest clothing. But as in past years, within a couple of
weeks the temperature had dropped along with the humidity and the A/C was no
longer needed, ceiling fans and open doors and windows were enough to keep it
comfortable inside.
There have been other changes here in Loreto Bay over the
summer. Last Season I wrote about the infrastructure
completion project, a large part of which involved landscaping both sides of
the main road through the development.
Now the center median has been “zeroscaped” using indigenous plants,
shrubs and grasses that require minimal irrigation, set off with accent rocks
and several colors and textures of gravel.
Now with this final element almost completed, the main artery of the
community is looking better than it ever has, and it makes a much more positive first
impression as one drives through the development.
Another significant project has been completed – the new
Community Lap Pool, surrounded with patios and high-end outdoor furniture, is
located about mid-way between the original Pool at the south end of the
Founders Neighborhood and the one completed in second phase Agua Viva last
year. With the addition of these two new
pools, everyone in the community is now within a relatively close distance to a
refreshing gathering place that will become the hub for much enjoyment, as more
and more people spend more time here.
I was also struck by how few Homeowners were here when I
first arrived, there are of course year-round residents, many involved in
businesses here and the operations required for maintaining a community of over 600
homes. But there are a small number of Homeowners
who choose to spend the long hot summer here, although many of them who do seem
to enjoy the quiet solitude that comes from having the place almost to
themselves.
Among the other changes this Season, Loreto Bay Homes has
opened a new, much larger, Real Estate Office, a few doors south of our Property
Management Office, where the convenience store used to be. This new expanded office means there will be
more than one Agent available in the Office during business hours so we won’t
have to close when out showing homes.
Our larger presence is in anticipation of an increased volume of
visitors this season, when the new daily airline service begins in November.
In town there have been a number of changes this summer,
probably one of the most significant is the opening of a new supermarket, the
Ley Super Express, bringing a wider selection of products including an in-house
bakery and Deli counter with prepared foods to go like rotisserie roasted chickens. While I have enjoyed shopping there several
times since I arrived back, my one complaint arises from the store’s popularity
– any time I have been there the small parking lot is full and it can take some
time before a space opens up.
The arrival of a new chain store competitor has raised the
bar for some of the other stores in town with noticeable improvements in El
Pescador and smaller changes at Mercado Juarez, but the grocery business in
Loreto has certainly changed for the better, particularly when I remember the
way things used to be a few years ago!
(Long time readers may remember one of my early postings where I
described the shopping exercise as “Hunting and Gathering” http://livingloreto.blogspot.mx/2009/02/hunting-and-gathering.html)
But probably the biggest change since I left for the summer is
the fact that work has finally begun on twinning the highway between Loreto Bay
and town. A number of pieces of heavy
earth-moving equipment are working on both sides of the existing highway,
starting just south of town preparing the ground for new roadbeds. I haven’t heard a projected completion date,
but it will clearly take some considerable time to build the 15 km. of new
roads, which I understand will eventually continue another 10 km south of
Loreto Bay through to Puerto Escondido.
So as more Homeowners arrive daily and our community comes
back to life, I am looking forward to the best season ever here in Loreto
Bay. I begin my sixth season of writing
this Blog conscious of the commitment to post on a regular basis and the demand
of coming up with weekly topics, but also excited by the expectation of new
developments and progress in the community. I feel a real sense of optimism and
confidence that, as we approach the tenth anniversary of the first sales event
in November 2003 (when I purchased my home from a chalk outline on a sandy
beach) Loreto Bay is now fulfilling the vision and dreams that so many people
have shared.
Watching a dream become a reality, going from
“chalk on sand” to a thriving community of over 600 homes with great
expectations about what lies ahead for those of us lucky to call this place
Home – that is what “Living Loreto” is all about!