Tijuana, Rosarito Beach, Ensenada, Puerto Nuevo, Tecate, San Quintin
Baja California Mexico is the number one travel destination for gringos. Golf, fishing, offroading events. wine tasting, Latin jazz music and more await you.
Want to move to Mexico? Here is an online guide to help thosde thinking about moving to Mexico to retire or just enjoy the Baja lifestyle.
Here are some adiitional links with online coupons, local Baja news and more.
 
 
 Home
 Tijuana
 Rosarito Beach
 Puerto Nuevo
 Ensenada
 Tecate
 San Quintin
 Baja California
 Mexico

 Baja Tours
 Calendar of Events
 Maps Online
 Tourist Info
 Baja Fishing
 Surf Reports
 Baja Golf
 Wine Tasting
 Restaurants
 Local Night Life
 Baja Off Road
 Vacation Rentals
 Music Scene
 Holidays of Mexico
 Price of Gasoline
 Tourist Assistance

 Long Term Rentals
 Real Estate
 Moving to Mexico
 Retire in Mexico
 Active Adult Living
 Assisted Care
 Baja Lifestyle
 Mexican Recipes
 SENTRI Pass
 Mexican History
 CFE Online
 Telnor Online
 CESPT Online
 DirecTV in Baja
 Cable TV
 Movie Theaters

 Baja Coupons
 USBC
 Baja News Online
 Local Links
 Web Design
 Who is BajaGringo?
 Contact Us
 
 
 
 
 
 
Weather Visas for Mexico Travel Docs Driving in Mexico Border Crossing
 
Art, Culture and Language...
Outside Your Comfort Zone?


 
By The BajaGringo
Column originally appeared in the Baja Times  on March 16, 2008

  

Participating in online forums and blogs allows me the opportunity to share information, ideas and experiences with folks from diverse backgrounds and on a wide variety of subjects. It’s a regular “brain breather” I take between the 10 to 12 hours I spend daily on my computer with my work. You would think I’d want to get away from the thing in those moments but I suppose that it’s part of my genetic makeup and a disease that Cristina diagnosed long ago. I am definitely terminally infected with all the keyboard characters permanently tattooed in reverse on my finger tips after 30 years and billions of keystrokes.

Gringo in Rosarito Beach, Baja California Mexico

 Trust me on this one, I have counted.
 
In one of the blogs that is frequented by Gringos living here south of the border a new member posted a question looking for some help to connect with the local art and music community. The topic is one of particular interest for me and so I jumped in with all ten fingers. The subject became a hot one and it was quite evident what limited knowledge many of the local Gringos have about the cultural community and resources available here south of the border. In the debate that followed I could see that the real battle line was drawn along the ability to communicate and more precisely, the willingness to step outside of your personal comfort zone.
 
Mexican hospitality is famous world over and on the Baja California peninsula they have made it exceptionally easy for us Gringos to enjoy the local playground of activities and adventure without ever needing to learn a single word of Spanish. Restaurants, hotels, golf courses, resorts, spas, shops, bars, clubs, gas stations, movie theaters, wine tasting, fish taco stands, doctors, dentists, markets and more – all with someone ready and willing to step up and help you. Their English might not be perfect but a conversation is forged and the objective is almost always accomplished. I have heard some Gringos living here remark that they forget sometimes that they are in a foreign country. I have personally met many Gringos that have never learned more than a few words of Spanish, in spite of many years residing here on the peninsula. You cannot only survive, you can live, work and enjoy the lifestyle that has attracted so many of us to this beautiful slice of the Pacific coastline without ever learning a single word of Spanish. It is a credit to the wonderful people, native to this region and who serve as our generous and gracious hosts.
 
That having been said, my only question would be why would you want to?
 
Friends are one of life’s great blessings and since moving here years ago my circle has grown to include many in the local art and music community. Hardly a day goes by without receiving at least one invitation to an event, concert or exhibit here along Baja’s northern coast. Being the practical one that I am, invitations that also mention food or wine always seem to get moved up to the top of my social calendar. Going through my emails and web links I was able to put together several hundred links to local artists, poets, musicians, galleries, museums, exhibits, operas, street fairs, concerts, theatre and much more.
 
After removing the outdated ones I sorted them alphabetically and posted over two hundred links online. Many of the forum members thanked me for the information but I also received just as many questioning why I included so many websites that are in Spanish? The question made me consider going back and provide some translation service to my online friends but after giving it some thought I realized that wouldn’t be the best answer I could give.
 

Gringo in Rosarito Beach, Baja California Mexico

Part of what makes this region so culturally unique is deep rooted in the Spanish language, often referred to as the language of romance and love. Mexico has the largest Spanish speaking population in the world and is spoken throughout Latin America and Spain. Spanish is the second most-widely spoken language in France, Italy, Portugal and Brazil, as well as the United States. Sharing a Latin-based link with English, learning to speak, read and write in Spanish is not as difficult as you might think. Some will surely argue, reminding me of the old saying that you can’t teach an old dog new tricks. Animal Planet and personal experience have taught me that just isn’t true. Learning a new language is a stimulating experience and the ability to think, dream and communicate in another language is something that is difficult to imagine or comprehend until you have experienced it personally.
 
Scientists have recently discovered that learning a new language later in life stimulates many of the neuro connectors that had gone long unused in our brain and improves memory and overall brain function. When I shared that fact with Cristina she remarked that I should consider taking up four or five new languages. Simultaneously, in fact she added.
 
Many years ago (we are not counting), back when I was a foreign exchange student in Argentina, I stepped off the plane with very little Spanish ability other than the first chapter of my high school Spanish book. After a week there and relying on those around me who spoke English I realized that I needed a crash course to learn the local Spanish dialect of Castilian. The language sounded so beautiful and as a young man with raging hormones I knew it was the only way I would be able to talk to all the beautiful women around me. With that noble inspiration I dedicated myself to learn fifty new words in Spanish a day. I would look up the new words each night in my Spanish-English dictionary, writing them down on the pages of a small notebook I would carry in my back pocket. That little notebook went everywhere with me.
 
Taking advantage of any spare moment awarded me I would study the pages and attempt using each of the words several times that day in my broken Spanish conversation. I repeated that routine for the weeks that followed and after three months I calculated that I had learned over five thousand new words. I was able to begin to hold a conversation and in time my grammar improved solely by practice and continued use of my newly acquired language skills. I don’t recall one person who ridiculed me when I erred (which was quite often) and I found that most were more than happy to help me in conversation. All of us have had that experience with someone attempting to learn English at one time or another. I will admit that on more than one occasion I used it as an excuse solely to initiate a conversation with a beautiful member of the fairer sex. Today I speak Spanish as easily as I speak English and it has become as much a part of me as my green eyes and receding hairline.


Learning to communicate in Spanish is learning more about the Mexico we have come to love and so many of us now call home. It will open your eyes to the deeper, richer side of Baja California that you perhaps never knew existed before.

You will be able to attend shows, theatre and events in Spanish with a new appreciation and understanding. You will begin to lose the fear of stepping outside your personal comfort zone and begin to explore the side of Mexico that I have come to know and love. A country with rich history, cultural roots and traditions brought to life with so much color and flavor. I could never fully paint that picture in English anymore than I could translate a Spanish Love song completely with all of its rich feeling and deep emotions.
  

Spanish is the language of romance, love and so much more. Many of us have heard the calling of the song that draws us to the Baja California peninsula and Spanish is the language of the seducing lyrics to her song.

Gringo in Rosarito Beach, Baja California Mexico


Whether you start with fifty words a day, ten or even one you will begin to open yourself up to see and be able to fully integrate into the art, music, culture and community of this wonderful place. Becoming a true foreign ambassador will allow many here who don’t speak English to learn a bit more about you as well.
 
Along the way I suspect that you will discover as I have, that the true reward lies in that we ultimately learn much more about ourselves…



BajaGringo is Ronald Hoff, eMarketing and SEO Consultant.

He can be reached at:

  
  
     Contact Page

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

          
 
Tijuana, Rosarito Beach, Ensenada, Puerto Nuevo, Tecate, San Quintin, Rosarita Beach
Website SEO & Design
 
Baja Website Design