"Research is hard. You have to Google and stuff." - Sarah Palin
I have been researching the Baja. We want to spend at least a couple of days or a week in every significant town or village on the way down. We also want to spend a few nights boondocking on the beach. It is not hard to find information on the Baja as too many people go there. It is indeed "Mexico Lite" but is about as desolate and "foreign" as most North Americans are comfortable experiencing. It is not Chiapas or Oaxaca. Not by a long shot.
It is, as I suspected, very "Americanized". Many (maybe most) signs are in English and many prices are quoted in US dollars. When people on Baja travel forums talk about prices, it is always in US dollars. This does not make me happy.
One thing I do like reading about are the restaurants along the way. The food selection and quality look very inviting but I suspect prices will be higher than we are used to on the Mainland. However, fish tacos are plentiful and the beer is ice cold! I will get used to it!
Vehicle TIP's (Temporary Import Certificates) are not required unless we leave the Baja. The motorhome has a five year permit already so we may as well buy one for the car in case we do decide to take the +/- $1,600 ferry over to Mazatlan from La Paz. Visa (FMM) rules are the same as the mainland. We need them.
I am thinking we may cross at Tecate and take Mex 3 down from Tecate to Ensenada. This route goes through the Guadalupe Valley wine country of Mexico, a geographical extension of the Napa Valley. The
Adobe Guadalupe Winery has a tasting room, a nice restaurant and allows free overnight RV parking which might be fun. This route also avoids the madhouse of the Tijuana crossing.
I tend to over-research everything I do so you will be hearing more about the Baja.