cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Problem Nogales Crossing

snarley
Explorer
Explorer
Came across this on RV'ing in Mexico. Not my post but they asked to share and the issue may be relevant if you have a bigg rig going North.
We made the trip from San Carlos Sonora Mexico to Green Valley AZ USA today in 8.5 hours, with a half hour for lunch, departing at 7am from Totonaka RV resort.
Some notes:
1. With a lot less traffic than before Xmas, the trip was not particularly stressful, in spite of construction. We donโ€™t travel fast, just โ€œsteady as she goes.โ€ The trip north was a lot less stressful than the trip south just 5 weeks earlier.
2. To risk sounding like a broken record, do NOT travel this road at night. There is so much construction activity that cannot be signed or lit, with huge risk.
3. We were not inspected at the vehicle check point south of Benjamin Hill. Good, that saved a half hour.
4. Our lunch stop was the parking area at the Pemex just north of Magdelena del Kino. Lots of space to pull off the road.
5. The US border crossing was a problem. What we believe is the intended way to cross the border (and has been in the past) is as follows:
a. After the last toll gate on the truck route at Nogales (several kilometers before the border, get in the RV and auto lane, the furthest most left.) On the right, there is a Fast Lane for trucks, and a truck lane, both behind concrete barriers. The RV lane has only a double yellow marker lane on your immediate left, separating you from south bound traffic.
b. At the bottom of a long hill, right at the US border, we thought we should move right (and have in the past few years) and get in the โ€œBusโ€ lane, since the lanes for autos are not wide enough to accommodate most RVs including coaches, 5th wheels and some Class Aโ€™s towing.
This has worked well for us in the past. HOWEVER.... today on the US side, concrete barriers have been erected (recently we think since they werenโ€™t there last year) to separate the Bus lane from the auto lanes. NOT ENOUGH ROOM for rigs of any size has been provided to make the transition from the RV lane on the Mexican side to the BUS lane on the US side. We scraped our truck bumper and fender on the right wall of BUS lane, nearly tore out the last 10 feet of our 5th wheel on the barrier and mounted the curbs with both truck and trailer (miraculously without damage to tires or rims that we know of) in order to execute the transition to the BUS lane. We reported the problem to our customs agent who was going to report the issue to management. The problem isnโ€™t on the Mexican side; itโ€™s on the US side.
So far as I understand, solutions may lie in two areas:
1. The Auto lanes may have been widened and height clearances raised to allow coaches, 5th wheels and so on to access the Auto lanes. This should mean we should no longer need to access the BUS lane to enter the US. I donโ€™t believe this has happened, but would be happy to be wrong.
2. One or two concrete barrier sections on the US side must be removed to allow transition from the Mexican RV lane to the US BUS lane. A sign saying โ€œBUSes and RV to the rightโ€ (of the barrier) would facilitate an easy timely transition.
3. A third but extremely unpalatable solution is that RVs use the truck lanes, specifically the โ€œFast Laneโ€ to cross the border. (Often far too much truck traffic to facilitate a crossing in anything less than a few hours.)
I think we may have been some of the early travelers heading back north so we may have accidentally pioneered this newly barriered BUS lane. There are many rigs south who will remember their experience from last year, which will place them in the same pickle as we encountered today, i.e., trying to transition from the Mexican RV lane to the US Bus lane, immediately at the pint of entry into the US.
If you know what we did wrong, please get the info out on the RVing sites ASAP to reduce the stress travelers crossing at Nogales might experience.
Our 5 weeks in Mexico was a such a good experience, with only this one small but baffling and frustrating encounter trying to return to the US. If anyone knows where we went wrong letโ€™s share the right answer ASAP.
20 REPLIES 20

moisheh
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks: I dislike facebook with a passion!

Moisheh

snarley
Explorer
Explorer
Moisheh- it is a facebook page. Kevin Read is the admin.

moisheh
Explorer
Explorer
What is RVing in Mexico?

Moisheh

moisheh
Explorer
Explorer
When the new crossing was built we had a similar problem. The Jersey barriers were too close together. Did $10,000 damage to our rig. I stopped the MH when I heard the first scrape but could not open the door as it hit the barrier. I sat there for a few minutes wondering what to do. A US border guy came over yelling at me to move. I refused. he gave me 2 options. Move the rig or just sit there. They will arrest me and get a tow truck to move the rig. I moved on. The lack of any signs is ridiculous. I sure hope someone solves this problem. You cannot take the downtown crossing .

Moisheh

Talleyho69
Moderator
Moderator
Thanks so much for the great information you have provided. It reminds us why we drive to Sonoyta to cross back into the US.

This year, we will be exiting Mexico in two vehicles, the RV with California plates, and the other, with me driving, with Guerrero plates pulling an empty trailer, also Mexico plated. We will each have a dog. Hopefully it will not be a horrible ordeal, but both dogs are on the same rabies certificate, so who knows?

Again, thanks for making this information available to everyone.

Lwiddis
Explorer II
Explorer II
Another set of reasons my TT, my TV and I stay out of Mexico.
Winnebago 2101DS TT & 2022 Chevy Silverado 1500 LTZ Z71, WindyNation 300 watt solar-Lossigy 200 AH Lithium battery. Prefer boondocking, USFS, COE, BLM, NPS, TVA, state camps. Bicyclist. 14 yr. Army -11B40 then 11A - (MOS 1542 & 1560) IOBC & IOAC grad