blog single last sunday

Hotel California

By FourFeetOnAdventure

Hotel California is, like most of us know, a famous Eagles song from 1977. I always thought it was about some hotel in California, and happily sang along with the lyrics without spending too much time investigating what it was all about. This changed when we were on our whale tour in Guerrero Negro. We shared our boat with a Mexican couple from La Paz. We chatted a bit about our plans, and they said we had to go further south than La Paz (the ferry goes from La Paz, so not our intention). They mentioned lots of reasons, but one of them was that the famous Hotel California (from the song, you know, “Welcome to the hotel California, … “ they said) was there. REALLY? Interesting. It sounded plausible. Baja in the 70s, I can imagine it was quite the hippie place, full of Americans smoking away. So, it could be. Right? But, we weren’t planning to go there, so I forgot about it.

Until a couple of days later my mind got tickled about Hotel California again, when we stay at the Hotel California in Ciudad Insurgentes, and I decided to get to the bottom of this Hotel California business. According to Wikipedia the Eagles said: “On just about every album we made, there was some kind of commentary on the music business, and on American culture in general. The hotel itself could be taken as a metaphor not only for the myth-making of Southern California, but for the myth-making that is the American Dream, because it is a fine line between the American Dream, and the American nightmare.” Also on that same wikipedia it says that it goes back to hotels in LA in general, determining the skyline. Nowhere does it mention the Baja.

So if that song is not about a hotel in the Baja, what were the Mexicans talking about? On www.hotelcaliforniabaja.com you can read the following (shortened by me) story; about how the Hotel California at the Baja was founded in 1947 by a Chinese immigrant named Mr. Wong, who lived in the 16 room hotel with his wife and seven daughters. Wanting the locals to believe he was Mexican, Mr. Wong changed his name to Don Antonio Tabasco but he became known as "El Chino," meaning "The Chinese Man" regardless. His looks might also have been in his way. He introduced ice from La Paz in 1950, being the first and only chance to get cold beer around, making the place popular. More things happen, and then one rumor by someone with no connection to any owners of the hotel, in the 1990s, states that the Eagles once owned it. This is not true. Also the present owners of the hotel, a Canadian couple, do not have any affiliation with the Eagles, nor do they promote any association. Despite this, many visitors seem to be mesmerized by the "coincidences" between the lyrics of the hit song and the physicality of the hotel and its surroundings. For example, Hotel California is accessed by driving down a long desert highway from either Los Cabos to the south or La Paz to the east. The Mission Church of Pilar is located directly adjacent to the hotel and mission bells are heard daily. Since the Church is so close it sounds like they are almost inside the hotel at times. Countless stories and firsthand witnesses relating to spirits and ghosts in the courtyard of the hotel. During the 'Hippie Era" of the 1960s and 1970s, people were know to easily grow their own marijuana in the extremely fertile land of the Todos Santos area and then roll them into "Colitas" which is a Mexican slang term for 'Joint" or Marijuana cigarette.

So I’d like to BUST the rumour brought to us by the Mexican couple that Baja owns THE Hotel California from the song. Still, it sounds like a nice place. Actually, it is more likely that we cycled along the hotels that inspired the song when we were passing through LA. And what about the Ciudad Insurgentes Hotel California? Well, let’s just forget about that one...