Ride Bikes, Walk More, and Find a Golf Cart Repairman!
|
Our Poor, Sad-looking Golf Cart Had Problems |
When our golf cart quits running,
we have some serious problems to solve. If you recall, we don’t own a car. In
small towns in this part of México, a golf cart is sometimes called a carrito, and functions for many, such as
Jon and me, as a little battery-operated car. We depend on our golf cart to get
us to the mini-supermarket, produce stand, and meat market to shop once or
twice a week. It hauls three loads of laundry in the three blue Rubbermaid
totes strapped to the back when we drive it to the lavandería once or twice a
week. We load our paddleboard onto the custom top rack and our beach gear on
the back when we head to the beach for some Stand Up Paddleboarding. This
inexpensive vehicle does a lot of work for us.
|
Three Rubbermaid Totes & a Cargo Net Hauls a Lot of Stuff |
Battery Failure
A week before we were planning to
leave for our annual motorhome trip to the United States, our carrito gave up. The batteries failed on
our last run to the recycle center. We were half-way up Calle Libertad, a fairly steep dirt road out of Sayulita, when our
pickup-style golf cart, loaded with empty wine bottles and miscellaneous
plastic items, began slowing down until it refused to climb the last steep
slope. The batteries had just enough juice to coast back down the hill and get
us back home.
What could be wrong? Jon was
faithful about filling the six battery water reservoirs with distilled water.
He always charged the batteries after every trip to town. When we got home that
day, he tested the batteries with his volt meter and found one of the six
well-used batteries was no longer holding a charge. We didn’t have it in our
budget to buy six new 6-volt deep-cell batteries at the time. So, Jon asked
around at a couple of golf cart rental places in town to see if he could buy one
used battery to get us by. There were none to be found. We decided we would
pick up a used battery while we were in the U.S. and hope that would fix our
power issue.
|
We Were Back to Riding Bikes to Town Again |
For the time being, we were back to
riding bikes to take our dirty laundry to the lavandería and return the next
day to pick it up, clean and folded. Cruising down cobblestone roads on bikes
loaded with groceries, dog food, a bottle of tequila, and margarita mix is a
bumpy and treacherous trip, but we had to stock up on supplies for our drive to
Oregon. Hauling that heavy load required us to walk our two bikes the last steep
stretch up the hill to our home. No more Stand Up Paddle boarding for the rest
of this season. At least we could walk the short distance to the beach with our
boogieboards for a few more rides on the mellow waves of June, a good way to
cool off on a hot, humid afternoon.
We really missed our carrito! But, there was nothing more
we could do for it until we returned from our travels to Oregon. We unplugged
it from the battery charger, covered it with a tarp to protect it during the
rainy season in Nayarit, and called a taxi to take us to our motorhome. We knew
when we returned in the fall, golf cart repairs would be a high priority.
Time to Find a Golf
Cart Repairman
When we returned from Oregon, Jon
had a “new” used battery and wasted no time installing it and attaching the
charger to the carrito. But, the six
batteries would not come to full charge. It was time to find a golf cart
repairman. I had remembered one of my Facebook friends, Gabe, had recently
posted a photo and information about a golf cart expert who works at two golf courses
in the Riviera Nayarit. So, I did some digging on Facebook (what a wealth of
information that social media provides!) and found his name and phone number.
Jon called him
immediately and, we were lucky, Ari was available. It seems golfing season
hadn’t take off in early November so he wasn’t too busy yet. He drove to
our house, analyzed the issues, charged the golf cart with his own battery charger for a
while, and then took it for a test drive. He determined that the batteries were
fine. Our charger was now the culprit for the insufficient charge. But, he had the
parts to fix it! A short time later, our charger and batteries were fully
functional again! We were so relieved. We happily paid his reasonable fee.
|
Ari and His Wife Checking the Batteries |
Ari then mentioned that the ball
joints and brakes were badly worn, the steering was loose and mushy, the brakes
barely functioning. He said that he could fix those, too. Jon said he knew they
were in pretty poor condition and asked for a price to have them rebuilt. Ari
gave him a fair price to do the work and came the next day as promised. He
arranged his supply of parts and his tools and set to tearing the front end off
of our golf cart. The poor, dirty thing looked pretty sad without its front
tires and other key parts disassembled. When I looked at the disabled carrito propped up, sitting on its tires
that were lying on their sides in the gravel, I thought, “That’s one way to
jack up a vehicle. I guess that’s how they do it here in México.”
|
Ari Working on the Golf Cart's Ball Joints & Brakes |
Ari’s wife spent the day helping
him and keeping him company, handing him tools when he needed them, digging for
bolts and nuts when he asked. He sat in the gravel surrounded by greasy parts
and miscellaneous hardware, studiously working over the old ball joints,
replacing some parts from his stash and others that Jon had brought from the
U.S., including some new steering box parts. When Ari was thirsty, his wife
would hold the water bottle and tip it to his mouth, his hands too greasy and
busy to stop for a drink. Their quiet and loving ways with each other were
wonderful to see.
Since moving here, we’ve
learned that the working man in México rarely throws anything away. They save almost
everything in case they might need it in the future. The piles of screws, bolts,
washers, and various parts that Ari used to rebuild our golf cart were mostly
scrap that he had salvaged, with only a few new parts he had purchased. This
was a perfect example of reusing and recycling. I admit, while I watched him
searching through his collection of stuff on the ground for just the right
screw or part, I wondered if our golf cart would ever be back together again.
Not only was it reassembled that day, it steered, braked, and ran better than
ever. In addition, he installed a battery charge gauge on the dash, one that
Jon had purchased from Amazon. Now, we will know when the batteries’ charge is
getting low before we get stranded somewhere. We were able to make a run to the
lavandería and shop for groceries the next day—using the carrito, not our bikes!
|
Jon Straps the Paddleboard Onto the Carrito for a Trip to the Beach |
Flat Tire on Our Way
to the Nursery
Our pickup-style carrito may be one of the ugly ducklings
among golf carts in Sayulita, but we love it. It’s a work horse, a real asset
when I decide to take a trip to the nursery for plants and a bag of heavy soil.
On one such trip, I didn’t think we would make it to our destination when I
looked down at the tires and one was completely flat. Jon pulled the golf cart
to the side of the road, parked, and told me to stay with it while he ran home
for our bike pump. A half-hour later, here he came, riding his bike and
carrying the pump. He threw his bike on the carrito’s
roof, strapped it down, and proceeded to pump up the flat tire. He hopped in
the carrito and off we drove, determined to get to the nursery. A hundred yards
along, the tire was flat again. Jon pumped it up again and said we had to get
to the tire repair shop on the highway, about a half-mile away. That was a very
long half-mile for Jon—pump up the tire, drive a hundred yards, and repeat.
Now for the bad news. The auto
repair shop does not repair golf cart tires. Jon insisted that there had to be
a way to fix it because we couldn’t get home otherwise. The young man thought
about this for a few minutes, shook his head, and then wandered off, leaving
Jon and me wondering what we were going to do next.
A while later, he sauntered back to
Jon with a full-sized automobile inner tube in his hand, deflated and old. He
said, in Spanish, that he had an idea. We watched in amazement as he proceeded
to pull the golf cart tire off, stuff the wad of tube into the tire, and
reinstall it on the carrito. He then
attached his air compressor to the tube stem and began adding air to the inner tube
until it inflated just enough to fill the golf cart’s tire. Fixed! The amazing
thing is that in the year since that ingenious repair job, the tire has never
gone flat.
Our carrito’s tires
may be old and bald, but we don’t have to climb extremely steep hills. The
tread is about gone and the batteries don’t have the power Jon would need to
“peel out” anyway, so why change the tires yet. The Mexican way is to use
things until they stop working, and then fix them so they will work a while
longer. Living in México, we have learned some great lessons on how to live
frugally!
To Sign Up for my "Healthy Living and Traveling in Mexico Monthly Newsletter", click HERE
|
Take a Look at My "Healthy Living in Mexico #1 and #2" eBooks Available on Amazon.com, Amazon.ca, and Worldwide! |
To View "Healthy Living and Traveling in Mexico" on Amazon, Click HERE
To View " Retirement Before the Age of 59: Healthy Living in Mexico #2" on Amazon, Click HERE