Faces of Cabo
Transcription
Faces of Cabo
DECEMBER 2003/JANUARY 2004 VOLUME IX, NUMBER 4 Thr ee Faces of Cabo by Robert B. Simmonds Lover’s Beach near Land’s End Robert Simmonds, Ph.D., is a psychologist practicing in San Diego, the publisher of Mexico File, and the brother of Dave Simmonds, the editor. He muses on his first trip to Cabo. He can be reached at docbob@emotionalwellness.com This is the first part of a two-part series. “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave....” – The Eagles, from The Hotel California This was my first trip down to Cabo. My brother, Dave, had warned me, clucking his tongue like all of his Mexico afficionado friends do when they talk about Cabo, that it’s the most expensive place in all of Mexico and that they’re spoiling both the land and Mexican culture down there. I kept hearing that it’s just like Southern California in Cabo. I may as well go to Newport Beach. On the other hand, Dave said that he has a wonderful time every time he goes to Cabo – and he never fails to mention that he used to go camping on the beach, back in the old days, decades ago, on the very spot where they now have a big luxury resort. And there was also the chorus of alarms that I heard, both before I flew down there and during my trip, about the new Costco that just opened in Cabo San Lucas – proof that there is no way that Mexican culture could possibly survive the always-encroaching American onslaught. I mean, they make it sound like the Huichol vases are going to get crushed under the oversized jars of marinated artichoke hearts. Fortunately, culture isn’t an either/ or proposition. It just is what it is. Still, there was no way I was going to miss seeing Carmel. I laugh better with Carmel than with any other person on the planet – gutsplitting laughter, the kind where you know you shouldn’t behave like this in public. I’ve known Carmel for over thirty years, but hadn’t seen her in 18 years. She used to live in my apartment and gave my life a very happy tone. We were the best of friends. We both left Ithaca, New York, in time. She ended up a nurse living in Staten Island, and I came to San Diego and opened a psychology practice. She emailed me that she had to use her miles up before the end of 2003 and that she had booked a room at the Plaza las Glorias in Cabo San Lucas – and why don’t Cheryl and I come down to see her there. Cheryl opted out – she needed to work and dogsit. I called Dave to find me a room and he got me one at the Pueblo Bonito Blanco. Outback Los Cabos: Adventure Touring in Baja Sur by Ann Hazard Photo Credit: Terry Hauswirth Ann Hazard, a frequent contributor to Mexico File, is the author of Cooking with Baja Magic, Cartwheels in the Sand, and the more recently released Agave Sunsets. She has also written over 100 articles on Baja, Mexico, and Mexican cuisine. Visit her at http://bajamagic.com. Ah – Los Cabos. What visions those words bring to mind. Perfect, sunny days, warm water, endless miles of white sandy beaches and dramatic scenery … towering mountains that drop down to a rocky, arid desert terrain that marches right into the turquoise sea. These beaches are rimmed with world-class resorts, golf courses and upscale restaurants. INSIDE Continued on page 2 M á s o M e n o s 2 T h e G a t e d C o m m u n i t y C a b o – T h e O t h e r S i d e A b o u t M e x i c o 8 Continued on page 6 4 5 Three Faces Continued I ’ll use any excuse to get back to my favorite town in Mexico, so when my ex-AeroMexico executive friend Mayte Weitzman, who now heads her own PR firm in Houston called The W Group, invited me down on a press trip to the remodeled Velas Vallarta resort, it was an easy decision. All I had to do was convince my wife, the beautiful Felice, that there were still things about Vallarta that I needed to learn – things I had to see. This was no easy task, but one for which I am transparently well practiced. Eventually, I had to shamelessly bribe her with a promise of a weekend getaway to San Francisco. Ka ching! My freebie just got very expensive, but once again, the marriage was saved. I usually pay for all my own expenses when traveling Mexico, and in Vallarta that means staying at Posada de Roger, my old haunt for some 30 years now where a double runs about $30 US. As I was checking into the fabulous Velas Vallarta with a complimentary cold towel and icy margarita at hand while a bell-guy hoisted my bag on his back, I suspected that I was in store for something a little different. Living large, indeed. I flew on Aeromexico from San Diego to Cabo. I had always heard that this was a superb airline, but didn’t really understand the concept until this flight. And what makes it special is, well, Mexican culture. One of many flamingos dining on flowers in a bush outside of my patio First Face: Paradise (Cabo San Lucas) Carmel in a glass bottomed boat. There is a friendly and gentle mood among the airline staff. The frenetic tension I usually experience on an airplane was missing. The flight was filled with US citizens set to have a good time and Mexican nationals, for whom a good time is a given. Breakfast was served on our two-hour flight, and the food was fairly good. Interestingly, they served drinks with alcohol for free. I had a window seat and sat mesmerized by the blank and empty land below me as we flew straight down the Baja peninsula. There were very few roads cutting across the brown land below. We flew over Tijuana and saw the I t turned out to be one of my favorite trips ever to PV. We had a great group of colleagues who know the sometimes baffling Mexico ropes and enjoy the local libations, sometimes in great quantity. The Velas Vallarta has just undertaken a room and grounds remodeling that make it one of Mexico’s very finest resorts (www.velasvallarta.com). All of the rooms are suites, varying in size, but all with kitchens. My one-bedroom suite was about 1,000 square feet, better furnished than most homes, with a huge balcony overlooking the tropical grounds and a view of the beautiful Bahia de Banderas which fronts the hotel. The 10-acre site has three pools, one with a waterfall and a swim-up cantina. The restaurants were top-notch, the service impeccable. I highly recommend this property, something I don’t often do. And it is very kid-friendly with activities all day. Continued on page 5 2 Patio off of the author’s suite at Pueblo Bonito Blanco. playas and the bullring, then the bustle of Rosarito Beach. I saw the enormity of Magdalena Bay but couldn’t see any gray whales, although this is the time of year they would be there. I could see Loreto after we sliced across the peninsula and ended up flying over the Sea of Cortez. And before I knew it we landed at San Jose del Cabo and the pilot announced, on December 3, that it was 93 degrees on the ground. (Note that the average temperature in Cabo this time of the year is normally about 75 degrees, so these were heat-wave conditions.) Despite Cabo’s reputation for being expensive, I rented a VW Beetle, the old kind, white and clean and funky looking, from National for $133 for the week. Had I gotten a convertible I would have paid over three times that amount. From the airport I drove south down Route 1 (yes, the same highway that goes in the other direction up the nearly thousand mile peninsula to the border crossing at San Ysidro), bypassing the main part of San Jose del Cabo. It’s really the only highway in Baja. There, to my left, was the deep blue hue of the Sea of Cortez as I traveled along what is called the Corridor, the 18-mile four-lane highway between San Jose and San Lucas. The Corridor is lined with resort hotels and condo complexes, some of them among the finest in Mexico. This is what people complain about when they say that Cabo is overbuilt and Americanized. The hotels are nicely spaced apart now, but in years to come the Corridor might well become more congested, lined with one building after the next. The road is not very safe by disciplined American standards. There is construction in places, it’s poorly marked, and cars race by at American freeway speeds – especially from my perspective in my little chugging along Beetle. Continued on page 3 A view of the grounds at Pueblo Bonito Blanco Three Faces Continued A view of Pueblo Bonito from the Sea of Cortez Profile of pelicans near Land’s End Surprises hit you frequently. Finding the Pueblo Bonito Blanco was a breeze once I got near Cabo San Lucas. And there is was – Paradise. From my hotel I would look out onto the blue waters of the Sea of Cortez and right in front of me (and maybe a mile away), so close, it seemed, that I could reach out and touch it, was Land’s End, the famous large rock at the very tip of the Baja Peninsula. On my side was the Sea of Cortez. On the other side of Land’s End was the Pacific Ocean. This is one of the most beautiful spots on the planet. I had a ground floor room (I somehow got upgraded from a junior suite to an executive suite) with a beautiful patio overlooking palm trees, immaculately groomed grounds, a rambling swimming pool with an island in the middle of it and waterfalls – and, get this, just a couple of feet in front of me on the green lawn were pink flamingos. Real live flamingos. I spent hours in reverie watching these birds. (I won’t go into how my wife, Cheryl, is a flamingo freak and how our house is filled with flamingo everything – she should have been on this trip.) Yes, Pueblo Bonito Blanco is artificially created, but it’s perhaps the nicest hotel I’ve ever stayed at. They have created Paradise and I loved being there. I met Carmel at six o’clock that night, a very happy reunion, at her hotel, Plaza las Glorias, the oldest of the resort hotels in San Lucas, an enormous building and Rock formations near Land’s End located on the marina. Incidentally, San Lucas is a small town, but it took me an embarrassing forty-five minutes of driving to find her hotel the first time, even though it’s only a mile from Pueblo Bonito Blanco. Things just aren’t marked that well in Mexico. Our first dinner, and maybe the best of the whole trip, was at Mi Casa, a short two blocks from her hotel . I had a mole poblano which was just heaven, and Carmel had a fruit plate. Mi Casa is located adjacent to the central plaza on Calle Cabo San Lucas (624-143-1933). The open-air interior is beautifully designed to resemble a Mexican village with murals and authentic decorations. They say that Mi Casa has the most authentic Mexican food in Cabo, specializing in regional Mexican cuisine from different parts of Mexico. Everyone in Cabo, it seems, sells timeshares. Conversations with the Mexicans are easy to come by and are usually interesting. In terms of cultural markers, I noticed that they talked frequently about their families and where they grew up. Their education or their business experiences also came up often in conversation. Almost everyone I talked to came from the mainland of Mexico, many from Mexico City. They came to Cabo to make money – and that’s where the timeshares come in. The conversation would inevitably lead to the questions, “What do you plan to do while you’re in Cabo? What would you like to do?” I would answer with Pelicans resting on a limed rock near Land’s End something like, “Trying different foods, maybe going horseback riding on the beach, going out to Land’s End in a glass-bottomed boat, snorkeling.” That’s where you get hooked. “Oh, I can get you a boat ride for free.” Or, “I can get you an extra night at your hotel for free.” And when you agree to the freebie, you find out that you’ve got to sit through one of these hour and a half breakfast sales pitches for a time-share. One morning I walked past perhaps twenty tables of sales pitches going on at the restaurant at my hotel. (Fortunately, I had the perspicacity to avoid falling for these deals – but not Carmel: she was psyched to buy a time-share by the time I met up with her.) Cabo, they say, is Mexico gone wrong. They say it’s where Mexican culture breaks down in the face of the American encroachment. If it weren’t there, Mexico could be Mexico. I prefer to interpret it as one of the places where Mexico’s cultural change is most apparent. Mexico is changing rapidly as it moves from third-world to a modern country. There are cell phones, PDA’s, and laptops all over the place. Mexicans have been watching US television for years, and they emulate the stars and their lifestyles. One young woman I talked to (who stood in a time-share booth) had no problem with being thirty and unmarried – and she talked about the ticking of her Continued on page 4 The very tip of Baja California, past Land’s End 3 The Gated Community by Bruce McGovern Several times, The Doctor in the little village where my wife was born, and his wife, have invited us to visit their home in Puebla. They had mentioned the fact that it was in a ‘gated community.’ That is, it has high walls around it, and to enter, a person must convince some very suspicious security people they have a reason to be there. Usually security will call your house for permission to admit them if they are not sure. I had visited a gated community in Puebla, but it had $250,000 homes. So, I paid little attention when he said he lived in a gated community, assuming it was out of our price range. My wife and I have gradually over the last three years begun to think we should live in Puebla, since it is a direct bus ride to every place we want to go – Cordoba, rural Puebla, Mexico City, and Texas, therefore the United States. The rough plan would be to keep our old van in storage here in Texas, as the Winter Texans often do, with our traveling needs in it, and when we come to the States, bring it out and go driving away to visit family wherever they are. Last week, I told The Doctor and his wife I had a lot of questions to ask. They didn't mind at all. In fact, they were all excited at the prospect of having us for neighbors. Nice, ample-sized homes in their gated community have two or three bedrooms and a nice patio. Rent for the houses runs about 3,000 pesos a month, a little over $300 USD; to buy one runs around $35,000 USD. Small apartments rent, and probably sell, for about half that money. Owner pays water. The renter pays electricity and telephone, also gas for the roof tank for the gas stove and water heater. The security charge is almost nominal, perhaps $10 a month. The Doctor's house has a 5,000 liter cistern, and the water is on at least 3 days a week, so water would not be the problem it is for Raul, who gets water only once or twice a week, and only has a 3,000 liter cistern. The central bus station is within walking distance. A supermarket/mall is within two blocks of the security gate. A combi 4 (microbus) route that can take you across the city for a few pesos runs in front of the mall. This would be perfect for my wife, who does not drive, but has a strong desire to go places. Security only permits the gas truck, the garbage truck, the bottled water trucks, the meter readers, and not much of anyone else in without permission from the owner/renter. This neighborhood is quiet – no street vendors. Even the parents take their kid to the large park a few blocks away, instead of letting them play noisily in the streets. In 1999, we visited Raul about a mile from this place, and I already know I like it there. We have a date to meet them at the security gate in January. If my wife loves it, well, wish me luck! And, those who think they'll send me a mail to find out exactly where this little paradise is located, no way! In Iowa, we never told where we found morel mushrooms. No one tells where they catch fish. So, sorry, go find your own gated community. Someday, if I sign a lease, maybe I'll share. Maybe not. However, The Doctor assures me there are other such gated communities around Puebla, and almost certainly in other cities as well. So, if you are considering another community, and this appeals to you, ask locally for such a community. Frankly, I don't like the thought of living in a closed community. However, since we tend to travel a lot to visit family, the high level of security while we are gone overrides the strong desire I have to mingle with the general community around me. Writing from my home in McAllen, Texas Three Faces Continued biological clock. In fact, she had a rebelliousness in her tone of voice and she was proud of it. She said her family, on the mainland, believed in the old ways, but Playa Los Medanos, the main she could beach in Cabo San Lucas never do that. We gringos lament the loss of the innocence and gentility that we see in our idealized A sailboat vision of where the Sea Mexico and of Cortez we point to meets the Pacific Cabo and Ocean say, “There, there’s the problem; that’s why we’re losing El Arco beautiful old at Land’s Mexico.” End But, in truth, Mexico is going to change, and is changing, Cabo or no Cabo. Approaching El Arco, from the Pacific side A seal lion rests atop a rock near Land’s End b b b Sea lions blend into rock formations at Land’s End Loreto b Santiago b b Cabo San Lucas Puerto b Vallarta Mexico City bb Puebla Carmel could almost cry at the beauty of the Mexican people. I saw much more of what I call Mexican culture in Cabo than I have ever seen in the Baja Norte cities of Tijuana and Ensenada. And this is what appealed to Carmel. She saw a gentleness, a purity of soul in the Mexicans she talked to – and she trusted in that. Carmel is a believer in good in the world. Mexicans would invite her to their house on her next trip down to Cabo, and she would seriously accept their invitation. Carmel is a love child of the sixties. She would buy trinkets from little barefoot girls, examining the handcrafted beauty of each one before making her final selection. And her attention would focus not so much on what she was buying as on whom she was buying it from – and their simplicity and calmness. “If you buy from me, good. If not, that’ll be OK too.” What is, is. Meandering pool reminds the visitor they are in a tropical paradise One day I had a call from Carmel. Let’s meet up. I said I would walk over to her hotel, along the beach. I would be there in half an hour. I thought the sand on the beach would be hard and easy to traverse. Not so. The grains of sand in Cabo are large, round and smooth. You don’t walk along the beach, even in the wet part near the water. You trudge. I go to a gym in San Diego, but I had to rest numerous times on my walk down the beach to the marina in front of Carmel’s hotel. And then the dock meandered around so that the walk turned out to take an hour and a half. I was delayed by a group of young men who shouted, “Hey, meester, you want some weed?” When I declined, they said, “You want some blow?” Not today, thank you. From that time on I drove over to her hotel. We took a glass-bottomed boat ride out to Land’s End, one of the nicest experiences of the trip. We wanted to see the colorful tropical fish in the waters of Cabo, but we didn’t want to snorkel in order to do it. So, we met up with Jorge, who, for ten dollars each, took us out (I also tipped him five dollars at the end of the trip). We saw parrotfish, trumpetfish – and my memory fails me in naming the several other species we saw. Sea lions basked on the rocks. The pelicans had their own pelican rock which they had whitened over the years. We traveled in the boat past Land’s End from the warm, greenish waters of the Sea of Cortez to the colder and clearer water of the Pacific Ocean. On the way back, Jorge, an expert with his boat, guided us through the narrow opening at the base of El Arco. Jorge dropped us off at El Melía (the beautiful, calmer, more Mexican resort right next to Pueblo Bonito Blanco) and picked up another party for the same trip. Jorge is becoming a wealthy man. The spa at Pueblo Bonito is world-class. Pueblo Bonito Blanco (which is also called Pueblo Bonito Los Cabos) actually has a sister hotel, Pueblo Bonito Rosé, right next door – and guests can cross back and forth between the two. Rosé seems to be more of a time-share building. It, too, is a paradise, and perhaps more magnificent than Blanco. There is a black swan in one of the pools. Continued on page 8 Cabo – The Other Side by Ann Hazard Where’s the easiest resort to escape to from San Diego? Los Cabos – only two hours away on Aeromexico or Alaska. However, if you’re like me and crave peace, quiet and beachside romance on your next getaway, you may consider Cabo just a little too busy. I did. I hadn’t been there to stay in nearly five years. I figured it wasn’t really Baja anymore – with its crowds, jet skis, cruise ships, big hotels and chain restaurants. To me Baja is supposed to be remote and peaceful … a place where nature remains dominant. Well, I stand corrected. On the northwest side of Cabo San Lucas, light years (and seven minutes by free shuttle) away from everything, is the new Pueblo Bonito Sunset Beach. On a private piece of coastline that seems to go on forever, this hotel is terraced down a hillside, in total harmony with the environment. The views are expansive, the rooms luxurious but comfy-casual. Each has marble floors, a private oceanfront patio, TV with all the channels anyone could ever want, oversized shower and mini-bar. We flew to Cabo after school got out with two 17-year-old girls. While I’m fine with camping in a tent on a deserted beach, my daughter and her friend have higher standards. They were in vacation heaven. So was I, actually. What I learned is that I’m not above being treated like a queen, and that a suite on a hillside is more romantic than a tent in the sand! Guests can walk or hitch a ride on a golf cart down the winding path that leads to the beach, pool and swim-up bar. The pool meanders along the beachfront, its waterfalls and bridges giving it the feel and look of a tropical lagoon. The swim-up bar – instead of just offering underwater barstools – actually has booths, with tile tables above the water and underwater seating. We plopped down and ordered lunch. Best Reuben sandwich I’ve ever had … in Mexico. Go figure. Dinner at La Nao Restaurant (named after a Spanish galleon that traveled from Manila to Acapulco by way of Cabo, from 1565 until 1815) was another treasure. There are two other Pueblo Bonitos in Cabo— the Rosé and the Los Cabos (also known as the Blanco). Both are on Playa Los Medanos, the main beach in town – and between them, they offer every amenity a vacationer could ask for. Cabo has grown up. It’s nothing like the rest of the peninsula, but then it doesn’t purport to be. It’s sophisticated … with world-class hotels, food and service. In October, it hosted APEC (the Asia Pacific Economic Conference) with twenty-two presidents in attendance. That’s big. But what actually impressed me the most about Cabo were the desalinization and water treatment plants. Every major hotel pumps seawater in, purifies it, pipes it throughout the property, treats wastewater and returns it to the ocean in its original state. That’s huge. Check out www.pueblobonito.com. b b b Más o Menos Continued V elas has recently opened a new hotel in Nueva Vallarta that we were shown on tour, the Grand Velas All Suites & Spa Resort. And grand it is. Doubles in this palace-like resort start at $500.00, all-inclusive. I knew I was in unfamiliar territory when they described their “pillow menu” option with your room. Pillow menu. For the first 10 years I traveled in Mexico my pillow options were either my rolled up Levi’s or rolled up beach towel, whichever smelled best that day. Now I’m thinking that this place might be the bait for my next bribe. Felice really likes nice pillows, and I have another trip offer coming up. b b b 5 Outback Continued Osprey pauses close at hand The nightlife rivals Cancún. When we were there recently, we watched a neverending parade of cruise ships drop anchor in the bay, disgorging crowds in search of that ideal gift, a quick tour of the area, or an afternoon on the glorious beach at the Hotel Hacienda, www.cabotravel.com/ hotelhacienda.htm, where we were staying. The pace in Los Cabos is lively, to say the least. There’s never a shortage of things to do. Our hotel was centrally located – within walking distance to everything. It combined the best of old world Mexican charm and modern amenities, and it had the best beach (a half mile long) in the area. We started our trip in Buena Vista, about 45 minutes north of the Los Cabos Airport. Here the splendor of nature dominates. The ATV Tour assembled in a quiet spot. hotels are small, spread out and intimate. Many are accessible only by dirt road. People make friends here. They feel like they’re part of the family and they know the waitresses and bartenders by name. Many return year after year. Fishing tends to be the primary draw, as this is one of the premier sport fishing destinations in the world. With more than 850 species of identified fish, it ranks as one of Earth's most productive fishing areas. There isn’t much nightlife, as anglers tend to go to bed early and rise before the sun. We don’t mind. If we want that kind of action, we go to Cabo. 6 Want to visit the East Cape, but don’t fish, and want to do more than work on your tan? Interested in Los Cabos, but eager to see something outside the city limits? For those of us who want something a little more edgy than a resort vacation – be it old or new school – there is something new happening in Southern Baja. Call it ecotourism or call it adventure tourism – it’s the hottest thing going on in these parts, and it will transform your idea of Baja Sur forever. When most people think of the Baja landscape, they think of desert, mountains and sea. That doesn’t even scratch the surface. There is a world of splendor under Cave Rock the sea to be explored. There are hidden tropical oases, waterfalls and hot springs in the mountains. The only living coral reef in western North America can be found here, in the Cabo Pulmo National Marine Park. There are lush plantations terraced down steep mountainsides. In coastal lagoons you can find amazing birds and other wildlife. There are ancient Indian rock paintings and crumbling old Spanish missions. There is even have a zoo in the East Cape. We used Hotel Buena Vista Beach Resort (http://hotelbuenavsita.com) as our home base for our adventure tour vacation. All tours described are offered through the hotel. San Miguel Indian Rock Painting Tour Hundreds of ancient Indian rock and cave paintings have been discovered in Baja and all are at least 15,000 years old. On this six-hour guided tour, our guide, Angel Ortiz, took us way up into the rugged mountains close to the Los Cabos Airport. The paintings here are on a monstrous boulder, located in what was obviously the middle of the Indians’ sacred meeting grounds. Small hands and an array of wildlife are depicted, along with an accurate compass. A river runs through this arroyo year-round. During the rainy season (late summer to early fall) the waters roar down the canyon. Over centuries the waters have scoured, shaped and buffed the granite boulders so that now they’re smooth and easy to walk on. There are sandy beaches alongside the massive rock formations – providing ideal places to picnic and spread your towel for a siesta after you take a dip in the river – which is what we did, of course! Santiago Zoo and Waterfall Tour The next day Angel took us on a sixhour excursion to the agricultural village of Santiago. We were amazed at the lush orchards of mangos, avocados and citrus fruits growing here in this oasis community. It seemed so non-Baja! After a tour of the town, we visited the Santiago Zoo – the only one in all of Baja California. Here we snapped photos of ostriches, deer, an array of exotic birds – including eagles, a falcon, parrots and peacocks, a tiger, bear and lion, foxes, coyotes and mountain lions. This zoo is a wonderfully peaceful sanctuary set within gardens of mango and avocado trees, aloe and numerous species of native cacti. After this, we headed up into the Laguna de la Sierra Mountains to visit La Cola de la Zorra (the Tail of the Fox), which is the La Cola de la Zorra cascades to pool below largest waterfall in Baja. The water tumbles down more than 40 feet into a pool that is over 20 feet deep. After a short, easy hike on a good trail, we reached the falls, where the braver among us dove off the rocks (from about 35 feet) into the cool, crystal clear water. Angel had offered us the option of picnicking at the waterfall or stopping back in town for lunch in the gardens of the Hotel Palomar. We opted for the picnic, but stopped on our way home at the hotel for a couple cervezas and some guacamole. What a day! Santa Rita Hot Springs Tour I knew there were hot springs at the Hotel Buena Vista, but I couldn’t believe there were more up in the mountains. Our third Continued on page 7 Outback Continued ATV Mountain Tour of coral reefs. A Mexican fishing vessel, the Colima – sunk during a storm in 1939 – lies in 18 feet of water offshore, and offers the added bonus of a wreck dive for scuba enthusiasts. Visibility ranges from 60 to 100 feet in the water, and the ocean temperatures range from 65 to 80 degrees. adventure tour took us through Santiago again, through the ranching oasis of San Jorge and up in the mountains to Santa Rita. There we came upon a rancho with private hot and cool springs and a stream that flows year-round. Terry and our driver, Max, hiked with the rancher a half hour upstream to large pools where you can swim and even dive in the crystal clear water. Angel and I ate lunch and soaked in the pools of hot water. When we’d had enough, we hopped over a few rocks and cooled off in other pools. It was heavenly. The idea of hopping aboard an ATV and heading for the hills makes me feel like a modern day cowgirl. On this four-hour guided tour, Steve took us off-roading into the mountains, educating us about the local flora, fauna, and wildlife as we passed through riverbeds, traversed mountain trails and visited the rarely seen side of Baja. We headed down the beach and through several arroyos before we began climbing into the hills toward Big Spring. The views of the Sea of Cortez from way up there Rita Ann Hazard relaxes in a pool Waterfall cascades into a rock carved pool Cave stream sculpts the terrain gracefully ATV Bird-Watching Tour were mind-boggling. It was truly a “top of the world” experience. We left our bikes and walked about 300 yards to a waterfall and large pool. We’d worn our swimsuits under our shorts, so we stripped down and dove right in. Steve pulled out a cooler with chilled beers and some snacks, and we had ourselves a mini-picnic before heading back to the hotel. dive and snorkel sites within the park. He told us that the previous day a whale shark (harmless, but the hugest fish in the sea) had surprised snorkelers. They’d also seen mantas flipping in and out of the water and some sperm whales spouting offshore. Terry and I took this four-hour guided ATV tour with Buena Vista’s wildlife expert, Steve Chism. We departed from the beach shack at the southeast edge of the hotel property and traveled south along the beach and coastal road. The terrain here varied between desert thorn forest, agriculture and peaceful coastal lagoons. He pointed out all kinds of birds in the brackish and fresh water lagoons, including: osprey, frigate birds, Gilla woodpeckers, catus wrens, pyrrahuloxia. Uncommon birds include: wood stork, black-bellied whistling bucks, sora, lasuuli bunting. It was hot the day we went, so we brought along our snorkeling gear and stopped near Rancho Leonero to cool off and check out the undersea life. We saw all kinds of fish, and even a pair of lobsters! MF THE MEXICO FILE The Newsletter for Mexicophiles Cabo Pulmo Marine Park In June of 1995 Cabo Pulmo was officially declared a Marine preserve by the Mexican Government – which means it’s off limits for fishing and a perfect eco- and adventure tour destination. Located about midway between San Jose del Cabo and Buena Vista, Cabo Pulmo is off the beaten track and it’s not crowded. The underwater park is 11 miles long with eight different fingers THE MEXICO FILE Published ten times a year by Simmonds Publications 5580 La Jolla Blvd., #306 n La Jolla, CA 92037 Voice mail: 800-563-9345 n Phone/Fax: (858) 456-4419 E-mail: mf@mexicofile.com n Website: www.mexicofile.com Subscription rate is $39.00 per year in the U.S., $49.00 per year outside the U.S. Promotional rates are sometimes available. ©2004 Simmonds Publications The Mexico File’s contents are intended for the independent traveler. The information given is believed to be reliable, but cannot be guaranteed for accuracy due to constant changes that occur in a country this size. n Unsolicited stories, photos and letters are welcomed and encouraged. Postage should be included for any items to be returned. n This publication may not be reproduced in any form without written permission from the editor and the author of the article. Editor: David Simmonds Publisher: Robert Simmonds, Ph.D. Contributing Editors: Cheryl Weller, Felice Simmonds n Design/Layout: Paul Hartsuyker www.hartworks.net Pepe Murietta, longtime park director, is a certified dive, sailing and kayak instructor. He’s also a naturalist with expertise in marine and plant biology and archaeology. That day he met us at his Outdoor Activity Center and gave us a presentation on the We followed Pepe’s van down a dirt road to our launching point. The beach was as pretty as any I’d seen in the Caribbean, with the same pale aquamarine water and sugar-soft white sand. The temperature was a perfect 78 degrees. Underwater, we swam among needlefish, triggerfish, rainbow colored parrotfish, big-nosed jewfish, yellow and gray-striped tigerfish, spiny brown-spotted blowfish, eels and even a sea turtle. Later on, my kids took Pepe’s kayak out to look at the sea lion colony nearby. Then we headed into the tiny town of Cabo Pulmo and had a magnificent lunch at Nancy’s Restaurant. As unlikely as it seems, she was trained at the Cordon Bleu in France. I believe it, because the food was fabulous. So were the Margaritas! There are plenty of other tours to take and places to visit in Baja Sur. We barely scratched the surface here. In addition to what I’ve described, there are crumbling, ancient missions to visit, an artist colony at nearby Todos Santos, whale nurseries in Bahía Magdalena and secret surf spots Continued on page 8 7 Three Faces Continued Cancun, Los Cabos….Loreto? It’s official. The next major tourist destination in Mexico will be Loreto, the small Mexican town about 700 miles down the Baja peninsula. The Villages of Loreto Bay will be a series of seaside villages built on 3,000 acres on the Sea of Cortez three miles south of Loreto. The first 60 homes recently went on sale and sold out on the first day. The total buildout will include 5,000 homes, hotels, service and retail businesses, and recreational facilities. Home prices currently start in the $150,000 range. The development is a partnership between Mexican, Canadian and American investors. Besides driving the transpeninsular highway to access Loreto, there is Loreto International Airport. For more information visit www.loretobay.com . Airport Security Not Welcomed Mexican politicians, religious leaders and human rights groups have lodged official complaints with government ministries requesting to know why there are U.S. security agents at the Mexico City airport. The major complaint is that Mexican law ensures that passengers are not searched by foreigners on Mexican soil. Mexico has complied with the U.S. request to place armed, undercover federal police on key flights destined for the U.S., but its sovereignty is being questioned regarding the searches. (Editor’s Note: Mexican airlines appear much more diligent in inspecting passengers than those in the U.S. Passenger profiling doesn’t seem to be a civil rights issue and I can’t imagine one of their pilots being a terrorist and not being discovered). Tourism Numbers Increase International tourism to Mexico increased by 7.1 percent from January to September, 2003, compared to the same months in 2002. The revenue generated was a staggering $7.04 billion, with a 8 Outback Continued The spa is part of the Rosé complex. My room at the Blanco got me daily spa passes with full use of the facilities (otherwise, the cost is $12 per day). This is pure luxury with an emphasis on relaxation. In fact, they have a relaxation room with bubbles traveling up the wall and calming new age music in the background. I enjoyed the steam room, Swedish showers (where rows of showerheads are aimed at the length of your body coming from three different directions) and the jacuzzis (which had ten foot waterfalls pouring into the pools). Massages and treatments of various kinds cost extra and the prices are comparable to those in the U.S. (In the interest of telling the complete story here about Pueblo Bonito, there is actually a newer third hotel on the Pacific side, Pueblo Bonito Sunset Beach. See the short article by Ann Hazard in this issue.) I had more shrimp in Cabo than I’ve ever had anywhere. The shrimp houses are right on the street, open without windows, with tables of drinkers and shrimp-eaters, and mariachi bands playing to your soul’s content. I recommend the Shrimp Factory across the street from Plaza las Glorias and El Shrimp Bucket on the marina. You buy a kilo or half a kilo of shrimp and peel away to your heart’s content. (But the very best shrimp I had was not in Cabo San Lucas, but in San Jose del Cabo at the Tropicana. Their shrimp cocktail is a masterpiece – clean, fresh and tasty and, for $9.00, contains about 30 shrimp.) on the Pacific side. If you’re ready to try a vacation that’s not centered totally around being pampered, eating, drinking and sunning or fishing … then getting a taste of Outback Los Cabos might just be your next cool thing. Resources: In the East Cape, Hotel Buena Vista Beach Resort (www.hotelbuenavista.com) and Palmas de Cortez (www.bajaresorts.com) offer a whole range of adventure tours. Contact Pepe Murietta at (http://cabopulmo.com.mx) to arrange a personalized tour of the Cabo Pulmo Marine park. Vista Sea Sports (http://vistaseapsport.com) in Buena Vista offers a great array of scuba and snorkel tours. Operators out of Los Cabos include Cabo Safari (http://cabosafari.com), Baja Adventures (www.bajaadventures.com) and Cabo World (www.caboworld.com). For the most comprehensive listing of all Adventure Tour operators in Baja, visit Baja Links: (http://www.bajalinks.com/ @surf.html). Here you’ll find information on everything from whale and kayak tours, to windsurfing, surfing and scuba. For information on Cabo, www.visitcabo.com is the place to check out. To fly in, check out Aeromexico (www.aeromexico.com) or Alaska Airlines (www.alaskaairlines.com). b b b In the February 2004 issue of Mexico File, we will continue our Cabo tour with two more faces – San Jose del Cabo and Todos Santos. b b b historic record $9 billion within reach for the year. The average amount of money spent per visitor also increased by nearly 5%. One reason for the increase has been attributed to the launch of Nuestro Mexico, a program aimed at promoting travel to Mexico among Mexicans residing in the U.S. and Americans descended from Mexico. b b b Subscribe to The Mexico File. Name Address Telephone Cost: $39.00 per year (ten issues) in the U.S. $49.00 per year outside the U.S. Send check or money order to: Simmonds Publications 5580 La Jolla Blvd, Suite #306 La Jolla, CA 92037 Phone 1-800-5MEXFILE