Baja California Sur Is Wild by Nature
Baja California Sur Is Wild by Nature
Baja California Sur is wild by nature, and that is not a warning. It is an invitation. Don’t try to make this like where you came from. If you prefer there, please stay there.
A Place Shaped by Everything That Came Before
The beauty of Baja California Sur lives in its wide open spaces and in the grit of the people who built something extraordinary out of almost nothing. This peninsula has endured the native era, the pirate era, the failed Jesuit and Franciscan missions, the mining era, the sugar plantation era, and the modern tourist era. Through all of it, Baja absorbed every wave of change and remained itself.
The people here blended with each other. Instead of building walls, they built community.
The Wildlife That Was Here First
A crested caracara surveys his kingdom from the top of a cardón cactus. He was here long before any of us and will be here long after. Meanwhile, a fever of mobula rays spirals through the Sea of Cortez, the body of water Jacques Cousteau called the world’s aquarium. He was not exaggerating.
Each winter, humpback whales fluke at dusk off the Pacific coast, returning without fail, reminding us who this place really belongs to. And beneath the surface of the water you see from your beach chair, a diver is dwarfed by a massive bait ball of bigeye trevally in the blue.
Baja California Sur is wild by nature in ways that most people never get close enough to understand.
This Is Not a Theme Park
This is not a gated community with an ocean view. In fact, this is one of the last wild places on the continent. It was shaped by indigenous hands, missionary ambition, pirate greed, rancher stubbornness, and a natural abundance that simply does not exist anywhere else on earth.
If you prefer heavy-handed rules and rigid restrictions, this may not be the place for you. But if you feel something when you look at this coastline, at these animals, at this sky? Welcome home.
Photos courtesy of Leonardo Gonzalez Photography.
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