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I took advantage of being
on the west coast visiting the
MV Kaitlin
and caught an Aeromexico flight fron San Diego to the
Los Cabos
area on the southern tip of Baja
California. I spent the week of April 4-11 there, diving and exploring.
I rented an AVIS vehicle for the week. They wanted $220/week for a stick shift, $450/week for automatic. I took the stick, a tiny black Chrysler Neon, and ran up over 300 miles. A week later, back in the states, I was still stepping on an imaginary clutch when stopping at traffic lights. You can do without a car in the Los Cabos area, but if you're staying anywhere but downtown Cabo San Lucas, you'll find the cost is offset by the savings on rather expensive taxi service.
Landscapes in this dry area are mesquite, yucca plants and dust,
until you come to the explosion of flowers marking the entrance to one
of the many resorts lining the 12 mile corridor between San Jose del Cabo and
Cabo San Lucas.
The main streets of Cabo are similiarly lined with flowers, and
every morning the water trucks would dutifully care for them.
There is also a notable absence of bridges over the
normally dry arroyos. During the rainy season they simply overflow
even the main highways. Metal stakes are found along the edge of
a road where it crosses the arroyos, letting folks know how deep the
muddy water is.
The rest of the
year drivers slow down to traverse the sandfills and washouts
where the water flowed. Fortunately, they don't usually have
rain this time of the year, but those washouts can sure sneak up
on you. Then there's the last 16 miles of the road to Cabo Pulmo.
It's gravel with big ruts and rocks. |
I stayed at the Plaza las Glorias,
a 287 room complex that dominates the west side of the marina in downtown Cabo San Lucas.
Rooms were clean, full sized, with phones and cable, and well appointed as befits a 4 Star ranking.
It is within walking distance of nearly everything in town. All the area's activities
are available from many vendors at Plaza las Glorias.
Cabo is a watersports town, with fishing, diving, swimming, and cruising on an enormous variety of watercraft being the dominant activites. Golf, horseback and 4-wheel ATV riding are also available. There are a dozen highly rated resturants within a short walk, and a bazillion bars of every musical persuasion that operate until the wee hours. There are hills just west of the Plaza las Glorias. If you find your way there, you'll get some excellent photos of the town, the marina, and Land's End. You'll also learn to turn your Avis stick shift Chrysler Neon around on a narrow dirt road with a rock cliff behind you and a soft shoulder and a 400 foot drop in front. The photo will go on the webpage even if it's not any good. |
I did two days of diving while in Los Cabos.
Early in the week I did the 80 mile drive to Cabo Pulmo, and dived
with Pepe's Dive Center. Pepe was off in La Paz doing National Park things,
but his wife Libby was there, and Roberto, our Divemaster. We assembled
our gear under the awning, donned our wetsuits,
then left in the back of a pickup truck for the half mile trip
to the boats. All diving is from 20 foot wooden pangas. Easy out (back roll)
but tough recovery (doff gear, get pulled over the side by helpful DM.)
We all helped shove off from the shore, then scrambled aboard.
Cabo Pulmo has the most northern coral reef in the eastern Pacific. All the reefs
are nearby, and it was a short ride to El Baho, a 60' reef and the first site.
The 2nd site was El Centril, a 20-45' depth and barely offshore.
There was a bit of a chop on the water, which silted the visibility down to about 25 feet. Water temperature was in the low 70F's.
There was also a noticible current, making for drift dives.
The reef was mostly rock, with occasional purple gorgonians (some sea rod species) and low
lying finger coral on top, particularly on the shallow (20') portion of the reef.
Fish were plentiful but not overwhelmingly so. There were lots of striped burrfish,
yellow tailed surgeon fish, and a couple of Napeleon Wrasses. Bat rays were jumping
all around the surface in a feeding frenzy, but we only saw a few underwater in the low vis.
We did find a few rays in the sand near the rocks.
Midweek I dove Cabo San Lucas with Land's End Divers. I chose them from the 4 dive operations at Plaza las Glorias for the expedient reason that I could drop my divegear out my window and it'd land on their doorstep. Okay, I didn't really do it, but I could have. A continuing SW surge left only 3 divesites open, and they were silty. We did the Sandfall, max depth 100' and then nearby North Wall, where like any wall you could reach 3000' but managed to stay above 70. Visibility was less than Cabo Pulmo, surge was noticible at the hang, and water was again in the low 70F's.
We saw many of the same spiecies as before, but added
a spiny lobster and several small morays. Diving here is from pangas also, with
even more freeboard than in Cabo Pulmo. These divesites were barely out of the marina,
about 5 minutes by boat. All in all the diving was great for the folks from the California coast and the midwest, where the water is 54F and the visibility is seldom greater than 15 feet. For us Florida types, it was about as cold as we can tolerate, and we rarely see visibility that low. On the other hand, these sites had enough new things to keep it interesting. I didn't bring the RS, so shot only Hi8 video, from whence come these shots. None would make the photo galleries, but they do give a sense of the area. I may head for La Paz in the fall, when whale sharks are common in the area, and I'll be better armed camera wise. |
I posted reports from
Dr. Z's Internet Cafe and Bar in Cabo San Lucas.
This is an excellent place, equipped with
7 computers online and phone jacks for use with your own computer. Of the two
internet cafe's in Cabo, this is the only one where you can log on with your own computer,
making it useful for things other than checking email.
Besides that, Dr Z's is a fine cafe with both indoor and outdoor seating, with an excellent menu and a full
service bar. I took advantage of both the specialty coffee and the quesadillas on more
than one occasion to FTP uploads to the site and check the 100 or so emails that come from
the various relays.
Rates are available for 1/4, 1/2, and 1 hour times,
with 1 hour running 100 pesos ($11). Both Dr Z and his helper Ziggy are fully conversant in the ways
of computers. In the photos, Dr. Z labors at
another tricky HTML table, Oti uploads a couple of margaritas for customers,
and Ziggy looks on as I FTP to Wade's Page.
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| The
arch at Land's End seems to be the photo in 90% of the area advertisements,
so I took the mandantory shots too, from across Cabo San Lucas Bay near Cabo Sol.
There was a sea mist up, even though it was midmorning, and a ground swell pounding
the rocks below. In a few weeks I'll return when the MV Kaitlin makes the journey south.
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