Sunday, 24 April 2016

A cabo san lucas whale watching tours

You can enjoy many Cabo San Lucas activities in this beautiful part of the world. The most southern tip of Mexico hosts sports and adventures for you to take part in, and get a real feel for Cabo San Lucas. Take a break from the laying in the sunshine, and you can do something you'll remember for a long time.
A cabo san lucas whale watching tours  is a perfect way for you to get to know some of the Cabo desert terrain. You get a practice session first so you get used to the ATV, and then you're taken by a guide around the desert at a comfortable pace.You'll stop off for a break once in a while, and the guide will talk about the area you're in. It's interesting as well as exciting. A good tip with an cabo trek is to take your camera. You'll see lots of spectacular scenery that you'll want to see again.
Whale watching is big in Cabo San Lucas. These huge mammals migrate south during the months of January to march to the warmer waters of Mexico. You can go on a cabo whale watch expedition, and you can actually get close enough to touch these magnificent creatures.

A Cabo cruise is something different to the usual energetic Cabo San Lucas activities. You can go snorkelling on your cruise. You'll get to see some marine life in the Santa Maris bay.
There is no other place on earth that offers such a high concentration and variety of marine mammals throughout the whole year as do the waters of the Baja Peninsula. The area has many lagoons and sanctuaries where from December right through to April a variety of different species of whale come to mate and give birth to their offspring. More than 20 species of whales are known to visit the peninsula throughout the year.

Every year thousands of gray whales make the 5,000 mile journey from the cold Arctic waters of Alaska's Bering Sea to the warm water lagoons of Mexico's Baja Peninsula where they mate and then give birth to their calves. Cabo whale watch is becoming very popular in the Sea of Cortez (also known as the Gulf of California) where visitors can see blue whales, humpback whales, sperm whales, orcas, finback whales, minke whales, pilot whales, schools of dolphins and many more marine creatures. Marvel as the whales return to the ocean surface after deep dives to expel air from their blowholes, watch the humpbacks repeatedly jumping out of the water and be amazed by the fin whales performing barrel rolls on the surface.

At the southern end of Baja, near Los Cabos, whales are frequently spotted near the beaches of Todos Santos. On the gulf side, near the city of La Paz, the waters are visited by whales around Isla Espiritu Santo and Isla Cerralvo which was renamed 'Jacques Cousteau Island' by the Mexican government in 2009 as the famous explorer and conservationist referred to the area as 'the world's aquarium'.
Mexico's Baja Peninsula consists of the states of Baja California Norte (North) and Baja California Sur (South). Covering an area of over 55,000 square miles, the 680 mile long Baja California Peninsula is an area of beauty with endless beaches, colourful deserts and unexplained rock formations. Apart from whale watching there is so much to do here on your direct holidays to Mexico, including diving, snorkelling, windsurfing, surfing, kayaking, fishing, hiking, golf and much more. Carnivals and fiestas in Baja are an amazing experience and should not be missed when visiting this amazing place.


The Baja Peninsula can generally be divided into two weather zones with the northern half experiencing weather similar to that of South California and the southern half experiencing weather like that in Arizona. The northern half of the peninsula has dry summers with consistent winds along the Pacific coast while the southern half has its rainy season during the summer.

1 comment:

  1. I always want to have adventure of watching whale in real life and such post always motivates me to pursue to my dream. Thanks for sharing it..

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