Baja California South

With 2,230 Kms. of coasts, Baja California South holds 17% of the country's coastline, which represents an enormous potential for tourist resources. There are attractive waters such as those of Mulegé, San Carlos and López Mateos and that of San José del Cabo.
Lovely bays both in the Gulf and on the Pacific, lagoons such as those at Ojo de Liebre and Juan Juan Ignacio, and the paradisical and solitary islands of the Gulf are of great ecological value.
Baja California South (Sur) includes the capital of La Paz, that many people believe is the most "Mexican" of the Baja cities, and the resort centers of Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo.
Ferries run from La Paz to the Mexican Mainland. Great shopping, modern resort hotels, fabulous beaches, and unbelievable weather in the Los Cabos area, attract many thousands of visitors and permanent residents from the U.S. and Canada. Towns like Todos Santos offers a nice year-round climate. Sea of Cortez towns like Mulege feature fabulous diving, snorkeling and kayaking opportunities, and Loreto is becoming a retirement mecca.
The south-central areas around Gerrero Negro on the Pacific side, and Mulege to La Paz on the Sea of Cortez side, are becoming popular whale watching sites!



