This tour criss-crosses the longest peninsula in the world, from the Pacific Ocean to the Sea of Cortez, from the California border to “land’s end” at Cabo San Lucas. Imagine encountering gray whales, hooking a marlin, swimming in crystalline turquoise waters and strolling warm beaches with a belly full of fresh seafood, camping on the calm inlet at the Bay of Concepcion and shopping at Ensenada’s ocean-front promenade. You’ll visit tropical villages like Mulege and modern cities like La Paz, and spend sparkling days at the international tourist haven of Cabo San Lucas.
Start: San Diego, CA
End: San Diego, CA
Miles: 2,200
Day 1
San Diego, CA
• Orientation
• Peso Exchange Assistance
• Get Acquainted Party
Day 2
Vicente Guerrero
• Welcome Dinner
Day 3
Catavina
Day 4
Guerrero Negro
• Dinner (optional)
Day 5-7
Mulege
• Festive Dinner
• Entertainment
• Petroglyphs Walking Tour
(optional)
Day 8
Puerto Escondido
Day 9-11
La Paz
• Guided City Bus Tour
• Cathedral, Museum
• Artisan Workshop
• Sightseeing
• Barbecue
Day 12-14
Los Barriles
• Brunch
|Day 15-18
Cabo San Lucas
• Dinner
• Boat Tour (Fall and April
Tours)
• Lover’s Beach
• Glass Blowing Factory
Tour
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Day 19-21
Playa Tecolote
Day 22
Puerto Escondido
• Loreto Excursion
(optional)
Day 23-25
Bay of Concepcion Beach
• Beach Party
Day 26
San Ignacio
Day 27-28
Guerrero Negro
• Dinner
• Whale Watching (Jan. thru
March)
Day 29
Catavina
Day 30-31
Ensenada/Estero
• Mexico Farewell Dinner
Day 32
Border Crossing
• San Diego, CA
Start: San Diego, CA
End: San Diego, CA
• Miles: 2,200 |
Baja California is the world’s longest peninsula and the landscape is widely diverse and captivating. With the endless blue of the Pacific Ocean to the west and the Sea of Cortez white sand coasts on the east, Baja is one great beach. But you might be surprised that it also boasts three mountain ranges, placid valleys, and high deserts with thousands of varieties of plants and animals.
Guerrero Negro, located on Scammon’s Lagoon, is an ideal spot to observe California grey whales between January and March. Thousands of whales migrate from the Bering Sea to the lagoon each year.
