Balandra beach e El Tecolote, Baja California Sur, Mexico

Seaside Treasures of the Sea of ​​Cortés


A Divine Cove
crystalline lagoon
The mushroom
Amphibious Photos
A Pelican Domain
Contemplation
pure desert
Among Pelicans
Mangrove Corner
Dune of the Moon
sea ​​of ​​cacti
turquoise cove
Perspective from above
On the way to “El Hongo”
Sea of ​​Cortez Dorado
Cactus Valley
Late Afternoon Sepia
cactus with good view
Gale
Desert on Fire
Often proclaimed the most beautiful beach in Mexico, we find a serious case of landscape exoticism in the jagged cove of Playa Balandra. The duo if forms with the neighbour Playa Tecolote, is one of the truly unmissable beachfronts of the vast Baja California.

Some quirk of the navigation application diverts us from the expected evasion that Saturday morning, towards the outskirts of the capital La Paz, lost almost at the entrance to the desert and which we quickly classify as suspicious. We've revamped the search.

Instead of the long road, we took an alternative that skirted the city and pointed north, towards its back.

From a desolate peak, already full of cacti, we recognized the port of Pichilingue where we had disembarked days before, when arriving from Los Mochis, state of Sinaloa.

We skim the ferry terminal, reject the port's homonymous beach.

The road rises, bends inland.

He enters a new desert valley, full of saguaros with green, striped and thorny arms that so longed for the sky that their colonies multiplied up the hills.

A boat lost in the sea of ​​cacti and nothingness suggests that the ocean was close by again.

Without warning, instead of desert, on our left, we found a dense mangrove that concealed the bottom of an arm of the sea.

Playa and Balandra Bay: an Immaculate Baja California Sur

When we go around them, we find the entrance to Playa Balandra that we were looking for.

A respective park employee approaches us. He clarifies for us what we remembered having read somewhere, that the parking lot had a maximum number of cars.

“Either they come back another day or leave the car here. Thirty people are already waiting. Many will only go there towards the end of the afternoon.”

We knew how special Balandra was, which was worth the privilege of its imminence. We put our backpacks on our backs. We proceed. Less than ten minutes later, we are at the entrance to the beach, next to trailers and stalls that sell a little bit of everything.

Just above sea level, the view from that base on the hillside revealed to us, above all, the human, tourist side of the place and failed to enrapture us. Accordingly, we make our way to a trail that ascends to a panoramic summit.

From the summit, finally, to Playa Balandra, its shapes and exuberant colors grant us a dazzle that would only intensify.

Playa Balandra: On the shores of the Sea of ​​Cortés or the Gulf of California

Mexicans still prefer to refer to the vast expanse of dark sea to the west as Mar de Cortés, in honor of the conqueror born in the region of Badajoz who brought down the mighty Aztec Empire and was one of the first Europeans to sail there.

Unlike the Gringos and most of the foreigners who call that dead end Pacific Ocean, Gulf of California. Whatever the name, what we had at our feet was very out of tune.

A deep creek stretched inland, bordered by high, steep, barren slopes. The bed that covered it was sandy and shallow.

With the tropical sun at its peak, depending on the tides, the sea that barely covered it took on incredible shades of emerald and slightly cloudy turquoise that contrasted both with the coral sands and with the surrounding earth tones and ochre.

In the middle of the lagoon, a patch of dark blue revealed an exceptionally deep section.

The general shallowness of the cove allowed bathers to splash and cross it, from one side to the other, on foot, on mattresses, inflatable boats or in rented kayaks.

To the west of that point of view, between volcanic rocks, cacti and a panoply of thorny bushes, a trail descended to a dune and seaside in the shape of a crescent moon.

It is there that we move, in the same way of discovery in which we had arrived, however, in the company of other explorers already given over to rest.

We crossed the dune.

We went up again to a new summit, overlooking a cove and beach more exposed to the open sea and which the wind punished with a violence that the snug Balandra was spared.

In this already long wandering up and down, we found that the sun was getting ready to dip into the Pacific. Wearily, we agreed that it was time for Balandra to reward us.

We return to the base of the dune, dive into the water, splash around, cool off as much as we can, bearing in mind that we were barely above our knees.

Afterwards, we retrieved our backpacks and started a walk out to sea.

First, without destination or great meaning.

El Hongo: the most Emblematic and Disputed Rock in the region of La Paz

As soon as we go around the cliff from which we had descended, guided by the appearance of the main geological attraction of Balandra, the reason for countless selfies, family and group photographs and their respective adventures and misadventures.

The dark side of the cliff reveals us "The mushroom”, the famous mushroom rock of the beach, unofficial symbol of La Paz, present in all its promotional materials.

So emblematic that, whenever its precarious hat is knocked off by storms or by visitors who climb it, the authorities of the protected area rush to reconstitute it.

Because, when we arrive at its base, we are faced with a mere four or five bathers waiting to have it all to themselves. The great star, however, displayed its last light of day, turning orange the Sea of ​​Cortes that attracted it.

In those pre-twilight moments, we noticed an unexpected migration.

Coming mainly from the beach's equipped sand, dozens of bathers, on foot and on kayaks, converged to “The mushroom” and grouped together on the side of its shadow, adjacent to a concave bottom of the cliff that formed an almost tunnel.

We knew that the mushroom dispute, with the additional benefit of the sunset, would earn us rewarding photographs. We assume, therefore, a necessary amphibious posture.

We adjusted ourselves back and forth, depending on the positions of those posing and suggesting poses, always in such a way as to have the mushroom highlighted above the sea line and the opposite slope.

We shot countless times, still attentive to who was coming, with all our clothes on, as if that was the only worthy photo of the vacation.

Seagulls that flew over us, attracted by the concentration of people, also contributed to that visual frenzy that we only took for granted when the twilight tones faded.

Return to La Paz and then back to Playa Balandra

We join the new migration. Balandra's, returning to the urban shelter of La Paz. We were so fascinated by the beach that in the middle of the next afternoon, on Sunday, we returned.

Instead of heading straight towards the main entrance. We stop a kilometer or two before, determined to enjoy the scenery from the top of the opposite slope, much higher, and the panoramic view to match.

We walked several kilometers, again among cacti and desert bushes that did not forgive distractions.

We descended from the crest of the slope to photograph Balandra with very graphic cacti in the foreground.

In the meantime, the only other wandering being in those parts, interrupts his meditation on the rock, approaches us and greets us.

“Surreal, this here, isn’t it?” asks us Sven, a German backpacker still born in East Berlin, formerly East Germany.

We effusively agreed. Sven offers to photograph us with Playa Balandra in the background.

Afterwards, we went back to the cars exchanging compliments about Baja California, from other no less surreal places in Mexico and World. Sven gets a ride back to La Paz.

El Tecolote: Incursion to the Neighboring Beach

We fulfilled the plan thought of the night before to go check out the neighboring Playa El Tecolote.

If Balandra is protected and exclusive, we find its popular sister in El Tecolote.

Vehicles park as they please on the beach and in front of the many bars serving the beach. Some get into trouble and, as we have witnessed, even have to be towed from sandy areas.

Facing east, with a view of the large island of Espirito Santo (another mythical place in La Paz), El Tecolote is windy. It welcomes shoals that renew themselves endlessly.

One of the favorite pastimes of those who frequent it has thus become drinking beers, micheladas and others.

Snacking on the terraces while chatting and enjoying the swooping flights of the countless resident pelicans.

Birds are often keen to claim their dominance.

They dive, unceremoniously, among bathers or in amusing or frightening raids, depending on the profile of the victim.

At almost the same time as the day before, the falling sun was beginning to shine “The mushroom” dyed the sepia-toned coastline of El Tecolote, dotted with wooden establishments and palm trees.

With the wind becoming infernal, only a few swimmers survive among the pelicans.

Along the bars, a crowd of restless figures prolongs that airy breath of life between the desert and the Sea of ​​Cortés.

Of Baixa, that Mexican California, there really was only geography.

Tulum, Mexico

The Most Caribbean of the Mayan Ruins

Built by the sea as an exceptional outpost decisive for the prosperity of the Mayan nation, Tulum was one of its last cities to succumb to Hispanic occupation. At the end of the XNUMXth century, its inhabitants abandoned it to time and to an impeccable coastline of the Yucatan peninsula.
Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico

On the Edge of the Cenote, at the Heart of the Mayan Civilization

Between the XNUMXth and XNUMXth centuries AD, Chichen Itza stood out as the most important city in the Yucatan Peninsula and the vast Mayan Empire. If the Spanish Conquest precipitated its decline and abandonment, modern history has consecrated its ruins a World Heritage Site and a Wonder of the World.
Yucatan, Mexico

The End of the End of the World

The announced day passed but the End of the World insisted on not arriving. In Central America, today's Mayans watched and put up with incredulity all the hysteria surrounding their calendar.
Campeche, Mexico

200 Years of Playing with Luck

At the end of the XNUMXth century, the peasants surrendered to a game introduced to cool the fever of cash cards. Today, played almost only for Abuelites, lottery little more than a fun place.
Phi Phi Islands, Thailand

Back to Danny Boyle's The Beach

It's been 15 years since the debut of the backpacker classic based on the novel by Alex Garland. The film popularized the places where it was shot. Shortly thereafter, the XNUMX tsunami literally washed some away off the map. Today, their controversial fame remains intact.
San Cristóbal de las Casas a Campeche, Mexico

A Relay of Faith

The Catholic equivalent of Our Lady of Fátima, Our Lady of Guadalupe moves and moves Mexico. Its faithful cross the country's roads, determined to bring the proof of their faith to the patroness of the Americas.
Montezuma, Costa Rica

Back to the Tropical Arms of Montezuma

It's been 18 years since we were dazzled by this one of Costa Rica's blessed coastlines. Just two months ago, we found him again. As cozy as we had known it.
Champoton, Mexico

Rodeo Under Sombreros

Champoton, in Campeche, hosts a fair honored by the Virgén de La Concepción. O rodeo Mexican under local sombreros reveals the elegance and skill of the region's cowboys.

Mexico City, Mexico

mexican soul

With more than 20 million inhabitants in a vast metropolitan area, this megalopolis marks, from its heart of zócalo, the spiritual pulse of a nation that has always been vulnerable and dramatic.

Campeche, Mexico

A Bingo so playful that you play with puppets

On Friday nights, a group of ladies occupy tables at Independencia Park and bet on trifles. The tiniest prizes come out to them in combinations of cats, hearts, comets, maracas and other icons.
Mérida, Mexico

The Most Exuberant of Meridas

In 25 BC, the Romans founded Emerita Augusta, capital of Lusitania. The Spanish expansion generated three other Méridas in the world. Of the four, the Yucatan capital is the most colorful and lively, resplendent with Hispanic colonial heritage and multi-ethnic life.
San Cristobal de Las Casas, Mexico

The Home Sweet Home of Mexican Social Conscience

Mayan, mestizo and Hispanic, Zapatista and tourist, country and cosmopolitan, San Cristobal has no hands to measure. In it, Mexican and expatriate backpacker visitors and political activists share a common ideological demand.
Izamal, Mexico

The Holy, Yellow and Beautiful Mexican City

Until the arrival of the Spanish conquerors, Izamal was a center of worship for the supreme Mayan god Itzamná and Kinich Kakmó, the one of the sun. Gradually, the invaders razed the various pyramids of the natives. In its place, they built a large Franciscan convent and a prolific colonial houses, with the same solar tone in which the now Catholic city shines.
Campeche, Mexico

Campeche Upon Can Pech

As was the case throughout Mexico, the conquerors arrived, saw and won. Can Pech, the Mayan village, had almost 40 inhabitants, palaces, pyramids and an exuberant urban architecture, but in 1540 there were less than 6 natives. Over the ruins, the Spaniards built Campeche, one of the most imposing colonial cities in the Americas.
Cobá to Pac Chen, Mexico

From the Ruins to the Mayan Homes

On the Yucatan Peninsula, the history of the second largest indigenous Mexican people is intertwined with their daily lives and merges with modernity. In Cobá, we went from the top of one of its ancient pyramids to the heart of a village of our times.
Yucatan, Mexico

The Sidereal Murphy's Law That Doomed the Dinosaurs

Scientists studying the crater caused by a meteorite impact 66 million years ago have come to a sweeping conclusion: it happened exactly over a section of the 13% of the Earth's surface susceptible to such devastation. It is a threshold zone on the Mexican Yucatan peninsula that a whim of the evolution of species allowed us to visit.
Uxmal, Yucatan, Mexico

The Mayan Capital That Piled It Up To Collapse

The term Uxmal means built three times. In the long pre-Hispanic era of dispute in the Mayan world, the city had its heyday, corresponding to the top of the Pyramid of the Diviner at its heart. It will have been abandoned before the Spanish Conquest of the Yucatan. Its ruins are among the most intact on the Yucatan Peninsula.
Barrancas del Cobre (Copper Canyon), Chihuahua, Mexico

The Deep Mexico of the Barrancas del Cobre

Without warning, the Chihuahua highlands give way to endless ravines. Sixty million geological years have furrowed them and made them inhospitable. The Rarámuri indigenous people continue to call them home.
Creel to Los Mochis, Mexico

The Barrancas del Cobre & the CHEPE Iron Horse

The Sierra Madre Occidental's relief turned the dream into a construction nightmare that lasted six decades. In 1961, at last, the prodigious Chihuahua al Pacifico Railroad was opened. Its 643km cross some of the most dramatic scenery in Mexico.
chihuahua, Mexico

¡Ay Chihuahua !

Mexicans have adapted this expression as one of their favorite manifestations of surprise. While we wander through the capital of the homonymous state of the Northwest, we often exclaim it.
savuti, botswana, elephant-eating lions
Safari
Savuti, Botswana

Savuti's Elephant-Eating Lions

A patch of the Kalahari Desert dries up or is irrigated depending on the region's tectonic whims. In Savuti, lions have become used to depending on themselves and prey on the largest animals in the savannah.
Herd in Manang, Annapurna Circuit, Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 8th Manang, Nepal

Manang: the Last Acclimatization in Civilization

Six days after leaving Besisahar we finally arrived in Manang (3519m). Located at the foot of the Annapurna III and Gangapurna Mountains, Manang is the civilization that pampers and prepares hikers for the ever-dreaded crossing of Thorong La Gorge (5416 m).
Engravings, Karnak Temple, Luxor, Egypt
Architecture & Design
luxor, Egypt

From Luxor to Thebes: Journey to Ancient Egypt

Thebes was raised as the new supreme capital of the Egyptian Empire, the seat of Amon, the God of Gods. Modern Luxor inherited the Temple of Karnak and its sumptuousness. Between one and the other flow the sacred Nile and millennia of dazzling history.
Era Susi towed by dog, Oulanka, Finland
Adventure
PN Oulanka, Finland

A Slightly Lonesome Wolf

Jukka “Era-Susi” Nordman has created one of the largest packs of sled dogs in the world. He became one of Finland's most iconic characters but remains faithful to his nickname: Wilderness Wolf.
Ceremonies and Festivities
Pentecost Island, Vanuatu

Naghol: Bungee Jumping without Modern Touches

At Pentecost, in their late teens, young people launch themselves from a tower with only lianas tied to their ankles. Bungee cords and harnesses are inappropriate fussiness from initiation to adulthood.
patriot march
Cities
Taiwan

Formosa but Unsafe

Portuguese navigators could not imagine the imbroglio reserved for the Formosa they baptized. Nearly 500 years later, even though it is uncertain of its future, Taiwan still prospers. Somewhere between independence and integration in greater China.
Beverage Machines, Japan
Meal
Japan

The Beverage Machines Empire

There are more than 5 million ultra-tech light boxes spread across the country and many more exuberant cans and bottles of appealing drinks. The Japanese have long since stopped resisting them.
Peasant woman, Majuli, Assam, India
Culture
Majuli Island, India

An Island in Countdown

Majuli is the largest river island in India and would still be one of the largest on Earth were it not for the erosion of the river Bramaputra that has been making it diminish for centuries. If, as feared, it is submerged within twenty years, more than an island, a truly mystical cultural and landscape stronghold of the Subcontinent will disappear.
combat arbiter, cockfighting, philippines
Sport
Philippines

When Only Cock Fights Wake Up the Philippines

Banned in much of the First World, cockfighting thrives in the Philippines where they move millions of people and pesos. Despite its eternal problems, it is the sabong that most stimulates the nation.
Young people walk the main street in Chame, Nepal
Traveling
Annapurna Circuit: 1th - Pokhara a ChameNepal

Finally, on the way

After several days of preparation in Pokhara, we left towards the Himalayas. The walking route only starts in Chame, at 2670 meters of altitude, with the snowy peaks of the Annapurna mountain range already in sight. Until then, we complete a painful but necessary road preamble to its subtropical base.
on this side of the Atlantic
Ethnic

Island of Goreia, Senegal

A Slave Island of Slavery

Were several millions or just thousands of slaves passing through Goreia on their way to the Americas? Whatever the truth, this small Senegalese island will never be freed from the yoke of its symbolism.”

Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Got2Globe Portfolio

life outside

Totems, Botko Village, Malekula, Vanuatu
History
Malekula, Vanuatu

Meat and Bone Cannibalism

Until the early XNUMXth century, man-eaters still feasted on the Vanuatu archipelago. In the village of Botko we find out why European settlers were so afraid of the island of Malekula.
Bather, The Baths, Devil's Bay (The Baths) National Park, Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands
Islands
Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands

Virgin Gorda's Divine “Caribbaths”

Discovering the Virgin Islands, we disembark on a tropical and seductive seaside dotted with huge granite boulders. The Baths seem straight out of the Seychelles but they are one of the most exuberant marine scenery in the Caribbean.
Reindeer Racing, Kings Cup, Inari, Finland
Winter White
Inari, Finland

The Wackiest Race on the Top of the World

Finland's Lapps have been competing in the tow of their reindeer for centuries. In the final of the Kings Cup - Porokuninkuusajot - , they face each other at great speed, well above the Arctic Circle and well below zero.
Couple visiting Mikhaylovskoe, village where writer Alexander Pushkin had a home
Literature
Saint Petersburg e Mikhaylovkoe, Russia

The Writer Who Succumbed to His Own Plot

Alexander Pushkin is hailed by many as the greatest Russian poet and the founder of modern Russian literature. But Pushkin also dictated an almost tragicomic epilogue to his prolific life.
Flock of flamingos, Laguna Oviedo, Dominican Republic
Nature
Oviedo Lagoon, Dominican Republic

The (very alive) Dominican Republic Dead Sea

The hypersalinity of the Laguna de Oviedo fluctuates depending on evaporation and water supplied by rain and the flow coming from the neighboring mountain range of Bahoruco. The natives of the region estimate that, as a rule, it has three times the level of sea salt. There, we discover prolific colonies of flamingos and iguanas, among many other species that make up one of the most exuberant ecosystems on the island of Hispaniola.
Mother Armenia Statue, Yerevan, Armenia
Autumn
Yerevan, Armenia

A Capital between East and West

Heiress of the Soviet civilization, aligned with the great Russia, Armenia allows itself to be seduced by the most democratic and sophisticated ways of Western Europe. In recent times, the two worlds have collided in the streets of your capital. From popular and political dispute, Yerevan will dictate the new course of the nation.
Miniature houses, Chã das Caldeiras, Fogo Volcano, Cape Verde
Natural Parks
Chã das Caldeiras, Fogo Island Cape Verde

A "French" Clan at the Mercy of Fogo

In 1870, a Count born in Grenoble on his way to Brazilian exile, made a stopover in Cape Verde where native beauties tied him to the island of Fogo. Two of his children settled in the middle of the volcano's crater and continued to raise offspring there. Not even the destruction caused by the recent eruptions deters the prolific Montrond from the “county” they founded in Chã das Caldeiras.    
Jerusalem God, Israel, Golden City
UNESCO World Heritage
Jerusalem, Israel

Closer to God

Three thousand years of history as mystical as it is troubled come to life in Jerusalem. Worshiped by Christians, Jews and Muslims, this city radiates controversy but attracts believers from all over the world.
female and cub, grizzly footsteps, katmai national park, alaska
Characters
PN Katmai, Alaska

In the Footsteps of the Grizzly Man

Timothy Treadwell spent summers on end with the bears of Katmai. Traveling through Alaska, we followed some of its trails, but unlike the species' crazy protector, we never went too far.
La Digue, Seychelles, Anse d'Argent
Beaches
La Digue, Seychelles

Monumental Tropical Granite

Beaches hidden by lush jungle, made of coral sand washed by a turquoise-emerald sea are anything but rare in the Indian Ocean. La Digue recreated itself. Around its coastline, massive boulders sprout that erosion has carved as an eccentric and solid tribute of time to the Nature.
orthodox procession
Religion
Suzdal, Russia

Centuries of Devotion to a Devoted Monk

Euthymius was a fourteenth-century Russian ascetic who gave himself body and soul to God. His faith inspired Suzdal's religiosity. The city's believers worship him as the saint he has become.
Serra do Mar train, Paraná, airy view
On Rails
Curitiba a Morretes, Paraná, Brazil

Down Paraná, on Board the Train Serra do Mar

For more than two centuries, only a winding and narrow road connected Curitiba to the coast. Until, in 1885, a French company opened a 110 km railway. We walked along it to Morretes, the final station for passengers today. 40km from the original coastal terminus of Paranaguá.
Street Bar, Fremont Street, Las Vegas, United States
Society
Las Vegas, USA

The Sin City Cradle

The famous Strip has not always focused the attention of Las Vegas. Many of its hotels and casinos replicated the neon glamor of the street that once stood out, Fremont Street.
Fruit sellers, Swarm, Mozambique
Daily life
Enxame Mozambique

Mozambican Fashion Service Area

It is repeated at almost all stops in towns of Mozambique worthy of appearing on maps. The machimbombo (bus) stops and is surrounded by a crowd of eager "businessmen". The products offered can be universal such as water or biscuits or typical of the area. In this region, a few kilometers from Nampula, fruit sales suceeded, in each and every case, quite intense.
Esteros del Iberá, Pantanal Argentina, Alligator
Wildlife
Iberá Wetlands, Argentina

The Pantanal of the Pampas

On the world map, south of the famous brazilian wetland, a little-known flooded region appears, but almost as vast and rich in biodiversity. the Guarani expression Y bera defines it as “shining waters”. The adjective fits more than its strong luminance.
Bungee jumping, Queenstown, New Zealand
Scenic Flights
Queenstown, New Zealand

Queenstown, the Queen of Extreme Sports

In the century. XVIII, the Kiwi government proclaimed a mining village on the South Island "fit for a queen".Today's extreme scenery and activities reinforce the majestic status of ever-challenging Queenstown.