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Discover Baja California Sur

Exploring Baja California Sur is like discovering a land of vivid contrasts: deserts that stretch to the horizon, mountain ranges that hold mist on their peaks, and a sea that pulses with a life of its own.


Here, between the Gulf of California and the Pacific Ocean, migrations that have been taking place for thousands of years take place. Whales travel thousands of kilometers to give birth, birds cross continents following the rhythm of the seasons, manta rays and sharks move along invisible but precise routes.

Understanding these movements is not only amazing, it's also essential. Each migration route is a sign of ecological balance, and by understanding them, we learn to protect them.

 

The peninsula is home to both resident and transient species. In winter, for example, gray whales come from the Arctic to the warm lagoons of Baja California to give birth to their calves. From December to April, you can observe them in the wild—an encounter that transforms the way we look at the ocean.

 

But life isn't just found in the sea. The land also exudes biodiversity: bighorn sheep in the mountains, migratory birds resting in the mangroves, and cacti flourishing amid the silence of the desert.
Spaces like the El Vizcaíno Biosphere Reserve remind us that conservation is not just an idea: it's a commitment to everything that inhabits this region.

 

Baja California Sur isn't something you rush through. You see, you listen, you learn.


This territory is more than a destination: it is a shared ecosystem, a living lesson in resilience and beauty.


And knowing it with respect is the first step to protecting it.

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