Cabo San Lucas
has a perennial
spring-break
atmosphere, one of
almost-desperate
festivity. Music
blares from every
establishment, the big American chains like Planet
Hollywood and the Hard Rock Cafe as well as momand-
pop taquerias. At the most popular bars, like
Kokomo and the Giggling Marlin, waiters with trays of
Jello shooters or bandoleers of tequila shots force-feed
the fun during audience participation shows that
specialize in Elvis impersonations and similar humiliations.
Half the people on the street are wandering
around with drinks in hand.
Everyone also seems to have a hustle, from
ancient Indian women peddling look-alike artifacts to
pretty blondes hawking timeshares. Visitors seeking a
quieter, more traditional atmosphere would be better off
staying in San Jose del Cabo, about 18 miles up the
highway, or at scenic Todos Santos on the Pacific Coast.
Cabo does offer some very pleasant underwater
diversions. There are several dive shops in Cabo San
Lucas, primarily in the waterfront Plaza Las Glorias.
These are limited retail outlets that specialize in
renting basic gear and booking excursions. A two-tank
boat dive runs $60-$65, with rentals averaging $30 for
tank, BC, and weight belt. If you don’t want to do the
legwork yourself, hotel concierges can help book your
trips.
I had a thoroughly enjoyable two-tank dive with
Amigos del Mar (the shop affiliated with the Solmar )
that took us to a couple of sites off Land’s End at the tip
of the peninsula. Near Lover’s Beach we saw the
underwater sandfall that Cousteau made famous (and
over-hyped). Our second dive took us past the famous
Land’s End arch, from the Gulf of California into the
Pacific. As we circled back, we were welcomed back to
the Gulf by a committee of curious sea lions.
The next day we piled into a van for a two-hour
drive up the Gulf of California coast to Cabo Pulmo,
site of the northern hemisphere’s only living coral
reef. It was really a rocky outcropping with some hard
and soft coral growths, but it made for some interesting
diving, particularly around the wreck of an old
tuna boat where we enjoyed the irony of fish feeding in
an abandoned gill net. A one-day trip is also offered to
Gordo Banks, where you might get big-animal encounters
similar to the Revillagigedos (minus the hands-on
manta experience).
There's limited shore diving at Chileno and Santa
Maria beaches, as well as Cabo Pulmo. Expect long walks,
long kicks, and depths no greater than 40 feet. Snorkelers
can try these spots or Lover’s Beach, which can be
reached by water taxi or a glass-bottom boat ride.