Dear Fellow Diver:
Scooping plankton, the whale shark seemed to be swimming
vertically in circles. This 25-foot-long, polka-dotted
wonder, a youngster in his early 20s, was even more memorable
with a row of remoras on his tail. I pinched myself
and forgot about being chilled. Everywhere I looked, whale
sharks were in the water. All I needed to do was stay out
of their way. Not because they would hurt me, but because
of the strict no-touching rules.
For me, snorkeling with these gentle giants was
equivalent to a climber's dream of summiting Mount Everest. But my dream had a rude awakening when, after 30 minutes, I was told I had to get out of the water. Secretaría de
Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, the Mexican government
agency known as SEMARNAT, rules the Bay of La Paz. I
had signed up for five days of snorkeling with the whale
sharks, but between the Mexican government and the weather,
I only got an hour maximum spread over two days, no more.
Not what I hoped for.
When skies are sunny, winds calm, and waves flat,
the plankton levels rise, and the first 17 boats, loaded
with snorkelers,
vie for
the opportunity
to swim with
the Bay's whale
shark population,
estimated
at plus-or-minus
125, primarily
juveniles. But
La Paz's weather
conditions can
be as unreliable
as that of
the Himalayas.
That huge differential
put me on top of the world while in the water -- and
left me incredibly disappointed when I wasn't
allowed in.
I've dived much of the world searching
for whale sharks. Every dive operator
knew to call me when a pod was heading in
their direction. Marc Bernardi, then owner
of Aquatic Adventures, remembered when seeing
them in Galapagos, and I was on his next
scheduled dive trip there. Near Darwin's
Arch, my first encounter simply whetted my
appetite. As I clung to a reef in strong current,
a whale shark appeared like a shadow,
then swam out of sight. A few years later, I
went with my group of dive buddies (we call
ourselves the "Chicken Divers") to Holbox,
off the Mexican Yucatan, to check out a
rumored late-summer migration. Wading through
the surf to board a panga, we motored an
hour before we saw whale sharks. Four of us
took turns in the water watching them as they
approached us from all directions. (You can
read about that adventure in the October 2004
issue of Undercurrent.) When we returned the
following year, we were rewarded with giant
mantas co-mingling with the whale sharks -- and unfortunately, a mass of other people.
The Undercurrent article had brought thousands of divers, pangas from Isla Mujeres, and
stricter government regulations.
Last year, after receiving an email from Baja Charters stating it offered the premier
Baja whale shark expedition, I signed up. Owner Terry Neal, a personable American
expat, cautioned me about December weather, which can be cold and rainy, with rough
water and limited visibility. Because I planned to spend more time on his boat than in a
hotel room, Neal suggested the Hyatt Place at the marina, rather than the fancier adjacent
resort of Costa Baja. Five miles north of downtown La Paz, Hyatt Place offered a
$59 nightly rate and a great breakfast.
After finishing a plate of hot eggs and cold yogurt, I waited for the hotel's 8:30
a.m. golf cart to take me the five-minute drive to Costa Baja's marina, where the Baja
Cat was docked. It's a 54-foot-long by 30-foot-wide Northwest catamaran that offers
trips from Cabo San Lucas to La Paz, and
places in between. The cabin has a nicesized
kitchen and dining table, with toilets
and two hot showers down a few steps.
Des and Yvonne, my friends who were staying
in Cabo, took a two-hour ride on Baja
Charter's shuttle bus for a day trip with
me, and along with a Colorado couple and
their adult daughter, we cruised 30 minutes
to designated zone 1, where people are
allowed in the water for the limited 30
minutes. (Boats can stay in the fartherout
zones 2 and 3 for up to two hours, but
people can't get in the water, so it's not
quite the same.)
Then we transferred from the catamaran
to a panga to search 15 minutes for the
whale sharks until they appeared. There
were so many! In the 50-foot visibility, I
could see their huge open mouths approaching
me as they scooped plankton through
their baleens. Trevally pilotfish escorted them, while massive schools of anchovies
huddled along their sides, seeking protection
from jacks that darted in and out to feast on
them. Des forgot his "collision avoidance monitor"
and got sideswiped -- we were all jealous
because he got the only feel (so soft, he
said). Mariana Padilla, a University of La Paz
marine biologist who was on board with us,
said these whale sharks were estimated to be
about 20 years old. Everyone wore 3-mil shorties,
but with the water averaging 75 degrees,
I wanted full 5-mil coverage.
After our exciting encounter, Chef Scott
had blended margaritas waiting for everyone,
plus chips with salsa and guacamole. I wish
I hadn't chowed down when I found out there
was also going to be a buffet lunch of chicken
and beef tacos, fresh fruit soaked in rum, more
margaritas, a chocolate cake from Walmart (La Paz' finest bakery) and a full open bar.
As the seven of us relaxed on the sundeck, we reminisced about our incredible
encounter, not knowing we had experienced a record-breaking day -- Captain Chris Miller
reported that we snorkeled with 20 whale sharks. Also, the panga driver watched a humpback
breech, and Mariana had a dorado sighting. She told us La Paz-tagged whale sharks
have been found as far afield as Thailand's Andaman Sea.
SEMARNAT is devoted to promoting the protection, restoration and conservation of
Mexico's ecosystems. Thus, it monitors and controls viewing and interaction with whale
sharks. While there are 120 licensed boats, only the first 17 that call SEMARNAT that
morning are assigned the 30-minute time slots. If a boat is late, its departure time
is delayed by three hours. The fine for not having a license in the whale shark zones
is $10,000. While that's frustrating for tourists and dive operators, I tip my hat to
Mexico for a fine job of protecting whale sharks, which are being hunted for their fins.
This "iron grip" agency claims to have stopped long-lining and shark finning in the Sea
of Cortez, but all the local operators I talked to vehemently dispute that claim, saying
SEMARNAT is turning its head.
Returning to the well-tended marina around 2 p.m., the boat crew escorted us to the
gate, where I took a quick ride on Hyatt's golf cart back to the three-story hotel. I
had plenty of time to relax in my room with large bed,
bathroom and sitting area to watch high-def TV and use
the free WiFi. But my choice of staying in a convenient,
inexpensive hotel bit me when it came to doing
things other than snorkel trips -- while Hyatt Place
offered hourly complimentary shuttle service to the
city center, it was a 20-minute ride each way, with a
wait on either side, and I'm not much of a sightseer
or shopper. The town, which rests on perpetually tanned
flatlands along the Sea of Cortez, is no longer sleepy
-- it has a growing number of snowbirds and ex-pat
retirees, and has totally renovated its waterfront
Malecon, placing aquatic sculptures every 100 yards. I
walked around La Paz on my first day, but there were
zero tourists, and the historic, colonial-style Los
Arcos hotel was closed and dilapidated -- it felt like
the local economy was taking a hit. In retrospect, I
should have stayed at the Costa Baja Resort, which has
restaurants, a spa, pool and fitness center to stave
off boredom.
On my second day, I got the depressing call --
there would be no whale sharking that morning. Heavy
rains were predicted for La Paz. Baja Charters refunds in full or plans another dive activity. I was offered the opportunity to dive in
Cabo Pulmo, a coral reef considered the pride of the Sea of Cortez. But only locally
licensed boats are permitted to visit the Park's dozen sites. (Liveaboards, usually
headed to Socorro, have to hand over passengers to Cabo Pulmo operators.) Baja Charters
partnered with Cabo Pulmo Beach Resort to offer its divers the ground transportation,
meals, drinks, open bar, and dive equipment that's given to hotel guests. I took its
shuttle on the two-and-a-half-hour drive from La Paz on a dirt two-lane road that was
under construction.
Divemaster Alex guided the panga from the resort's dive shop with a tractor for
our beach entry. I dived with a couple from Nevada and a woman from Alaska. Designated
a marine preserve in 1995, Cabo Pulmo is home to the oldest of the three coral reefs
on North America's western coast. I didn't see much hard coral, but I saw scattered
sea fans and staghorn. But schools of jacks and yellow snapper were numerous, and
I passed by colorful parrotfish, a moray eel, and a mature, algae-covered hawksbill
turtle. Sadly, bull sharks, regular visitors to Cabo Pulmo, didn't appear. Our dives
averaged 50 feet depth, with visibility of 100 feet, and were limited to 50 minutes.
While other divers wore shorties in the 78-degree water, I covered mine with a fulllength
3-mil. The panga, with two seats lining each edge, had a sturdy ladder that was
easy to clamber up. The other divers, there for multiple days, were happy with the
dives, but I was too spoiled to consider them worth the long drive if Baja Charters
hadn't arranged it.
After the panga slid onto the beach, I used the dive shop's hot showers and spacious
changing room. Then I ran into Terry Neal's assistant, who said Terry was upstairs
in the resort's restaurant. I chatted with him over chips, guacamole and drinks at
an outdoor table overlooking Cabo Pulmo's rugged coast. A former CEO of multinational
companies, author and now a widower, Neal now lives in Cabo San Lucas. He says Baja
Charters is just plain fun for him, and he has surrounded himself with a capable customer-
service team who did a good job making sure my needs were met. Neal had just purchased
the Baja Seeker, a 96-foot McQueen yacht, which he re-introduced as Pacifica, a
five-cabin liveaboard that offers diving, snorkeling, fishing, kayaking and paddleboarding and a Jacuzzi, and he is currently working on obtaining a permit from SEMARNAT to
dive with schooling hammerheads.
While I was diving in Cabo Pulmo, the skies over La Paz dumped enough rain to flood
the streets. I didn't think about the impact that rain would have the next day while
snorkeling again with the whale sharks. Lacking other clients, Baja Charters arranged for
me to go solo in the panga with driver Leo Ramirez. Once again securing the first time
slot at 9 a.m., we spent a lot of time searching for the sharks. The first one we saw
was really cruising; the next two were juveniles that also seemed to be on a mission. I
got in the water and swam as fast as possible for brief but close encounters. Because the
previous day's storm had submerged the plankton, the whale sharks quickly descended.
When I heard from kite surfers and sailors that high winds of 25-plus knots were
forecast for the weekend, I called Califia Airlines to see if I could change my flight
to return the next day. I did so at a whopping cost of US$5. As great as the Hyatt staff
treated me, I was tired of eating dinner in the area set aside for breakfast buffets,
and as a lone tourist, I didn't feel like taking the 20-minute shuttle to dine solo in
town. And with no more whale shark sightings planned during my remaining two days, I
took a cab to the airport and headed back to Tijuana to overnight in San Diego before my
flight home.
So much for five days of bliss, but being in the water with 20 whale sharks slowly
moving by me was still what I consider an incredible adventure, albeit interspersed with
hours of boredom. This bucket-list trip is only for those who can "go with the flow"
-- Mexico's strict restrictions and weather volatility during the October-to-April whale
shark season can be challenging, but that's when the big guys are there, so it will
always be a crap shoot. Maybe Baja's weather is generally good in October and November,
but I don't predict the weather anymore (I recently inquired about going back and was
told the Harbormaster closed the Bay for the week because of an Arctic front causing
four-foot waves), and SEMARNAT doesn't give advance notice about when they open licensing
for whale shark viewing.
Baja Charters runs a great operation, but its whale-watching boats aren't fitted
for diving, they don't go out in bad weather, nor do they leave the Bay of La Paz,
so forget about them doing last-minute alternative trips to snorkel with sea lions
at Espiritu Santo. If you want to spend time in the Sea of Cortez rather than base
yourself in Cabo San Lucas, I highly recommend you go with a group of friends or
dive shop to charter a Baja Charters boat for five days, and when conditions for
whale sharks aren't great, snorkel at the nearby island of Espiritu Santo, dive at Cabo Pulmo, and find the schooling hammerheads and mantas. When the sun is shining
and the whale sharks ascend for their plankton feedings, you'll not forget it.
-- M.P.
Divers Compass: I took a 90-minute flight from Tijuana to La Paz via
Califia Airlines for $203, and the cab from airport to Hyatt Place was
around $24 . . . There's no direct flight from the U.S. to La Paz;
Delta, American and Alaska Airlines fly to San Jose del Cabo, and then
it's a two-hour car ride or shuttle ride to La Paz . . . My cost per
day for all-inclusive diving and food was $285 plus tax . . . Hyatt
Place on the marina was very convenient and nice, while nearby Costa
Baja Resort is a more upscale, resort-type place at $175 per night .
. . La Paz restaurants recommended to me included Oliva al Mare, Tres
Virgenes, Sorstis, Anzuelo, Palermo´s Steak house, and the homemade ice cream at La
Fuente . . . Websites: Baja Charters -- www.bajacharters.com; Hyatt Place in La Paz -- www.hyatt.com/en-US/hotel/mexico/hyatt-place-la-paz/lapzl; Costa Baja Resort -- www.costabajaresort.com; Cabo Pulmo Beach Resort -- www.cabopulmo.com