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Between the Mountains and the Deep Blue Sea
El Santuario Eco-Retreat, Baja California Sur
by Melissa Gaskill
In a flash of orange and black, an oriole landed
on the windowsill of my casita, then flitted to the
thatched palm roof, serving as a wake-up call timed
perfectly with rays of sun rising over the mountain
peaks. A clear Baja California Sur sky turned deep
blue as leaves rustled in the breeze over an ever-present
whisper of waves.
It wasn’t easy to get to El Santuario Eco-Retreat,
six small dwellings scattered discreetly among the
desert’s gnarly torote blanco trees and many varieties
of cacti, overlooking a crescent of beach lapped
by the multi-hued waters of Mexico’s Gulf of California.
But that’s part of its appeal. After a flight to
the growing village of Loreto, it’s 30 or so miles
south by taxi or rental car on narrow paved road,
then another unpaved mile to the gate, little more
than a gap in the trees with whale bones arching
over a sandy path.
More paths of deep, fine sand
wander the property to the casitas, each hidden from
view of the others. Names like Sueno, Danzante and
Escondido, carved on wooden fish with bright glass-bead
eyes, point the way. The complex, rounded out by
a communal yurt, bath house, and open air kitchen,
is framed in on three sides by the steep, rugged
slopes of the Sierra de la Giganta and on the fourth
by the water, where tall Isla Danzante and long Isla
Carmen seem to float in the air just off shore.
It would have been perfectly satisfying to relax
on my porch the entire week, emerging only for generous
meals cooked by women from the nearby villages of
Ensenada Blanca and Ligui, featuring fresh-caught
fish, fruits and vegetables from the farmer’s market,
and a variety of delicacies such as handmade empanadas
and fresh tortillas. But the wealth of activities
proved too tempting for that. Blue Waters Kayaking,
which handles booking for El Santuario, offers planned
group tours and guided activities á la carte for
solo guests (some require advance booking). I shared
my week here with a group tour, led by a pair of
personable and astonishingly knowledgeable guides,
Eli Shostak and Erin Bohm. Running down the list
of options that first night, Shostak summed it up
well: “There are no poor choices here.”
The first day, I walked south on the beach to a series
of jutting rock shelves. At their edges, small fish
swam in three or four feet of gin clear water. Gulls,
pelicans, frigate birds, and a pair of osprey flew
overhead, while herons and pipers waded along the
sandy part of the shore. Later, I followed the group
on a hike up a mountain ridge for a stunning view
of island-dotted sea stretching to the east and south
horizons. After a gravity-powered shower and dinner,
everyone relaxed around a roaring fire and listened
to Shostak’s animated reading from Almost an Island,
a book by Bruce Berger about the peninsula. After
dark, I snuggled into my blankets (desert evenings
can be cool almost year-round) under a moon so bright
it threw black shadows and made my flashlight unnecessary
for a late-night bathroom run. The eco-resort lies
so far from signs of major civilization, under such
clear air, that stars are visible despite the moon.
The next day I elected to ride horses with another
woman retreating at El Santuario. Phillipa and I
were picked up at the whale-bone gate by Jorge, who
lives in Ensenada Blanca with his wife and two kids.
The use of locals is obviously a recurring theme
here. Jorge brought two nice-looking horses wearing
comfortable saddles, and led us by a different route
to the same “vista del mar” as the previous day’s
hike. Riding proved much easier than walking on the
loose scree and in the deep sand, and our guide pointed
out various plants along the way, including pitahaya
dulce and pitahaya agria, fruits that are, respectively,
sweet and sour, and whose early summer ripening has
been eagerly anticipated by Baja California residents
for centuries. According to Shostak’s reading, in
fact, early Spanish missionaries reported that locals
liked the dulce version so much that they sometimes
tied a string to the fruit before eating it, so they
could pull it up and enjoy the experience all over
again, and were also known to pick the seeds out
of weeks-old human scat. Fortunately, those missionaries
introduced to Baja California a variety of other
fruits that are readily available today.
Horseback riding seemed the perfect excuse for a
massage, provided in my casita by a very competent
local woman with six years of experience under her
smock. Her touch was perfect, light and soothing
where it needed to be, firmer where required, strong
hands softened with refreshing oil. A cool breeze
through the open windows and the ubiquitous sound
of waves lulled me into complete relaxation. I slept
even more soundly that night.
Guests at El Santuario can opt for longer hikes,
including those that start off-site and explore canyons
where waterfalls or ancient cave paintings await,
or boat rides to Cosme, a natural tidal hot springs
and a great snorkeling spot. Other options are exploring
the coastline by panga, snorkeling around the shore
or nearby islands, kayaking, fishing and scuba diving.
All are dependent on weather conditions, of course,
as well as availability of guides and local services,
but there are always plenty of options.
Denise and Bill Jones, a veterinarian and psychotherapist
in San Luis Obispo, Calif., started El Santuario
in 1999 as a way to step out of the rat race they
no longer enjoyed. They wanted to get closer to nature
and provide a place for others to do so as well;
simple living close to nature became their theme.
The retreat was designed to blend in with the natural
surroundings, built largely with indigenous materials
by local laborers, and crafted to minimize use of
water. The couple intentionally bought supplies locally
where possible and trained and employed residents
of the nearby villages. El Santuario is also solar-powered,
and while there are lights, hot showers, and refrigeration
for the kitchen, there are no phones, televisions,
or computers to disturb the tranquility.
“It is a wonderful feeling living off the grid,”
Bill says, “and while we’re far from self-sufficient,
we’re very self-reliant, with the help of the community.
We were thrilled to get away from all the consumption
of LA and become part of the Ensenada Blanca community.”
For decades, if not centuries, little has changed
in Baja California, but today change looms for even
the most remote places on the peninsula. A steadily
increasing trickle of visitors is turning into a
torrent. FONATUR, an agency founded by the Mexican
government to create infrastructure and promote tourism,
seems to have a single-minded view of what that tourism
should be, and it isn’t places like El Santuario.
The agency has invited U.S. firms, primarily from
California, to develop choice spots. Even Donald
Trump is in on the rush. This creates the very real
possibility that every beach in Baja California will,
before long, sport rows of high-rise hotels and condominiums
with incongruously green golf courses carved in the
desert scrub. Heavy equipment recently appeared not
far up the beach from El Santuario. A slick Baja
publication aimed at potential real estate clients
in the U.S. — thousands of Americans already have
purchased high-end second homes here — is liberally
sprinkled with words like “exclusive” and “luxury.”
But Baja California and places like this retreat
offer singular luxuries no development can ever create:
That of a peaceful night with only the gentle lullaby
of waves falling on your ears. Serene bays of water
in shades of blue defying description, punctuated
with hazy, pointed islands marching to the horizon.
Sunrise over rugged mountains whiskered with stately
cardon and wild cholla cacti, and that same sun setting
over a different ridge, neither horizon marred by
the hand of humans. In between, the music of birds
in the air — or on the windowsill — and the sigh
of whales and splashes of dolphins in the water.
So come to El Santuario now, while these luxuries
are still available, no extra charge.
Whale Camp
One of this area’s most popular diversions is whale
watching in winter, when lagoons on the Pacific side
of Baja California are home to hundreds of gray whale
mothers and calves. The baleen whales, which grow
up to 50 feet long and 40 tons, migrate here from
summer feeding grounds in the far-north Bering and
Chukchi seas. Calves are conceived during the previous
year’s migration and born in the lagoons during winter
after a 13-month gestation. Fifteen feet long and
1500 pounds at birth, the calves nurse on milk that
is 53 percent fat, gaining 200 pounds a day and sufficient
blubber to travel thousands of miles to the cold,
Arctic waters in late spring.
One of the lagoons, Bahia Magdalena, or Mag Bay,
is a two-hour drive from El Santuario. You can rent
a car or taxi to go there yourself and hire a panga
(boat) guide for whale watching, or sign up for whale
camp, all-inclusive excursions that feature sleeping
in tents on uninhabited islands along the bay, whale-watching
by boat several hours each day and from shore other
times, kayaking, bird watching, and hiking in the
dunes. Blue Waters offers camps as an extension on
either end of your stay at El Santuario.
Baja Expeditions, the first outfitter to offer Bahia
Magdalena whale-watching tours way back in the 1980s,
has whale watch and kayak excursions originating
in La Paz, a four-hour van ride away. Guests stay
in cabin-style tents with cots. The company also
has five-day whale-watching trips out of San Diego
to San Ignacio Lagoon, north of Mag Bay.
Sea Kayak Adventures has a Mag Bay whale camp on
Isla Santo Domingo, a barrier island with more than
12 miles of beach and wind-sculpted dunes. A typical
day begins with coffee at 7 a.m., followed by a hot
breakfast, then loading into pangas for whale watching.
Grey whales come quite close to the boats, sometimes
near enough to touch, and calves often spy-hop, raising
their heads high above the water for a good look
around. The pangeros, or boat drivers, from nearby
Lopez Mateos have an organized rotation for taking
out groups, and the best among them have a real eye
for spotting surfacing whales and a sense of a respectful
distance from the big animals.
After whale watching, lunch is ready, and the afternoon
may be spent walking along the beach, hiking the
ever-changing dunes, or paddling kayaks to mangrove
areas, excellent places to bird watch. You may spy
dolphins and sea lions from kayaks or the beach.
Happy hour at 5 p.m. is followed by a hearty supper,
then socializing or a talk on whales before everyone
retires. Sea Kayak offers itineraries with three,
four and five days of whale watching, sightings guaranteed.
After spending a few days in such close proximity
to these whales, so huge and yet so gentle, it is
hard to say goodbye. The sights and sounds of the
grays remain with you, and the urge to return, just
as the whales do, is strong. Perhaps annual migration
is a good idea for all of us.
If You Go
El Santuario Eco-Retreat
Ensenada Blanca
Baja California Sur, Mexico
El-santuario.com
Casitas start at $80 per person in high season (Thanksgiving
to April 30). One night stay includes three meals
per day and snacks. Some guided activities extra.
Children and pets welcome.
Sea Kayak Adventures
PO Box 3862
Coeur d’Alene, ID 83816
208-765-3116
seakayakadventures.com
Magadalena Bay whale-watching wilderness camps, January
through March, start at $895, not including airfare.
Sea of Cortez kayak tours offered October through
April.
Baja Expeditions
2625 Garnet Avenue
San Diego, CA 92109
800-843-6967
bajaex.com
Delta, Alaska, and Continental Airlines serve Loreto.
Rental cars and taxi service available at the airport.
Loreto is 700 miles from San Diego on Baja’s paved
Highway 1. Passports are now required for travel
to Mexico. Bank services (ATM, money exchange) available
in Loreto, and most places accept U.S. dollars.
Gray Whale Facts from the American Cetacean Society,
San Pedro, California, acsonline.org/factpack/graywhl.htm |