BajaNomad

Article on La Paz in El Universal

bajajudy - 7-30-2006 at 07:03 AM

La Paz truly lives up to its name



BY JOHN MITCHELL
El Universal
July 30, 2006
"There is much tranquillity here," said the guard in La Paz?s Regional Museum of Anthropology and History when I remarked how much I liked his home town. After visiting the tourist resort of Cabo San Lucas with its thumping bars and nonstop party atmosphere, I was happy to have arrived in La Paz, whose name means "Peace." This easygoing port city on the Gulf of California is the capital of the state of Baja California Sur, which encompasses the southern half of Mexico?s 775-mile-long Baja Peninsula.

Browsing through the museum?s exhibits, I began to get a sense of La Paz?s surprisingly complex history. There were glass cases filled with spears and stone tools left behind by nomadic tribes that once inhabited the region, plus displays of rusty swords and muskets evoking images of battles between Spanish conquistadors and marauding pirates. On one wall hung a framed document bearing the name of U.S. filibuster William Walker, who attacked La Paz in 1853 and proclaimed himself "President of the Republic of Sonora" before fleeing from approaching Mexican troops.

There was also an old diving suit surrounded by oxygen lines and other underwater paraphernalia, a reminder that La Paz was once one of the world?s great pearling centers. The Spanish arrived in La Paz Bay during the early 16th century and gathered pearls there until 1697 when Jesuit missionaries arrived and forbade the activity. The pearl industry came to life again during the 1800s after Mexico gained independence from Spain. Intensive harvesting continued until the beginning of World War II, when a mysterious disease destroyed La Paz?s oyster beds.

In his 1941 book "The Log from the Sea of Cort?z," U.S. writer John Steinbeck described La Paz as "a lovely place" with "square, iron-shuttered colonial houses . with rows of beautiful trees in front of them." Today, a hodgepodge of nondescript modern buildings has replaced most of La Paz?s colonial architecture, but the city?s downtown core retains much of its old-fashioned ambiance.

A twin-towered 19th-century cathedral presides over La Paz?s pretty main square, which is shaded by laurel trees and graced by a red bandstand and lampposts adorned with iron sea horses. With its austere, neoclassical fa?ade constructed of brown brick and cut stone, La Paz?s cathedral resembles mission churches established by Jesuit priests throughout the Baja Peninsula. The present cathedral was built to replace La Paz?s original mission church constructed in 1720.

On the opposite side of the plaza stands La Paz?s Government Palace, which dates back to the 1880s. This block-long building, also neoclassical in style with an attractive clock tower, now houses a cultural center, some government offices, plus a small research library called the Biblioteca de la Historia de las Californias. I asked to see the library and was taken to a bare, musty room with study carrels and a tall cabinet jammed with well-thumbed Spanish and English-language books on the Baja Peninsula?s history and geography.

From the main plaza, I made my way down steep sidewalks to La Paz?s main shopping district, a jigsaw puzzle of streets and pedestrian malls lined with stores chock-full of clothing, electronic goods, Mexican handicrafts, and knickknacks from China. The pearl trade lured people from Asia, Europe and the Middle East, a fact I saw mirrored in the facial features of shopkeepers and passersby.

I then set out for the Gray Whale Museum located on the southern edge of town. Every winter, gray whales make a 5,000-mile journey from Siberian and Alaskan waters to their calving grounds along the Pacific shores of the Baja Peninsula. Once an endangered species with only several hundred survivors, gray whales have made an amazing recovery since being protected from commercial whaling in 1946, and they now number over 25,000. Inside the museum, I found displays providing information about gray whales, but what really caught my attention was a complete skeleton of one of these huge mammals, which can grow up to 50 feet long.

Eventually I reached the Malec?n, La Paz?s elegant seaside promenade decorated with sculptures - including a giant Dove of Peace - that stretches the entire length of downtown. Tired and hungry, I decided to eat a late lunch at La Terraza, a breezy, open-air restaurant popular with both locals and tourists. I ordered a cold limonada (lemonade) and an avocado stuffed with fresh shrimp, then leaned back to enjoy the view of sparkling La Paz Bay framed by swaying palm trees.

Later that evening, I bought an ice-cream cone and joined strollers on the Malec?n. As daylight faded, the setting sun turned La Paz Bay into a cauldron of molten gold and the sky into a serene canvas of pink and purple hues. I sat on a bench and watched nature?s show, glad to be in this sympathetic city that obviously takes so much pride in living up to its name.

Paula - 7-30-2006 at 06:51 PM

Thanks for the pictures Kate.
La Paz is so much fun to visit, not far from Loreto, but such a contrast! I love the neveria in the malecon with the wonder bread tree out front. Rose petal ice cream is fantastic, but we didn't care so much for corn.

Diver - 7-30-2006 at 08:28 PM

I just showed your photo of the mall to my 5 year old.
He immediately remembered being there this past February !
We went shopping on Saturday with the masses.
Funny how you realize that people everywhere are so much the same when it's shopping day.
Great memories !
Thanks Kate.