BajaNomad
Not logged in [Login - Register]

Go To Bottom
Printable Version  
 Pages:  1  2  
Author: Subject: Advice for 3-day San Diego to Cabo Roadtrip?
sohailcoelho
Newbie





Posts: 12
Registered: 2-9-2021
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 11:48 AM


wow San Ignacio looks incredible. maybe I will do a little side trip there. Thanks for sharing all that. I appreciate it.

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Quote: Originally posted by sohailcoelho  
This is all super helpful. thank you so much. dang what a crew here!

Definitely goin to cover up the tatts and class it up a bit. lol. I am a consultant in business, so super professional, but the exterior can look a little rough and tumble.

I'm not flying cause I want my car down there for the 2.5 months I'll be there. so it's worth it for me.

Love all the city recos. will check them out and now will likely extend to 5 days going down just to check the whales and slow the whole damn thing down.

Will take Hwy 5 on the way down and then Hwy 1 on the way back up as I'd like to spend some time in the wine region of Guadalupe.

keep the recos/advice coming. really appreciate this crew. Makes my solo adventure not feel so solo. :)


Wow, glad to see you come back to get more 'abuse' from us! LOL
Very happy that you will slow it down a bit!

My wife and I had a glorious trip to Cabo and back in 2012 and spent time in La Paz with Nomad amigo 'Baja Tripper' who showed us sites in the cape region. We also visited Blanca and Shari out on the 'hook' of Baja, southwest and west from San Ignacio.

Of all our summer vacation trips to Baja California Sur, the July 2012 one was the finest we ever had. Here are my trip photos and details: http://vivabaja.com/712/

Feel free to ask questions. When you come to San Ignacio (halfway in miles from the border to Cabo) do take the side road into the town plaza (just 2 miles) the river crossing and the mission from the 1700s are both incredible. A wonderful motel is just past the mission (Hotel La Huerta) and is inexpensive, too.

This San Ignacio oasis is surrounded by lava flows and harsh desert:


The mission of San Ignacio is pretty impressive, with four-foot-thick walls.

View user's profile
sohailcoelho
Newbie





Posts: 12
Registered: 2-9-2021
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 11:52 AM


I'm going next week. Thurs/Friday leaving SD. I know, I wish I could wait for a vaccine - but I'm just going to be safe as I've been here in the SD. I have friends in Cabo so will have people to hang with once I get down there. And I'll get tested once I'm there. Realities of the world right now.

Quote: Originally posted by AKgringo  
Glad to see you are still here, every now and then someone will ask a question, and disappear after their one and only post!

You didn't mention when you are planning your trip. I would recommend waiting until you have been vaccinated, and check into the what kind of patient load the hospitals in Baja are dealing with, because things can change.

The trip will be so much more enjoyable when you can mix safely with people along the way, but sadly, that is not the case right now.
View user's profile
David K
Honored Nomad
*********


Avatar


Posts: 64855
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline

Mood: Have Baja Fever

[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 11:56 AM


Please post after you get to Cabo to tell us about the drive!



"So Much Baja, So Little Time..."

See the NEW www.VivaBaja.com for maps, travel articles, links, trip photos, and more!
Baja Missions and History On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/bajamissions/
Camping, off-roading, Viva Baja discussion: https://www.facebook.com/groups/vivabaja


View user's profile Visit user's homepage
sohailcoelho
Newbie





Posts: 12
Registered: 2-9-2021
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 03:28 PM


Totally will do.

So outside of these towns, any other towns or hotels worth stopping at: San Felipe, Mulegé, San Ignacio, Geurrero Negro, Todos Santos - anything else?

Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Please post after you get to Cabo to tell us about the drive!
View user's profile
mtgoat666
Select Nomad
*******




Posts: 18389
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
Member Is Offline

Mood: Hot n spicy

[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 04:52 PM


Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums




Woke!

“...ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”

Prefered gender pronoun: the royal we

View user's profile
David K
Honored Nomad
*********


Avatar


Posts: 64855
Registered: 8-30-2002
Location: San Diego County
Member Is Offline

Mood: Have Baja Fever

[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 04:59 PM
You will see things without trying! Baja has so much to give...


Here is just a sample...

San Felipe for fish tacos... go to the south end of the malecon (bayshore street).


Gonzaga Bay for a beautiful beach view (easiest access at Rancho Grande, south of Pemex and south side of runway).


The state border (just north of Guerrero Negro) has the famous 135 ft. Eagle Monument. You lose an hour going south, into Mountain Time Zone (Km. 220 [from Santa Rosalía]).


I showed you a bit of San Ignacio, just off the highway, you turn at the whale bones (Km. 73).

Santa Rosalía (Km. 0/ 195 from Loreto) has the steel prefab church designed by Gustave Eiffel in the 1880s.


Mulegé is known by some as the Hawaii of Baja... a river lined with palms (like San Ignacio) and with a mission founded in 1705 and built in 1766 with a view that is worth a walk behind the mission to see! Take the road signed for the mission beyond the south side of the bridge over the river (Km. 134).


Bahía Concepción with its many beaches is some of the best of Baja to many! A fun cantina on the beach is at Playa Buenaventura (at Km. 93) with great cheeseburgers!


Loreto (Km. 0) is the first town and mission in California, 1697.




"So Much Baja, So Little Time..."

See the NEW www.VivaBaja.com for maps, travel articles, links, trip photos, and more!
Baja Missions and History On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/bajamissions/
Camping, off-roading, Viva Baja discussion: https://www.facebook.com/groups/vivabaja


View user's profile Visit user's homepage
thebajarunner
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 3718
Registered: 9-8-2003
Location: Arizona....."Free at last from crumbling Cali
Member Is Offline

Mood: muy amable

[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 08:46 PM
He said the plan is 5


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums


Hard to find Catalina hotels on 5
View user's profile
mtgoat666
Select Nomad
*******




Posts: 18389
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
Member Is Offline

Mood: Hot n spicy

[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 09:39 PM


Quote: Originally posted by thebajarunner  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums


Hard to find Catalina hotels on 5


5 is a bad route for first timers,... he will see nothing but bleak moonscape and turn around before he gets more than 4 hours south of the border. One look at San Felipe and he will turn around and flee for home.
Every first-timer should do the windshield tour of TJ, baja pacific coast, ensenada and farm/ranch communities along 1, it is the culture and economic engine of Baja. Takes an extra hour, and you see 10x more.
San Felipe (and adjacent post-apocalypse landscape) is the arm pit of Baja (Rosarito is the other armpit) and should not be anyone’s first exposure to baja...




Woke!

“...ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”

Prefered gender pronoun: the royal we

View user's profile
Ateo
Elite Nomad
******




Posts: 5901
Registered: 7-18-2011
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 09:58 PM


Your comment about San Felipe being the armpit of Baja made me LOL.

Jon

Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Quote: Originally posted by thebajarunner  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums


Hard to find Catalina hotels on 5


5 is a bad route for first timers,... he will see nothing but bleak moonscape and turn around before he gets more than 4 hours south of the border. One look at San Felipe and he will turn around and flee for home.
Every first-timer should do the windshield tour of TJ, baja pacific coast, ensenada and farm/ranch communities along 1, it is the culture and economic engine of Baja. Takes an extra hour, and you see 10x more.
San Felipe (and adjacent post-apocalypse landscape) is the arm pit of Baja (Rosarito is the other armpit) and should not be anyone’s first exposure to baja...
View user's profile
thebajarunner
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 3718
Registered: 9-8-2003
Location: Arizona....."Free at last from crumbling Cali
Member Is Offline

Mood: muy amable

[*] posted on 2-11-2021 at 10:51 PM
Gee. You copied my earlier post. I’m flattered


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Quote: Originally posted by thebajarunner  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums


Hard to find Catalina hotels on 5


5 is a bad route for first timers,... he will see nothing but bleak moonscape and turn around before he gets more than 4 hours south of the border. One look at San Felipe and he will turn around and flee for home.
Every first-timer should do the windshield tour of TJ, baja pacific coast, ensenada and farm/ranch communities along 1, it is the culture and economic engine of Baja. Takes an extra hour, and you see 10x more.
San Felipe (and adjacent post-apocalypse landscape) is the arm pit of Baja (Rosarito is the other armpit) and should not be anyone’s first exposure to baja...


But then again
Aren’t most of your posts scavenged from other sources?
View user's profile
bajarich
Nomad
**




Posts: 464
Registered: 1-13-2005
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-12-2021 at 06:47 PM


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Quote: Originally posted by thebajarunner  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums


Hard to find Catalina hotels on 5


5 is a bad route for first timers,... he will see nothing but bleak moonscape and turn around before he gets more than 4 hours south of the border. One look at San Felipe and he will turn around and flee for home.
Every first-timer should do the windshield tour of TJ, baja pacific coast, ensenada and farm/ranch communities along 1, it is the culture and economic engine of Baja. Takes an extra hour, and you see 10x more.
San Felipe (and adjacent post-apocalypse landscape) is the arm pit of Baja (Rosarito is the other armpit) and should not be anyone’s first exposure to baja...


His original post was for a 3 day trip to Cabo, not sight seeing. I was just recommending the fastest, safest route.
View user's profile
sohailcoelho
Newbie





Posts: 12
Registered: 2-9-2021
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-13-2021 at 07:11 PM


I hear you on 1. I definitely will do it - but I just may do it on the way back in a couple months. Because I also want to spend some time in the wine country too. So that'll be the treat on the way back. I just want to get further south a bit faster and explore Mulegé and south. Thanks for the advice tho. appreciate it.


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Quote: Originally posted by thebajarunner  
Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  
Hotel Mision in Catavina. Great hotel (ask for room in old part, new rooms are boring).
Great place for first night, make sure to arrive with a couple hours of daylight left, and go climb the rocks about 3 to 5 miles north hotel. Any rock pile will do, great place to spend an afternoon scrambling on rock amongst the boojums


Hard to find Catalina hotels on 5


5 is a bad route for first timers,... he will see nothing but bleak moonscape and turn around before he gets more than 4 hours south of the border. One look at San Felipe and he will turn around and flee for home.
Every first-timer should do the windshield tour of TJ, baja pacific coast, ensenada and farm/ranch communities along 1, it is the culture and economic engine of Baja. Takes an extra hour, and you see 10x more.
San Felipe (and adjacent post-apocalypse landscape) is the arm pit of Baja (Rosarito is the other armpit) and should not be anyone’s first exposure to baja...
View user's profile
JZ
Select Nomad
*******


Avatar


Posts: 10564
Registered: 10-3-2003
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-13-2021 at 08:10 PM


Stop in Loreto for sure. The best town in Baja. Stay at La Mision hotel. It's right on the ocean and really nice. Get a room on the 3rd or 4th floor with a balcony. The view is incredible. Great bar and restaurant. Craft beers on tap.

Walk down to the marina (2 mins from La Mision) and pay a panga to take you out to Isla Coronado. About $90 for your own boat. Turquoise color water like the Caribbean.

Once in Cabo, at some point you should drive up to La Paz and check it out. Really fun city. Charter a boat and go see the islands. Beyond beautiful.



[Edited on 2-14-2021 by JZ]




See Baja California in 4K: https://youtu.be/4VNTIhRa6q0

Ever wanted to camp on a deserted island in the Sea of Cortez? https://youtu.be/g3ThXCm3XSA

Come along for a ride of the famous Seven Sisters https://youtu.be/hrdzmTWPUQs



View user's profile
JZ
Select Nomad
*******


Avatar


Posts: 10564
Registered: 10-3-2003
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-13-2021 at 08:12 PM


Video with shots of Loreto, La Mision, Isla Coronado, islands at La Paz, etc. All the opening shots are around Loreto.

https://youtu.be/4VNTIhRa6q0


[Edited on 2-14-2021 by JZ]




See Baja California in 4K: https://youtu.be/4VNTIhRa6q0

Ever wanted to camp on a deserted island in the Sea of Cortez? https://youtu.be/g3ThXCm3XSA

Come along for a ride of the famous Seven Sisters https://youtu.be/hrdzmTWPUQs



View user's profile
sohailcoelho
Newbie





Posts: 12
Registered: 2-9-2021
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-13-2021 at 08:42 PM


whoa. this looks incredible. Loreto and the island. and that vid you posted is wild. thanks for this. I will for sure check it out.



Quote: Originally posted by JZ  
Stop in Loreto for sure. The best town in Baja. Stay at LA Mision hotel. It's right on the ocean and really nice. Get a room on the 3rd or 4th floor with a balcony. The view is incredible. Great bar and restaurant. Craft beers on tap.

Walk down to the marina (2 mins from LA Mision) and pay a panga to take you out to Isla Coronado. About $90 for your own boat. Turquoise color water like the Caribbean.

Once in Cabo, at some point you should drive up to LA Paz and check it out. Really fun city. Charter a boat and go see the island. Beyond beautiful.





View user's profile
Alm
Ultra Nomad
*****




Posts: 2729
Registered: 5-10-2011
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-14-2021 at 12:24 PM


Quote: Originally posted by mtgoat666  

San Felipe (and adjacent post-apocalypse landscape) is the arm pit of Baja (Rosarito is the other armpit) and should not be anyone’s first exposure to baja...

True. People are taking route 5 for easy driving but Hwy 1 is more scenic. Route 5 makes less sense for those who are already in San Diego. If going through San Ysidro, make sure you cross before 3 pm.

Also, make it 4 days, not 3. Less stressful this way. You are going for 2.5 months anyway. Make it 5 days if planning substantial detours.
View user's profile
sohailcoelho
Newbie





Posts: 12
Registered: 2-9-2021
Member Is Offline


[*] posted on 2-14-2021 at 07:58 PM


Anyone have recos on hotels in Mulegé?
View user's profile
mtgoat666
Select Nomad
*******




Posts: 18389
Registered: 9-16-2006
Location: San Diego
Member Is Offline

Mood: Hot n spicy

[*] posted on 2-14-2021 at 08:04 PM


Quote: Originally posted by sohailcoelho  
Anyone have recos on hotels in Mulegé?


“Recos.” Sounds like something my teenager would say or write. I find it hard to reply to anyone that uses such silly shorthand




Woke!

“...ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”

Prefered gender pronoun: the royal we

View user's profile
RFClark
Super Nomad
****




Posts: 2462
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline

Mood: Delighted with 2024 and looking forward to 2025

[*] posted on 2-14-2021 at 09:00 PM


In Mulegé we always stay at Hotel Sernidad south of town a bit. They have a restaurant and bar too! All excellent!
View user's profile
AKgringo
Elite Nomad
******




Posts: 6029
Registered: 9-20-2014
Location: Anchorage, AK (no mas!)
Member Is Offline

Mood: Retireded

[*] posted on 2-14-2021 at 09:22 PM


Quote: Originally posted by sohailcoelho  
Anyone have recos on hotels in Mulegé?


I like La Hacienda, right down town by the central plaza. It is a taste of an older Mexico, and very reasonable! It, and others are in this post from a while back; http://forums.bajanomad.com/viewthread.php?tid=95332&got...




If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space!

"Could do better if he tried!" Report card comments from most of my grade school teachers. Sadly, still true!
View user's profile
 Pages:  1  2  

  Go To Top

 






All Content Copyright 1997- Q87 International; All Rights Reserved.
Powered by XMB; XMB Forum Software © 2001-2014 The XMB Group






"If it were lush and rich, one could understand the pull, but it is fierce and hostile and sullen. The stone mountains pile up to the sky and there is little fresh water. But we know we must go back if we live, and we don't know why." - Steinbeck, Log from the Sea of Cortez

 

"People don't care how much you know, until they know how much you care." - Theodore Roosevelt

 

"You can easily judge the character of others by how they treat those who they think can do nothing for them or to them." - Malcolm Forbes

 

"Let others lead small lives, but not you. Let others argue over small things, but not you. Let others cry over small hurts, but not you. Let others leave their future in someone else's hands, but not you." - Jim Rohn

 

"The best way to get the right answer on the internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer." - Cunningham's Law







Thank you to Baja Bound Mexico Insurance Services for your long-term support of the BajaNomad.com Forums site.







Emergency Baja Contacts Include:

Desert Hawks; El Rosario-based ambulance transport; Emergency #: (616) 103-0262