The battle of the beaches: Two seaside towns on the Gulf of California
are tussling for tourists. Both promise sun, sand and serenity. But
San Felipe is quaint. Peñasco has more pizzazz. And they both
want you.
SAN FELIPE, MEXICO
Rodrigo Ortega Montes was barefoot and beaming, a hammer in one hand, a bucket
full of clams and sea snails in the other.
" Very rich," he said in Spanish, meaning the snails.
We were alone on the beach. When I introduced myself, Ortega told me how he
had left Mazatlán, worked in California for a few years, then found
his way to a construction job here. He squinted south at the blue horizon,
the knife-sharp outline of a rocky hill with the sun behind it, and raised
his arms.
"
All this," he said, "and no migra."
Whether you're coming from the north or south -- with or without immigration
officials to consider -- life can be grand in this corner of Baja California.
But it is getting more complicated.
San Felipe, about 350 miles south and slightly east of Los Angeles, was founded
in 1916 or 1925 (depending on who's counting) as a fishing port. Once the paved
road to the U.S. border went through in the early 1950s, American anglers and
adventurers started coming as well. Now a sign puts the full-time population
at 19,263, though the 2005 census places the number at 14,831.
Even with no commercial flights, the town gets as many as 250,000 American
and Canadian visitors yearly, many of them snowbirds in RVs who park their
vehicles in dozens of campgrounds known as campos.
During spring break season -- essentially, the month of March -- the city teems
with college students eager to drink legally at age 18 and line up for foam
parties. (If you have to ask, you're too old.) Off-road races such as the San
Felipe 250 (March 14 and 15) come up now and again.
The rule of thumb: Californians come from spring through fall, and Canadians
descend in winter. And every day the sun rises over the sea and sets over the
mountains.
Growth amid the rustic
Besides fishing, clamming, drinking and lounging, visitors roar through the
desert on off-road vehicles of all kinds. For a day trip, many make the 55-mile
paved drive to Puertecitos, a quirky American expat and retirement enclave
with natural hot springs at the sea's edge.
At night, you can stroll past the row of semi-rustic restaurants and bars along
the malecón. At any hour, you're likely to catch fishermen fussing with
their boats. On beaches at the edge of town, you see hundreds of four-posted
huts -- parking ports waiting for RVs.
A character study of two Mexican vacation towns
Sonora's Puerto Peñasco and Baja California's San Felipe appeal in different
ways to visitors from north of the border.
These details will be familiar to any Californian who has made a few Baja road
trips. So what's different now?
For miles to the north and south, hundreds of vacation homes and condos have
gone up. Construction surged in the '90s and slowed more recently, leaving
the city poised between rapid growth and persistent rusticity.
Two unfinished projects look as though they'll surpass five stories, but otherwise,
nearly every building in town is three stories or less. In other words, growth
in San Felipe is so far a horizontal story, not a vertical one, and it seems
to be happening at 20 mph, not 70. Which, given the quality of so many Baja
roads, may be prudent.
Greeted by the gulf
Arriving by road -- yes, it's paved -- you reach San Felipe by miles of stark
borderlands driving (with a military checkpoint or two along the way). To your
right rise the serrated foothills of Baja's Sierra San Pedro Mártir
range, with the usual Baja stubble of ocotillo, mesquite and scattered cardón
cactus. On the left it's all flat. And don't pull over -- there's no shoulder
and you could end up sinking into the sand.
This was once a big wetlands, the estuary of the Colorado River. Now that there's
nearly nothing left of the Colorado by the time it gets here, the old delta
has devolved into a dead zone, too salty even for cactus.
Rolling beyond that dead zone and into San Felipe, you sidle up to the Gulf
of California, a.k.a. the Sea of Cortés. You pass a dozen or more beachfront
campgrounds for RV people and owners of rustic vacation homes. The rocky slopes
of 955-foot Cerro el Machorro rise at the northern end of the town and bay,
and white sandy beaches march south into the distance.
Depending on when you look, the beach might seem a bit broad or downright eerie
-- the retreating sea can lay bare as much as a quarter-mile of damp sand.
On a low hill in the shadow of Cerro el Machorro, the Catholic faithful have
put up a blue and white shrine to Our Lady of Guadalupe, a spot that offers
the best view in town and is visible to boats for miles around. The two rowdiest
spring-break party bars, Rockodile and the Beachcomber, stand along the malecón,
the three-block street and promenade that fronts the beach.
At the northern end of the malecón, beyond the metal footbridge that
leads to the Guadalupe shrine, stand the Lighthouse restaurant and a hulking
ship-shaped discotheque called the Boom Boom Room, which was closed during
my visit.
Look left as you cross the foot bridge and you behold the town's derelict old
shipworks, now a wet graveyard for several vessels that will never float again.
Look right and you get a great panorama of beach and sea, including dozens
of fishing boats, whose owners typically slouch nearby, mending nets or haunting
the sidewalk and whispering to strangers like me.
" Hey, mister. You like fishing?"
I think I heard that question five times in 48 hours. But one day soon -- and
really, how could anybody be looking forward to that day? -- the real-estate-hawkers
are going to outnumber the fishing pitchmen.
Welcoming the well-heeled
Among the real-estate enterprises, the 800-pound gorilla is El Dorado Ranch,
which covers about 35,000 acres just north of the city and is connected to
at least three hotels and one restaurant in town as well. Aiming to attract
more upscale customers -- and steal tourists from Puerto Peñasco --
El Dorado's Denver-based owners say on their website that their project provides "a
unique alternative" for Arizonans "weary" of Peñasco's "overcrowded
beaches, high prices and increasing commercialism."
More than 1,500 El Dorado homes and condos are done or under construction,
and 5,500 or more lots have been sold. In 2005, the El Dorado people unveiled
the area's first 18-hole golf course, Caras de Mexico ($70 to $85 a round for
nonresidents), which is to be neighbored by 300 condos (most of which are finished,
35 of which can be rented by the night) and more than 750 homesites. A hotel
is planned too, but construction has not yet begun.
Meanwhile, with most of its visitors in RVs, condos or vacation homes, San
Felipe sustains a strange and perplexing batch of hotels.
Beachfront El Cortez, built in 1959, is well-kept but stopped taking credit
cards late in 2007. The Costa Azul stands in a prime spot at the end of the
malecón, but its rooms are marred by flaking paint, and the staff doesn't
bother to open the restaurant or heat the pool off-season. The Hotel San Felipe
Marina Resort & Spa, south of town, has 55 rooms within steps of the beach
-- but no marina or spa.
The selection will improve with the opening of the Club Habana -- formerly
known as the Hotel Misiones, next door to the Hotel Playa Club -- but it's
unclear whether the rehabilitators will meet their target of opening later
this year.
Then again, if you're a believer in deadlines, this probably isn't the place
for you anyway. I fell in step with San Felipe when I stopped consulting my
watch and meandered from meal to beach to car to meal to beach to bed, time-traveling
between old and new.
For instance: Next to Pete's Camp el Paraíso, a campground, restaurant
and rustic vacation-home enclave that dates back more than 40 years, I found
the Caras de Mexico golf course and its neighboring condos. As a nod to Mexican
culture, the course, which features a special salt-tolerant grass, includes
a bronze statue of a Mexican hero at every hole. The first hole is Montezuma.
The 16th is Frida Kahlo. She's a par 5.
For breakfast one day, I had a $5.75 eggs Benedict at Pavilion, the fancy restaurant
neighboring the golf course. For dinner one night I had grilled shrimp for
$11 on the upstairs patio of Conchita's, gazing out at the sea and guessing
whether the fake marlin that dangled from a wire above the family at the best
table posed a safety risk.
Eventually I stopped worrying and had another beer. That, for now, is the San
Felipe way.
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