4 days in Baja

A road trip with friends plus camping on the beach, seeing giant cacti, soaking in hot springs, playing in sand dunes, a lot of food, and enjoying salt flats. What more could you ask for?

Trip time: 4 days for Thanksgiving Weekend.

If you are ever driving down the #5 Highway from MexiCali down the coast of the Sea of Cortez, keep
San Felipe is a beautiful place to hang out on the beach, explore the nearby rocks and pools, catch a
This nature reserve is home to 1,000 year old, absolutely gigantic cacti.
Puertecitos Mexico, Population 41, is located a few hours south of San Felipe and is home to excellent natural hot
We spent a little while here in the pretty landscape, just enjoying the views.

Dunes on the #5 Highway

If you are ever driving down the #5 Highway from MexiCali down the coast of the Sea of Cortez, keep your eyes peeled for really cool dunes. We pulled off for a while to play on our drive south. On the way back north, we were treated to a small sandstorm with winds blowing sand and dust clouds across the road.

Our friend Ming strolls across the beautiful landscape.

 

Gorgeous untouched wind patterns.

 

Would you judge me for being cliche if I captioned this “Leave only footprints?”

 

 

Josh doing some surfing/skittering down the side of the dune.

 

 

 

Palapa Camping on the Sea of Cortez

Our friend Ming made us reservations at a palapa campground in San Felipe called Kiki’s. It was a beautiful place to hang out on the beach, explore the nearby rocks and pools, catch a fish, cook Thanksgiving dinner, and gather wild clams for a pasta dinner.

This was our Palapa site. We slept in a tent on the airy deck and cooked our meals in the kitchen below.

 

Ming floats down the Sea of Cortez.

 

My first attempt at acroyoga.

 

Nicole met a local who showed us where to dig up clams for our pasta dinner. Thanks to our friend Lauren for this photo!

 

 

Beautiful sunset on the Sea. Not a bad way to end our day.

 

 

Valle de los Gigantes (Valley of the Giants)

Valle de los Gigantes (Valley of the Giants) is home to 1,000 year old, absolutely gigantic cacti, and is well worth a visit. It doesn’t appear to see much traffic and on the day we went, we were the only ones in the reserve.

It is an inhospitable but nonetheless beautiful landscape.

 

Lauren is dwarfed by her elder.

 

Close-up. Brutal.

Seaside Bathing in Puertecitos Hot Springs

Puertecitos Mexico, Population 41, is located a few hours south of San Felipe and is home to excellent natural hot springs. You’ll need to time it just right, as most of the pools are covered during high tide and gradually emerge and rise in temperature as the sea recedes. This gives a nice layered effect, allowing bathers to move toward or away from the sea until they find the temperature that is just right for them. We had a great time with friends just stacking rocks and lounging in the warm water. If you’re ever there, the only restaurant in town has the best pozole we’ve ever had.

 

Great company.

 

Ominous lighting, standing on the rocky beach near the hot springs as a storm rolls in. No filter. Really.

 

Josh’s rock stacking handiwork. The middle stone was about the length of a human head, for scale.

Baja Salt Flats

Somewhere along the way back from San Felipe, there is a neat salt flat. We spent a little while here in the pretty landscape, just enjoying the views.