Scammon’s Lagoon (Laguna Ojo de Liebre)
Baja California Sur
by Bill and Dorothy Bell
Drive the Transpeninsular Highway 1 down through the Baja, just past the border of the States of Baja California and head south into Baja California Sur past the town of Guerrero Negro to KM 208. It is well marked. Take the access road of approximately 25 miles on good flat dirt/gravel past and over salt flats and the access gate. ( These salt flats are the largest natural outdoor salt facility in the world; ½ owned by the Mitsubishi Corporation and ½ by the Mexican Government)
You have arrived at an experience of a lifetime.
Scammon’s Lagoon or Laguna Ojo de Liebre ( Spanish for Eye of the jackrabbit) is located in the largest Biosphere Reserve in Latin America. The gray whales migrate annually from the Bering and Chukchi seas in the Artic to the Lagoon – some 6000 miles – as part of their biological cycle. Scammon’s is the primary calving lagoon in Baja.
Charles Melville Scammon, an American whaling captain, discovered the entrance to a lagoon in 1857 and proceeded to hunt – some say slaughter – the graceful mammals for their oil, whalebone, and meat. The population of whales at that time was estimated to be around 30,000 and by 1869 the population dwindled to less than 2,000 – near extinction. In 1972 the Mexican Government created the Gray Whale Sanctuary. After International treaties and a concerted effort to ensure this species survival, the population is now estimated at 20,000 with an estimated 1,500 whales making Scammon’s their winter home.
Private boats and kayaks are prohibited from entering the waters and only licensed tour boats are allowed. It is protected by SEMARNAP, the Mexican Secretary of Environmental and Natural Resources and Fisheries and is a restricted sanctuary for migratory birds ( Canadian Geese, fishing eagle, white pelican, cormorants to name few) and marine mammals. It is recognized by UNESCO’ Man and Biosphere program.
An Experience of a lifetime.
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