San Jose del Cabo
Introduction - General Information -
History
San Jose del Cabo - Los Cabos, Baja
California Sur, Mexico
San Jose del Cabo The ‘Real Cabo’...
By David Mandich - December 17, 2003
If you are unfamiliar with what
constitutes ‘Los Cabos’ it goes like
this: located on the most southern
extremity of Baja California Sur, the
rowdy raucous resort community of Cabo
San Lucas is on the west end of the
peninsula tip and approximately eighteen
miles to the east, you will find the
more laidback, peaceful, colonial town
of San Jose del Cabo. Los Cabos
(The Capes) includes both communities
connected by a eighteen-mile stretch of
waterfront hotels, celebrity designed
golf courses and luxury home
developments.
Cabo San Lucas is the generally agreed
upon dividing line between the oceans of
the Sea of Cortez and the Pacific. In
fact, at the bay entrance where the
famous ‘Land’s End’ arch rock formations
are to be found – on one side of the
arch are the relatively cooler waters of
the Pacific and on the other, the
always-warmer Sea of Cortez.
Cabo San Lucas was designed literally
from ground-up by the Mexican government
to be a tourist destination resort a
couple of decades ago. Its sole purpose
is to generate tourism, jobs, and to
send 90% of the tax revenues back to
Mexico. And it’s been wildly successful.
It’s flashy and new. It rocks. It’s fun
to visit, but like the Vegas Strip,
would you want to live there?
For many tourists, after visiting fast
and frenetic Cabo San Lucas the first
time, San Jose del Cabo ends up
being their destination of choice for
future visits. Indeed most folks come to
Mexico to get away, take it slow and
appreciate the ambience as found in
San Jose del Cabo, what I call the
‘Real Cabo’.
San Jose del Cabo was for
hundreds of years, the only community
here at the tip fo the Baja California
Peninsula. With its natural fresh water
oasis flowing into palm-lined lagoons at
the oceans edge, the area supported
Indian communities and hundreds of
species of wildlife for thousands of
years before colonization by the
Spanish. During the pre-colonial period
it was a watering and provisioning stop
for Spanish galleons. The heavy ships
laden with treasure, silks and spices
from the east were the ‘big game fish’
then for pirates like Sir Francis Drake
who came looking for ‘donations’ to his
favorite charity (himself) and his
majesty the 'Virgin' Queen Elizabeth.
San Jose del Cabo was finally settled in
1730 with a Jesuit mission and fort to
help stabilize the region against these
marauders.
As the years went by, explorers like
Cabrillo and Vizcaino, cannoned
warships, whaling ships, and clipper
traders running the West Coast all
stopped and often left, leaving crew
behind. Some of the old families in
Todos Santos, La Paz and San Jose del
Cabo have English and French derived
surnames from ancestors who were
buccaneers before jumping ship and
becoming ranchers and fishermen.
San Jose del Cabo for hundreds of
years has been an outpost on the tip of
the Baja California peninsula. Up until
twenty years ago Cabo San Lucas was just
a few farmhouses, some scrawny cattle
roaming the dirt roads and a fish
cannery. There was only a twenty-mile
dirt road connecting it to the only town
nearby, San Jose del Cabo.
The quaint town of San Jose del Cabo
has an almost fantasy land quality about
it. Imagine main street Disneyland
without that big rat walking about
shaking hands. In city center one will
find a gorgeous Spanish colonial styled
city hall with murals of old Baja inside
its corridors. Within, there’s a
two-story courtyard shaded by a huge
Mexican Laurel.
Often one can enjoy an art exhibit or
concert here in the evenings. Out front
on Mijares (the main street) is a block
long fountain dividing traffic on the
street lined with plastered and columned
old colonial buildings and almost secret
paseos or inner courtyards full of shops
graced with bougainvilleas, palms and
laurels. Adjacent is a one acre tiled
plaza shaded with gigantic palms and
century old trees surrounding a
Victorian bandstand and a newer outdoor
stage for larger performances.
Often in the evenings on the plaza in
front of the cathedral, one can enjoy
traditional Mexican bands, Latin dance
and rock and roll music. One can
literally dance under the stars here, or
in one of the nearby clubs as in the
Tropicana Inn (located across the street
from the municipal palace). The
Tropicana Inn often features fine Cuban
or Mexican bands as well as romantic
covered outside dining along the
boulevard.
San Jose del Cabo exhibits the
best of traditional Mexico with its
blocks of unhurried streets and graceful
tree covered sidewalks, its scores of
shops, galleries, fine restaurants,
boutiques and total absence of popular
franchises such as McDonalds, Pizza Hut,
and Hard Rock Cafe. It’s a place to
explore, unwind, take-in and treasure.
San Jose del Cabo hosts many
excellent restaurants, which are
typically uncrowded, low keyed and
elegant compared to the more tourist
oriented Cabo San Lucas establishments.
Good picks are El Chilar Restaurant for
unique professionally prepared regional
dishes, Morgan’s Restaurant for fine
continental food with a local
interpretation, Baan Thai for Asian
cuisine in a sophisticated tropical
setting, The Tulip Tree (El Tulipan) for
good Latin and Gringo fare prepared by
the Canadian chef owner, Local 8 for
‘International Fusion Cuisine, La Panga
Antigua for Baja Seafood elegantly
prepared, La Dolce an Italian Bistro
adjacent to the plaza and Da Antonio’s
for the finest Italian and continental
food this side of the Old World located
adjacent to the Hotel Presidente on the
beach the end of Mijares boulevard
opposite downtown.
Art exhibitions, fiestas and traveling
shows from other regions of Mexico often
appear at the plaza with little notice.
Visit during a fiesta and you may be
treated to fireworks, band performing on
stages up and down the streets,
carnivals, cockfights, a rodeo and
thousands of locals from the barrios and
ranchos from miles around crowding the
streets.
Overlooking the San Jose del Cabo
plaza is a cathedral with a ceramic tile
mural above the doors, eternally
reminding the locals of the Jesuits whom
the Indians massacred centuries ago. The
Indians had serious issues such as not
wanting to wear pants, being allowed
only one wife, and having to work for
the church. The braves preferring
instead to hunt, fish, party, get drunk,
fight and play with their squaws. The
Jesuits in their opinion, didn’t offer
them much other than an austere life
based on faith, subservience, work, and
death by disease. The Jesuits, thought
the Indians, just didn’t get it. After
all, people come to Los Cabos to play
and have fun.
San Jose del Cabo is home to some of
the finest hotels and resorts to be
found anywhere including the One and
Only Palmilla hotel located a couple of
miles west of town. Here one can enjoy
drinks overlooking the surf below, the
Palmilla sportfishing fleet beyond and
excellent beaches for swimming and
snorkeling in between. Adjacent are
famous golf courses and million dollar
homes of the rich and famous, and the
legendary surfing spot of Costa Azul.
Other quality hotels worth checking out
include the El Encanto Inn and Tropicana
Inn both right in downtown. Casa Natalia
is a wonderful boutique hotel with
upscale dining and services, and for an
all-inclusive hotel experience where
food, drinks, and entertainment all come
with the room – try the Presidente
Inter-Continental Los Cabos Resort,
Crown Plaza Los Cabos Beach Resort, The
Grand Baja Resort and Spa or Royal
Solaris Resort Los Cabos, all located on
the Sea of Cortez beachfront.
San Jose del Cabo is a place
where one can ride horses on uncrowded
trails overlooking beaches where the
turtles lay their eggs (the Presidente
Inter-Continental Los Cabos Resort has a
turtle nursery), a place where nature
lovers can hike through the estuary,
bird watch, ride mountain bikes, surf,
fish, golf, snorkel, or just explore the
neighborhood.
A good short trip is to the nearby
community of La Playita. An old barrio
of San Jose del Cabo, it’s a
former fish camp of a few hundred homes
and souls. On the beach one can see
pangas lying about ready to take the
adventurous tourist fisherman out to the
nearby Gorda Banks for Marlin fishing.
Tip – Gorda Banks is twenty miles closer
from here than from Cabo San Lucas. On
Sunday afternoons, the locals gather on
the beach, children swim, young men toss
circular nets over their heads into the
water netting surf fish while the
oldsters gossip, listen to banda music
and drink until the sun sets over the
mountains.
The little barrio of Playita is built on
a small hill adjacent to the sea, and is
slated for renovation and development of
more hotels, two golf courses and a new
marina where a soccer field exists at
present. Lots are being sold at this
time in what may ultimately be the most
exclusive and done-right project on the
West Coast of the Americas. The
developers are doing their best to
integrate the locals, and their needs
with the project such as building a
church, a new soccer field, a special
area set-aside for the panga fleet and
more.
For me, San Jose del Cabo is the
‘Real Cabo.’ Having been inhabited for
centuries longer, it represents a real
snapshot of the old Baja, a place where
time goes by more slowly. Here, one can
relax and stroll about, sometimes
sharing the sidewalks with cows heading
through town to munch on folks gardens.
Just watch where you step.