Once-hot Baja surf spots falling dormant
Development, pollution and violence taint former havens for San Diego surfers.

Formerly crowded breaks are now eerily empty. (photo by Jonathan Eng)
Related Link: Top Baja surf destinations
The Northern Baja coastline was once part of nearly every Southern Californian surfer’s backyard. A place where one could take day-trip “surfaris,” gorge on fresh fish tacos, guiltlessly enjoy a mid-day beer and be back home before sun down.
Many of us grew up taking full advantage of the nearby south-of-the-border coastline, its exploratory flare and proximity to home; not too much commitment and just enough adventure to subdue the biting travel bug.
But times have changed along the Tijuana-Ensenada coastal corridor. Surf spots that used to have maximum capacity lineups are now eerily empty.
Fewer than five years ago it was common to see a mixed bag of Ensenada locals and visiting gringos sharing waves at places like San Miguel, just north of Ensenada, on a weekday.
These days the locals can have it to themselves; but questionable water quality from septic dumping and overflow is even steering them away from the rifling right hander.
Spots like Salsipuedes, K55s, and Calafia, traditional “favorites” for visiting surfers, are now nearly wiped off the surfing map due to inaccessibility. Ironically, the high-rise condo towers that are keeping surfers out of the line-ups stand empty as well.
Although investment along the Northern Baja coastline has slowed dramatically, the coastal condo development has not. New hotels, condos and homes pop up over night, as do billboard signs advertising placid blue waters and endless fields of wildflowers, hinting that you too could own a piece of paradise.
But if you look around the Corbusien beachfront structures and the signs meant to sell their beehive units, you’ll realize that that paradise is not here. Within a quarter mile of the squashed Trump Towers proposal site, just north of Baja Malibu, is the San Antonio de las Buenas creek, a torrent of partially treated sewage coming from Tijuana’s overwhelmed and only sewage treatment facility.
Although that project is now beleaguered by a depressed economy, litigation and alternative travel/investment plans by American vacationers, nearby billboards advertise new pretentious visions for what is now a dirt lot enclosed by barbed wire and a noxious scent of chlorine and sewage.
Travel further south and you’ll see much of the same; walled off swaths of coastal properties separated by half constructed or empty condo towers and hotels, trash heaps, federale checkpoints and destitute communities. The grandiose visions for the Cancunization of this coastline have become crumbling walls and rusted towers, standing as a sign of a past era … or one that never was.
A lethal combination of cartel-related violence, police corruption and a down-economy is killing travel in Northwest Mexico. Surf travel has always been the resilient economy. Wave quality usually takes precedence over safety, aesthetic beauty, comfort and accessibility. Surfers have always been the ones to take the risk and journey to places where vacationers wouldn’t bother to venture.
But we are no longer going to what is undoubtedly one of North America’s most wave rich coastlines. Even lifelong Baja vets are giving up on their trailers parked at Northern Baja’s beaches and points.
The stigma of Northern Baja travel, coupled with tainted coastal waters and ever-increasing inaccessibility is turning surfers off on south-of -the border travel. A 1992 Surfer’s Journal article stated that “a few years ago, you could track a northwest swell from Tijuana to Ensenada and see less than a dozen surfers.”
Well, in 2009, empty lineups have once again returned.
Zach Plopper is the Wildlands Conservation Program Coordinator for WiLDCOAST, an environmental NGO based in Imperial Beach. He is a native San Diegan and has been surfing there for 18 years. Zach is also a team rider for Matuse wetsuits, Xanadu surfboards, Glas apparel and films and Surf Ride. Learn more about Zach’s work at www.wildcoast.net.
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Comment by: Serge Dedina Posted: May 12, 2009, 5:18 pm
I grew up surfing Northern Baja and it is a shame to see the pollution plus lack of access ruin the experience for everyone. This has an impact on the economy since surfers were mainstays of tourism in the region. On my last trip a couple of weeks ago, the coast was empty-as in ghost town empty.
Comment by: Aida Navarro Posted: May 13, 2009, 10:36 am
great article. Sad but true.
Comment by: Rides More Posted: May 13, 2009, 11:14 am
I choose to surf Northern Baja breaks regularly. As do many of my friends. We stay away from areas that are regularly polluted and find many more clean spots that are now not nearly as crowded as they once were. It is kinda like Surfers Paradise.. The last south swell produced double overhead waves at Calafia. Contrary to your article there were 10 guys out and 8 of them were Gringos.. Better than the days of when there would 20 guys when big South swells pumped in..
Maybe when Serge was down last there was no swell..
what an amateur hack job.
Comment by: JOHN C .HACKER III Posted: May 13, 2009, 11:33 am
YA KNOW, ITS VERY SAD ,i basically grew up with my family down there,from our little vacation trailer just outside of renes restaurant at el mananA park to surfen k-38 to k-55.it used to be so much fun,then later got my drivers license and helped build four houses 5 miles before the bufadora in a place called RANCHO PACKARD,where a couple of my friends live full time now.ya know here ion da states,its a law that you go to school,si in Mexico [ITS NOT]!!my point being,its no wonder that every one walks around UNEDUCATED!!
Comment by: Jack Beresford Posted: May 13, 2009, 12:39 pm
How ironic that the sidebar ads for this story include listings for condos in N. Baja!
Comment by: Randy Seton Posted: May 13, 2009, 3:07 pm
And they call it an “inheritance from development” what an vile form of progress. Developers and investors take any route to make a buck, “Mow an Go” tactics, buying officials and even having their own environmental organizations. I do remember those glassy peaks at San Miguel, no mucho “caca” in the water then, just nice folks enjoying a place that wasn’t wrecked by over-populating.
So test your immune system surf the West coast. Mmmmm those lobsters sure are sweet!
Comment by: Fernanda Posted: May 13, 2009, 4:52 pm
Excellent article. It is crazy how much things have changed in the last couple of years.
Comment by: BajaBrent Posted: May 14, 2009, 10:47 am
Quit whining! I thought surfers were adventurers? Perhaps you should try a new sport: paragliding! Baja has excellent flying opportunities…and you dont get wet (o;… And in between flying windows…well the breaks are still there!!! As for drug wars, hogwash flu, etc. do you really believe the US media propoganda? For the real scoop see
see http://www.BajaBrent.com; http://www.FlyLaSalina.com and http://bajatraveladvisor.wordpress.com/
Comment by: nikki Posted: May 14, 2009, 10:59 pm
hey bajabrent — US media propAganda exists, no doubt … but minimizing the current drug war in Mexico for what … a blatant attempt to advertise — paragliding?
Want to be taken seriously? Stay away from real SCOOPS and get your facts straight by reading more articles like this one .. oh and while you’re at it .. run a quick spell check before submitting.
Comment by: Big wave surf champ Dunfee sits down with SDNN Posted: June 10, 2009, 12:58 pm
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