Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram WhatsApp
    Facebook Instagram WhatsApp
    Porto Journal
    • Home
    • Travel
    • Culture & History
    • Culinary
    • Español
    Porto Journal
    You are at:Home » Ghost Ships & Gold Dust
    Culture & History

    Ghost Ships & Gold Dust

    June 23, 20253 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Email Telegram WhatsApp Threads Copy Link

    Read in another language / Leer en otro idioma : Español

    The Wild Pirate Stories Beneath La Paz’s Calm Waters

    La Paz may feel like the kind of place where nothing bad ever happened. Calm waters. Peaceful sunsets. A breeze that shows up right when you need it. But centuries ago, these shores were anything but quiet.

    Back in the heyday of the Manila Galleon trade, Spanish ships loaded with pearls, silver, silk, and spice sailed right through this region—making La Paz a glittering stop on a very dangerous route. And where there was treasure, there were pirates.

    Names like Francis Drake and Thomas Cavendish still linger in local lore. Drake is said to have passed through Baja in the 1570s, testing Spain’s Pacific defenses. Cavendish made headlines in 1587 by capturing the Santa Ana near Cabo—a 700-ton treasure ship that took days to loot. Some say the stolen silver was hidden in nearby coves… and some of it never left.

    Pirates of La Paz: Secrets of the Sea and Buried Treasure / Vacation Rentals by Porto Vacanze / Luxury stay in La Paz

    Later, in the late 1600s, French buccaneers sheltered in what’s now Pichilingue Bay, using the calm waters to resupply and plot raids. They held coastal towns ransom and sparked colonial skirmishes that read more like movie scripts than history books.

    And then there’s the legend of Samuel Cromwell, or Cromuel as the name was passed down. Supposedly, he hid a fortune in the sand near the shoreline—and the breezy Coromuel wind that drifts in every evening? Locals say it’s named after him. Or maybe it’s just a coincidence… with great branding.

    Where to Find the Stories Today

    • Isla Espíritu Santo: Once a pirate hideout, now a biosphere reserve. Its red cliffs and hidden coves make it easy to picture a ship anchored in silence, waiting.
    • El Mogote: A dreamy stretch of dunes across the bay, whispered to conceal buried treasure. Sunset strolls there feel like you’re walking across a secret.
    • Rancho Gaspareño Cave: Tucked into the coastline, this spot has long been tied to pirate legends—and a missing chest supposedly found in the 1970s.
    • Museo de Antropología e Historia: For real-world context, this downtown museum showcases weapons, maps, and maritime artifacts from the age of sails and plunder.

    From Pirate Waters to Porto Views

    Today, the only thing ambushing you is the sudden craving for fresh clams or a second scoop of mango sorbet. But stay a little longer, and you’ll start to notice the layers beneath the surface. A breeze that rolls in like a story. A shoreline that once shimmered with sails and silver. A city shaped by quiet legends.

    At Porto Vacanze, we curate stays that connect you to the soul of Baja — its warmth, its wonder, and yes, its wild pirate past.

    Because some stories? They’re not over yet.

    Read in another language / Leer en otro idioma : Español

    Baja California Sur La Paz Mexico
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Next Article The Malecón: Sunset, Stories, and Sea Breezes

    Related Posts

    La Paz, a Little Louder

    February 14, 2026

    Halloween & Día de Muertos: How La Paz Celebrates Life and Remembrance

    October 21, 2025

    Scoops and Cones under the Baja Sun

    September 26, 2025
    Demo
    Demo
    Facebook Instagram WhatsApp
    • Home
    • Travel
    • Culture & History
    • Culinary
    © 2026 Journal by Porto Vacanze.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    • Español