The whale shark gets the headline — and deserves it — but the Sea Safari Norte is the tour that guests talk about differently. It runs all year. It departs at 7:30am and comes back eight hours later. It has no fixed itinerary, no scheduled stops, and no animal guaranteed. What it has is a guide who knows exactly where to look and a Sea of Cortez that almost never comes up empty.
What Happens on a Sea Safari Norte
The boat leaves the La Paz Malecón at 7:30am and heads north into the Canal de Cerralvo — the deep channel between the Baja peninsula and Isla Cerralvo. From there the route goes wherever the guide decides based on water temperature, bird activity, surface conditions, and six years of accumulated knowledge about what shows up where and when.
There is no script. The guide isn't following a GPS waypoint to a designated "dolphin zone." When something is happening — a feeding frenzy, a line of birds working the surface, a disturbance in the water that says mobula rays — the boat goes there. When guests are in the water with animals, they stay in the water. No timed rotations, no hurrying people out of the ocean to make a schedule.
Lunch is fresh ceviche prepared on board and served on a remote beach — a different beach each time, depending on where the morning has taken the boat. Most guests describe the lunch stop as unexpectedly perfect. A stretch of empty Baja coastline, ceviche in the shade, sea still visible in every direction.
"It's the tour where people ask what they can do tomorrow. The answer is usually: come back and do this again."
The Wildlife — What You're Looking For
Mobula Rays
Two species — Mobula munkiana and Mobula japanica — aggregate in the Sea of Cortez in schools that can reach tens of thousands of animals. When you hit a school, the surface of the water moves. Guests enter to snorkel in the middle of them. The rays feed on zooplankton and ignore humans almost entirely. It is one of the most genuinely surreal wildlife experiences on the planet.
Orcas
The Canal de Cerralvo is a documented orca corridor — pods move through seasonally, hunting rays, sharks and marine mammals. Sightings are not guaranteed but are regular enough that the guide checks the channel as a matter of course. When orcas are present, the boat goes quiet and everyone moves to the bow.
Dolphins
Bottlenose and common dolphins are the most consistent encounter on the Sea Safari Norte — bow-riding the boat, hunting in the channel, occasionally in groups of several hundred animals. The guide knows the difference between a dolphin group that's traveling and one that's feeding, and takes the boat to the feeding groups where the water is most alive.
Humpback Whales
Humpbacks arrive in the Sea of Cortez from December through April, using the warm southern waters for breeding and calving. The Canal de Cerralvo corridor sees regular humpback activity during season. Breaching, tail slapping, and close surface encounters are common when they're present.
Blue-Footed Boobies
Isla Gaviota — "Seagull Island" — hosts one of the larger blue-footed booby colonies on the Sea of Cortez. The Sea Safari Norte passes close enough to observe them on the rocks and frequently catches them diving offshore. Their hunting dives are fast, precise, and oddly satisfying to watch.
Whale Sharks
If the Sea Safari Norte is running during whale shark season and conditions are right, the guide will take the boat to the aggregation. Whale shark is not the focus of this tour — the Sea Safari Norte is designed around open-water wildlife — but the aggregation is in the area the boat travels, and the guide has no reason to skip it when it's there.
Why Six Guests and Not Ten
The Sea Safari Norte runs a maximum of six guests — smaller than The Hook's other tours. The reason is practical: this tour goes further, stays out longer, and operates in open water where conditions can change. Fewer people means a more agile boat, faster decisions, and more time for everyone in the water when animals are present.
It also means the guide can pay attention to what each person is seeing and help them see more of it. On a larger boat in open water, half the guests miss half the wildlife. On a six-person boat where the guide knows every guest's name and comfort level, that doesn't happen.
The Season Question
The Sea Safari Norte runs every day of the year that weather and sea conditions allow. It is not a seasonal tour — the Sea of Cortez produces extraordinary wildlife twelve months of the calendar.
That said, different things are prominent at different times. March through July is peak mobula season — the best chance of hitting the massive aggregations. December through April brings humpback whales and, if you want it, access to the whale shark zone. September through November is often the clearest water of the year, with good visibility for snorkeling even when surface wildlife is quieter.
The honest answer to "when should I go" is: whenever you can. Every departure produces something worth seeing. The guide's job is to find it.
What to Bring
The boat departs at 7:30am — bring a light jacket. The Sea of Cortez in the morning, even in summer, has a breeze on the water that disappears by midday. Biodegradable sunscreen is mandatory. A GoPro or underwater housing for your phone is strongly recommended — the mobula and dolphin encounters are excellent for underwater footage. Sea-sickness medication the night before if you're prone — this tour goes into open water where the swell is more pronounced than in La Paz Bay.
Sea Safari Norte — At a Glance
- Duration: 8 hours · Departs 7:30am from La Paz Malecón
- Max guests: 6 per boat
- Season: Year-round — no off-season
- Price: $3,300 MXN per person (~$165 USD)
- Included: Full snorkel equipment, wetsuit, marine biologist guide, fresh ceviche lunch on remote beach, all permits
- Guide: Certified marine biologist — in the water with you
- Type: Shared for individual bookings · Private available for groups
Frequently Asked Questions
Eight Hours on the Sea of Cortez.
Year-Round. Max 6 Guests.
Departs 7:30am from the La Paz Malecón. Certified marine biologist guide. Fresh ceviche on a remote beach. No fixed itinerary — just the sea and whatever's in it.
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