Cabo San Lucas cruise port guide on a short port day with whale watching, tender tips, and a quick look at the marina.
Cabo cruise port blog with maps, links, and more:
https://www.nowgoseeit.com/blog/cruise-port-cabo-san-lucas
Mexico cruise ports playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL4Hr8kE0shYkHz3tKuLxnaBW91EZ7XWQH
In this video we’re spending one busy port day in Cabo San Lucas and showing you how to make the most of limited time in port. Cabo is a tender port, which means your day starts on a small boat ride from your cruise ship into Cabo San Lucas Bay and the downtown marina. We walk you through what the tender process looks like, how long it takes, and why you should keep an eye out for wildlife like sea lions, birds, and even distant whale blows before your day has officially started.
Once we reach the Cabo San Lucas Marina, we take you along the waterfront promenade lined with boats on one side and restaurants, bars, souvenir shops, and tour stands on the other. This is where most cruise passengers book last-minute excursions, grab a bite to eat, or figure out what kind of Cabo day they’re about to have. We show you what to expect along the marina and what kind of activities you’ll see advertised.
Cabo is one of the best ports in Mexico for water-based shore excursions, so we cover the big options you’ll run into: scuba diving, snorkeling, glass-bottom boat tours to El Arco, sport fishing trips, and seasonal whale watching. We explain the difference between booking through the ship, booking in advance through partners on NowGoSeeIt.com, and waiting to book a tour on the pier. You’ll hear why prices usually drop the farther you walk away from the tender dock, and why you should never feel pressured to buy from the very first person who calls out “amigo, boat tour.”
For this visit we decided to build our entire Cabo day around a whale watching tour. Walking along the marina, we spotted a sign for a small-boat whale watching trip for forty US dollars per person. The tour was advertised as ninety minutes, but we ended up out on the water for close to two and a half hours, getting an incredible look at humpback whales on a small boat with a local captain.
On the way out to deeper water, our captain takes us past Cabo’s famous landmarks: Land’s End, El Arco, and the twin beaches of Playa del Amor (Lover’s Beach) on the bay side and Playa del Divorcio (Divorce Beach) on the rough Pacific side. We explain what makes these beaches different, how water taxis can drop you off for a simple beach day, and what to keep in mind about shade, facilities, and safety before you commit to being dropped off.
Once we pass Land’s End, we head into the Pacific side in search of whales. Cabo’s whale watching season usually runs from December into early spring, with peak viewing in the winter months when humpback whales come down from colder feeding grounds to mate and give birth in the warmer waters around Baja. Depending on the time of year, you may also see gray whales migrating along the peninsula.
Because our boat is small, our captain is able to maneuver quickly and position us near a pod without crowding or chasing the animals. We follow a family group of whales as they surface, dive, and move through the water, close enough to hear the exhale and see the details on their backs and tails. For us this ended up being the best whale watch we’ve ever done: no loud party music, no huge crowd at the rail, just a small boat, a skilled captain, and a lot of whales doing their thing around us.
After the whale watch we head back into the Cabo San Lucas Marina and still squeeze in a short walk through town before catching one of the last tenders back to the ship. We talk about how far you need to step away from the marina to find better prices and more local-style shops, what kinds of souvenirs you’ll see, and why it pays to keep an eye on your all-aboard time at a tender port like this. We also swing by El Squid Roe for a quick look at one of Cabo’s most over-the-top nightlife spots, even though a 3:30 p.m. departure day doesn’t leave much time for a full night out.
If you’re planning a Mexican Riviera cruise or a Cabo San Lucas port day, this video will help you understand how the Cabo tender process works, what to expect along the marina promenade, how to choose and book water-based excursions, what a small-boat whale watching tour looks like, how much you can realistically do on a short port day, and where to walk for quick local shopping near the marina.
For more details, maps, and links to recommended tours, head to our full Cabo San Lucas cruise port guide on NowGoSeeIt.com:
https://www.nowgoseeit.com/blog/cruise-port-cabo-san-lucas
And if you’re building a full Mexico or Mexican Riviera cruise itinerary, don’t miss our complete Mexico cruise ports playlist here:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL4Hr8kE0shYkHz3tKuLxnaBW91EZ7XWQH