Showing posts with label for. Show all posts
Showing posts with label for. Show all posts

Have the Best Spring Break Ever in La Paz Mexico



Everyone is ready for a vacation by the time Spring Break rolls around – college students are feeling burnt out from months of studying, and all you want to do is soak up the sun on a gorgeous beach with an ice-cold margarita in hand. If you haven’t given much thought as to where you’ll spend these precious vacation days, we have a suggestion for your best Spring Break ever: La Paz, Mexico, in Southern Baja California.


La Paz Mexico Spring Break


Why spend Spring Break in La Paz?
Mexico is the ultimate Spring Break destination for young people in the US and Canada, for obvious reasons. Most people end up following the herd and settling for Cancun on the east coast or Cabo San Lucas on the west, but if you want to have the best trip ever, you have to blaze your own trail. La Paz is Mexico’s best kept secret, but word is getting out fast about this incredible beach paradise.

Want to party with your friends on a boat, cervezas in hand, dancing in the sun and waving at passing dolphins? Stay out all night partying hard at bars and dance clubs? Snorkel with sea turtles, manta rays, whale sharks and even sea lions? Or maybe you just want to stretch out on pristine, white sand beaches with a margarita and listen to the gentle waves crashing onto the shore.

Best. Vacation. Ever.
Whatever floats your boat when it comes to Spring Break, La Paz can deliver and will completely blow your mind. People come here to have an awesome time all year round, intrigued by all of the things La Paz has to offer that Los Cabos and other places just can’t compete with.


If you’re ok with same old, same old, you’ll probably have a decent time elsewhere. But if you want to camp out on an uninhabited desert island that is home to the (official) most beautiful beach in Mexico, there’s only one place to do it, and it’s La Paz.

Is It Safe for Americans to Visit La Paz Mexico?


We’ve been getting our fair share of scary news stories in the US about violence and crime in Mexico. The ongoing issues with drug cartels in some parts of the country are generating quite a bit of concern, and the US State Department has travel advisories in effect for many areas of Mexico. What does this mean if you’re thinking about a trip to La Paz, in Baja California Sur?
Travel advisory for La Paz, in perspective
The unfortunate and unavoidable reality of government travel advisories is that there is always a significant delay between the unfolding of events and the publication of the warning. A current (as of this writing) warning advises US citizens to use caution when traveling to La Paz, which is the capital of the state of Baja California Sur. This is due to a higher than usual homicide rate, mostly stemming from organized crime and cartels.
However, if you look at the actual crime statistics for La Paz, you’ll see that there was a “blip” of increased violence that ended in October of 2015 – from October 2015 to April 2016, there have only been a handful of homicides in the city. Considering that La Paz, Mexico is a city of more than a quarter million people, the actual rate of violent crime has been on par with some of the safest US cities for six months, going strong.
A tradition of safety and peace in La Paz, Mexico
It’s also important to remember that La Paz has historically been one of, if not the safest city in the entire county. Before the violent “blip” came on the radar, Forbes had rated La Paz #3 on their list of Safest International Cities to Visit, and the New York Times rated it one of the Top 10 Places for American to Retire. Which really means that the elevated violence seen in late 2014-2015 was the exception, not the rule.

Of course, it’s always important to be aware of your surroundings and not make yourself a target – this is true whether you’re traveling to La Paz or Tokyo or Washington D.C. As long as you keep your wits about you, there’s no reason to call off your vacation to La Paz because of safety concerns.