Kayaking San Carlos in Sonora, Mexico

Choice of Bays, Open Ocean Perfect for Beginners or Skilled Kayakers

© Bob Bowers

May 27, 2009
Punta Las Cuevas, San Carlos, Mexico, Bob Bowers
Sitting on The Sea of Cortez, San Carlos offers tourists abundant reasons to visit. Multiple bays, coves and open water provide excellent kayaking for all skill levels.

Just 12 miles northwest of the deep-water port of Guaymas, San Carlos is a year-round destination for tourists seeking sunshine and sparkling ocean. Available water sports include swimming, snorkeling, scuba diving, windsurfing, fishing, sailing, boating and kayaking. An easy day's drive from Arizona, San Carlos, like Puerto Penasco (Rocky Point) to the north, has become a choice ocean destination for visitors from Tucson and Phoenix.

The San Carlos/Guaymas Tourist Area

San Carlos is only 325 miles south of the junction of Interstate 10 and Interstate 19 in Tucson, Arizona. Although San Carlos is more tourist-oriented, nearby (and larger) Guaymas also offers good reasons to visit. Together, the two towns provide wonderful restaurants, fresh seafood, and a variety of outdoor activities, including birding, hiking, biking and golf, as well as water sports. An international airport is located in northern Guaymas, and knowledgeable tourists can also reach the area by car in about 6 hours from Tucson.

Surrounded by rugged, cactus-covered mountains and lying along numerous bays, coves, inlets and white-sand beaches, San Carlos is strikingly beautiful. This wide variety of water, including a protected estuary, makes San Carlos an excellent choice for all levels of kayakers.

Kayaking in San Carlos

Kayaking choices, which can be combined into longer outings, include:

  • San Francisco Bay
  • San Carlos Bay
  • Punta Doble
  • Playa Algodones
  • Estero Del Soldado

Kayaking San Francisco Bay in San Carlos

The main business stretch of San Carlos, from the entrance near the Fiesta Real Hotel to the Marina San Carlos, lies along Ensenada San Francisco, or San Francisco Bay. This is a relatively placid large body of water screened from the rougher water found along the western shoreline. Consequently, it is an ideal area for beginning and less-adventurous kayakers.

Kayaks can be rented from El Mar Dive Center, which is on the bay side of the main street, just west of popular Rosa's Cantina. The English-speaking partners at El Mar will direct you to convenient entry points on San Francisco Bay as well as other locations, even if you have brought your own kayak. Double kayaks are available at El Mar currently for $45 U.S. for a 24-hour rental, including life jackets, paddles and kayak delivery/pickup at your entry point. For an additional $7 U.S., they will also move the kayak from one entry point to another, giving you access to multiple locations during the same day.

San Francisco Bay to San Carlos Bay

Following the shoreline southwest, you can kayak out of San Francisco Bay and around (or through) a rocky cliff (Punta Las Cavas/Cave Point) that leads to a small bay where the Marina Terra Beach Club is located. An eroded hole through the cliff adds some excitement and a short cut into the adjacent bay. Two islands harbor roosting Brown pelicans a short distance off the point, and the tile-roofed homes of Caracol nestle on the hill above the bay.

After crossing the mouth of the Marina Terra Beach Club bay, another point is encountered with a second, narrower tunnel into San Carlos Bay, where the main San Carlos marinas are located to the north.

Kayaking Punta Doble to Mirador

Continuing across the mouth of San Carlos Bay and around Punta Doble to the west, one encounters more chop, more wind and more power boats, and beginning kayakers could find this challenging. The water is generally more calm in the morning, before afternoon breezes kick up, and staying closer to the shoreline usually means easier kayaking as well.

After coming around Punta Doble, a series of beautiful small coves and inlets mark the coastline to El Mirador, the popular sunset viewpoint that towers 175 feet above the ocean. Mirador is about a 6 mile paddle from the mid-point of San Francisco Bay.

Kayaking Along Algodones Beach and Beyond

From Mirador, kayakers follow the coast around the point and past an azure resort bay to Marina Real. The beautiful white sand Algodones Beach sweeps north of the marina, past The Premier Vacation Club and The San Carlos Plaza Hotel to the Paradiso Resort. Although this is called a bay (Bahia Los Algodones), it has the look and feel of open ocean. Surf breaks along the beach, and Baja California lies 80 miles across the sea to the west.

From the Paradiso Resort, where Venado Island lies offshore, the coastline continues north past the village of La Manga and beyond. Strong breezes prevail along this area, which is popular with wind surfers.

Kayaking Estero Del Soldado

The Soldado Estuary is a protected area at the east end of San Francisco Bay. Access is through the bay or at a gated entrance along the Delfinario road, which runs between the main San Carlos road east of town and Guaymas. The estuary consists of mangrove islands and a maze of shallow waterways. The kayaking is easy and relaxing, and the estuary is popular with birders. Kayakers should be aware of tides, however, since low tidewater can drop to non-navigable levels.

San Carlos, an appealing tourist destination for many reasons, offers a broad range of kayaking experiences in a spectacularly beautiful setting.


The copyright of the article Kayaking San Carlos in Sonora, Mexico in Mexican Travel is owned by Bob Bowers. Permission to republish Kayaking San Carlos in Sonora, Mexico in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Punta Las Cuevas, San Carlos, Mexico, Bob Bowers
San Franciso Bay, San Carlos, Mexico, Bob Bowers
Punta Doble To Mirador, San Carlos, Mexico, Bob Bowers
Sea Of Cortez From Mirador, San Carlos, Mexico, Bob Bowers
Estero Del Soldado, San Carlos, Mexico, Bob Bowers


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