Cabo San Lucas Bay 1968

Cabo San Lucas Bay in 1968

This a picture of Trollop that we sailed into the Cape in 1968. The bay was alive with fish because the cannery was pumping all the fish parts into the bay they did not use.

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There were only two lights on shore at three in the morning when we arrived. The Hacienda and one in the village. See the smoke coming up from the cannery? Unbelievable what happened. Telling my age

Photo courtesy Bill Stein – See larger image of Cabo Bay 1968

Other images by Bill Stein

Cruise Ship Puerto Vallarta in Cabo San Lucas Bay 1970s

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Cruise Ship Puerto Vallarta in Cabo San Lucas Bay 1970s

Post Card photo byJavier Cota circa 1970’s, Cabo San Lucas, Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, Mexico.

Cruise ship Puerto Vallarta in Cabo San Lucas Bay c1970s Photo Javier Cota
Cruise ship Puerto Vallarta in Cabo San Lucas Bay c1970s Photo Javier Cota

Cruise Ship (Transbordador) Puerto Vallarto in Cabo San Lucas Bay circa 1970s. Photo by Javier Cota.

Cabo San Lucas 1970

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Photographs of Medano Beach area of Cabo San Lucas in 1970

Collection of spectacular old photographs taken by Edward Carriveau showing Cabo San Lucas in 1970.

Beverly Parsons has uploaded many great images of Cabo San Lucas taken during 1970.  Cabo San Lucas town, beaches, faces, and fishermen. See them on her Facebook page.  Photos taken by her father, Edward Carriveau. 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/632496947131623/

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All images are copyright by the owner.

See them on Facebook. Photos by Edward Carriveau

 

Culture of Cabo Museum of Natural History

Culture of Cabo: A Q&A with Director of the Cabo San Lucas Museum of Natural History. 

Article written by Chris Sands. Originally posted on Jun 20, 2016.  Reposted February 28, 2018 to accommodate new site format.

Roberto Cuétara has been working in museums for more than 50 years, and anyone who has visited cultural heritage sites in Baja California Sur–from Loreto to La Paz to Los Cabos–has almost certainly been exposed, knowingly or not, to his very fine informational guides and three-dimensional exhibits. He’s currently director at the Museo de Historia Natural de Cabo San Lucas, one of the Land’s End City’s most notable cultural attractions.

The museum, which originally opened on October 9, 2006, is the repository of an enormous amount of knowledge about the area and its inhabitants, a treasure trove of fossils and old photographs. Exhibit halls guide visitors through the long history of the region, from primitive tools excavated at local beaches to a two million year old zebra fossil found in the nearby Sierra de la Laguna mountain range. It is, suffice it to say, an essential stop for anyone interested in the history and heritage of Cabo San Lucas, not to mention an invaluable resource for local schoolchildren.

I recently sat down with the esteemed curator to discuss the history of the museum, and, as its 10th anniversary approaches, its future.

Roberto Cuetara, Director of the Museo de Historia Natural de Cabo San Lucas.
Roberto Cuétara’s 50+ year career in museums includes a current position as Director of the Museo de Historia Natural de Cabo San Lucas.

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Article by Chris Sands, Cabo San Lucas, continues on Los Cabos Guide.

Part One of Three
www.loscabosguide.com/culture-of-cabo-a-qa-with-roberto-cuetara-director-of-the-cabo-san-lucas-museum-of-natural-history/

Part Two of Three
www.loscabosguide.com/culture-of-cabo-interview-museum-director-two/

Part Three of Three 
www.loscabosguide.com/culture-cabo-interview-director-museum-natural-history-part-three/