Ojo de Liebre Lagoon
Wild life, whales and camping area, and salt lagoons. Sounded like the perfect place to visit
This is the description of the area from Wikipedia
The lagoon is within the Vizcaíno Biosphere Reserve UNESCO World Heritage Site, and is a Ramsar wetlands site. It also is the site of the biggest commercial saltworks plant in the world. It is an important habitat for the reproduction and wintering of the gray whale and harbor seal, as well as other marine mammals including the California sea lion, northern elephant seal and blue whale. Four species of endangered marine turtles reproduce there. It is an important refuge for waterfowl in the winter.
Encompassing both a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a major salt plant, Laguna Ojo de Liebre embodies the diverse worlds of natural habitat and industrialization.
The Ojo de Liebre lagoon has the biggest saltworks plant in the world – Exportada de Sal S.A. (ESSA). The company makes salt from seawater which is pumped into concentration ponds measuring 33,000 hectares.
They pump the ocean water into the lagoons, the salt is separated from the water, the water is drained off and the salt mined. Over simplified description |
There were two of these fellows hanging around. When we went for a walk they followed us about a couple of hundred feet behind us. |
At the end of the beach you could rent these . Pretty cool design |
8 feet wide and 16 feet long |
They have built 100's of nesting spots for the osprey |
2 comments:
The palapas are a great idea as are the wooden huts. Good ways to appeal to & accommodate their tourists.
Do you know what happens next with the salt? I'm guessing it's hauled from these lagoons to a processing plant. Would they have enough to export? That place is Ontario's Goderich!
We saw a loaded barge sitting in a bay. Apparently it was waiting to be loaded onto an ocean going vessel for export
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