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MND Local: Summer fishing tournaments around the Baja California peninsula

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Bisbee's East Cape Offshore fishing tournament
The iconic shotgun start that begins each fishing tournament day for Bisbee’s East Cape Offshore in Los Cabos. (Costa Palmas)

Bounded by the Pacific Ocean on one side and the Gulf of California on the other, the Baja California peninsula has traditionally been a major source of commercial fishing, producing nearly half of all seafood harvested in Mexico as recently as a decade ago.

Since the dawn of the age of tourism in the 1950s, however, many peninsular destinations have increasingly focused on sport fishing, and its competitive offshoot: fishing tournaments. Bisbee’s Black and Blue in Cabo San Lucas is the most famous of these — not only because it was one of the first notable examples, dating to 1982, but because of its enormous prize pools, which by 2022, set a record in excess of US $11 million.

That tournament takes place annually in October, but the fishing season properly begins during the summer months, with an array of tournaments — from big-money competitions to single-day events that give away cars to anglers who catch the biggest fish — held around the peninsula, from Tijuana to Los Cabos. Here’s a look at some of the most notable for summer 2026:

2026 Cabo Triple Crown of Fishing 

Pelagic sponsored Triple Crown of Fishing in Cabo San Lucas
Dorado (pictured above) is one of the species for which anglers earn points at the Cabo Triple Crown of Fishing. (Pelagic Tournaments)

The Pelagic-sponsored Cabo Triple Crown of Fishing annually kicks off fishing season in Los Cabos, with teams accruing points for reeling in not only billfish like marlin, sailfish and spearfish, but also gamefish species such as tuna, dorado and wahoo. Bisbee’s East Cape Offshore, the first of Bisbee’s annual trio of fishing events in the municipality, beginning in late July, is the most lucrative summer event on the peninsula, with a prize pool of over US $1.5 million. However, the Cabo Triple Crown of Fishing’s purse — US $300,000 in 2025 — is certainly respectable and draws a very competitive field of anglers.

Dates: June 11-14

Location: Cabo San Lucas

Cost: US $3,000 base entry per team; US $31,000 all-in for jackpots and challenges

2 Mares Baja California

2 Mares tournament in Baja California
First place in the annual 2 Mares tournament goes to the top regional team in Baja California. (Facebook)

The state-sponsored Torneo 2 Mares premiered in 2024, under the aegis of Baja California’s Secretaría de Pesca y Acuacultura (Sepesca), with the goal being not only to showcase the bounty of both the Pacific Ocean and Gulf of California (or Sea of Cortés), but also to highlight the talents of regional fishermen, women and children. The host sites rotate, with this year’s two tournaments to be held in San Felipe and San Quintín, and boast a combined prize pool of one million pesos. 

Dates: June 12-13

Location: San Felipe, Baja California

Cost: 6,000 pesos per team; jackpots up to 15,000 pesos

Reinas del Mar 

Reinas del Mar fishing tournament in Baja California
Women compete for six-figure peso prize pools in this annual tournament, held this year in Ensenada. (Reinas del Mar Baja California)

Since 2023, Sepesca has also sponsored this women’s and girls-only tournament designed to identify the “Queens of the Sea.” As with the 2 Mares tournaments, teams earn points for catching what are listed as “surface” and “bottom” species, which, in the former category, include yellowtail, bonito and corvina, and in the latter encompass cabrilla, whitefish, calico bass and more. Winners are thus those with the most versatile skill set across different rods, line weights and lures.

Date: July 17-18

Location: Ensenada, Baja California

Cost: 2,000 pesos per team

2026 Dorado Shoot Out

East Cape Dorado Shoot Out
Catch the biggest dorado at this tournament and you drive home in a brand new truck. (Van Wormer Resorts)

Although summer East Cape fishing tournament havens Los Barriles and Buenavista are only a few kilometers distant from one another, the former falls within the boundaries of La Paz municipality, while the latter is in Los Cabos. Not that it matters to the quality of fishing or the prize pools, since the combined cash and prizes in this single-day event, for example, top half a million dollars. The big prize is the brand new Toyota Hilux pickup truck, which goes to whoever catches the largest dorado, a delicious gamefish better known in other parts of the continent as dolphinfish or mahi mahi.

Date: July 18

Location: Los Barriles, East Cape, La Paz municipality

Cost: US $800 base entry; jackpots up to US $2,000

Ladies Shoot Out

Ladies Only fishing tournament in Los Barriles
Baja California Sur has its own ladies’ only event, held annually in Los Barriles. (Van Wormer Resorts/Instagram)

These days, the traditional “fishing widow” is increasingly a “fishing widower,” given there are now dedicated ladies’ only fishing tournaments in both Baja California and Baja California Sur. The southern version is held annually in Los Barriles at what’s the town’s best hotel and its best sport fishing operation: the Hotel Palmas de Cortez. The largest tuna and dorado reeled in determine the winners at this one-day team tournament (July 24 is set aside for registration and check-ins, with fishing on July 25).

Date: July 24-25

Location: Hotel Palmas de Cortez, Los Barriles, East Cape, La Paz

Cost: US $400 per team; jackpots up to US $500

Bisbee’s East Cape Offshore

Black marlin being weighed at the Bisbee's East Cape Offshore
This monster 773-pound marlin didn’t make it to the scales on time in 2025, but will go down in tournament history nonetheless. (Bisbee’s Offshore Fishing Tournaments)

Last year, prize pools at Bisbee’s East Cape Offshore, or ECO, were US $1.52 million. So, although four annual tournaments in Los Cabos top the million mark in purses, this is the only one to take place during the summer months. Gamefish are awarded here, but blue and black marlin traditionally earn the most points and lead to the biggest over-sized checks at the tourney’s end. 

Last year’s biggest check, for instance, was handed out to Team Reel’n and Deal’n for US $559,780 for a 404-pound black marlin, although Team Zorah actually boated what would have been an ECO record 773-pound black marlin. But the hours-long fight to reel in the massive fish prevented them from making it to the scales on time.

Dates: July 28-Aug. 1

Location: Buena Vista Beach Resort, Buenavista, East Cape, Los Cabos

Cost: US $1,500 base entry; US $36,000 all-in

2 Mares Baja California

2 Mares Tournament in Baja California
Stage two of the 2026 2 Mares tournament takes place in San Quintín this August. (Torneo 2 Mares Baja California)

The second event of this year’s 2 Mares tournament will be held in San Quintín, a town of under 5,000 residents located about 200 kilometers south of Ensenada. Although the rules are the same as the previous competition, the fish caught will vary since this one’s on the Pacific side, while the June tournament in San Felipe was on the Sea of Cortés.

Dates: August 21-22

Location: San Quintín, Baja California

Cost: 6,000 pesos per team; jackpots up to 15,000 pesos 

Tuna and Wahoo Shoot Out

Tuna and Wahoo Shout Out in Los Barriles
Tuna are a prime catch in this annual shoot-out event, which promises hundreds of thousands in cash and prizes to the winner. (Van Wormer Resorts/Instagram)

Like the Dorado Shoot Out in Los Barriles, the annual Tuna and Wahoo Shoot Out is a one-day team event. Not much information has been released on the 2026 tournament as yet, other than the expected cash and prize pool (listed at US $250,000), so stay tuned for updates, since a brand-new car or truck is traditionally among the prizes. Last year’s winning team, for example, drove away in a fully loaded 4×4 Volkswagen Amarok pickup truck.

Date: Sept. 19

Location: Los Barriles, East Cape, La Paz

Cost: US $600 per team; jackpots up to US $2,000

Chris Sands is a writer and editor for Mexico News Daily, and the former Cabo San Lucas local expert for the USA Today travel website 10 Best and writer of Fodor’s Los Cabos travel guidebook. He has also contributed to numerous other websites and publications, including The San Diego Union-Tribune, Marriott Bonvoy Traveler, Forbes Travel Guide, Porthole Cruise and Travel, and Cabo Living.

Young Mexicans have less interest in the World Cup than their elders

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A gray-haired man waves a "Mexico" banner in a soccer stadium surrounded by other fans
While 62% of adult Mexicans — including Gen Xers and Baby Boomers — have a lot or some interest as fans, only 24% of 20-something Gen Zers say they are keen to follow El Tri. (Shutterstock)

With World Cup opening day matches set to kick off in Mexico City and Guadalajara on June 11, a new study warns that young Mexicans may not be glued to every minute of the action.

The Mexican Internet Association, working with Offerwise of the Norstat group, found that 58% of Mexican adult internet users surveyed have a lot or some interest in following the tournament, with enthusiasm peaking among Generation X at 61%.

game on cel phone
Young people are more apt to watch the games on their cell phones or on an app on another device, with some only watching highlight summaries rather than the entire game.
(Unsplash)

But 24% of respondents report little interest and 18% say they have none.

Zero interest is even higher among younger adults: 21% of Gen Z respondents and 20% of millennials say they have no interest in following the 2026 World Cup at all.

In general, Gen Xers are now in their late 40s and 50s, millennials are roughly 30 to early 40s, and members of Gen Z (for this survey) are 18-year-olds through 20-somethings.

Though the survey spotlights those three generations, it is based on 1,200 interviews of 18-and-older men and women — including baby boomers — across all socioeconomic levels in urban Mexico.

The survey finds that enthusiasm for El Tri, the Mexican national team, is strongest among Gen X, where roughly seven in 10 respondents express high or moderate interest. However, only 24% of the Gen Z respondents say they are keen to follow El Tri.

Overall, 62% of respondents say they have a lot or some interest in following the national team.

“The challenge lies in connecting with younger generations, who experience football more through digital means than through traditional formats,” said Magda Orta, business director at Offerwise.

The study underscores how the sports viewing experience is shifting.

Free-to-air TV remains the top choice, with 50% planning to watch there, but social networks are close behind at 43%, ahead of streaming internet platforms (36%) and pay TV (32%). 

More than a quarter of users say they will constantly use their phone or another high-tech device during matches, rising to 30% among millennials, mostly to check social media, chat, order food, or scroll memes and stats.

Mexico’s trend sits within a broader global shake-up in fandom.

A Global Fan Study by audience-insights firm GWI, based on data from over 50 markets, finds 74% of sports fans now use social media to watch or follow sports and 61% consume highlights and clips.

Among Gen Z, 72% use social platforms for following sports and often jump across five or more apps a day.

In Mexico, one example of this shift is Layvtime, a digital platform on YouTube and social media that turns key plays and moments into the main event instead of the full 90 minutes.

Launched last year by ex‑El Tri defender Miguel Layún, it also streams selected Liga MX matches and other events free. Its younger, social‑media‑savvy crew breaks down key plays with casual, meme‑driven analysis — closer to a creator stream than to old-school TV play‑by‑play.

With reports from EFE and Globe News Wire

Mexico arrests El Chapo’s nephew in Nogales on drug trafficking charges

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A mug shot of Isaí "El Chinacate" Martínez Cepeda with his eyes blacked out for privacy
Isaí "El Chinacate" Martínez Cepeda, an alleged operative for the Sinaloa Cartel, could face extradition to the United States after being arrested near the U.S. border this week. (Omar García Harfuch / X)

Security Minister Omar García Harfuch announced on Tuesday that a nephew of convicted drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera had been arrested in the northern border city of Nogales, Sonora.

García Harfuch wrote on social media that federal forces detained “Isai N’, nephew of ‘El Chapo,'” but didn’t provide additional details explaining his relation to Guzmán Loera, who is serving a life sentence in a U.S. prison after he was found guilty of drug trafficking by a U.S. jury in early 2019.

He said that the suspect — identified in media reports as Isaí Martínez Cepeda, aka “El Chinacate” — is subject to an extradition order.

The Security Ministry (SSPC) said in a statement that the suspect is “identified as a logistics operator for a criminal group,” reportedly the Sinaloa Cartel, which Guzmán Loera formerly led. Martínez reportedly works for the Chapitos faction of the cartel, which is led by sons of Guzmán Loera.

The SSPC said that Martínez was in charge of “the production and distribution of synthetic drugs to the United States and Costa Rica.”

He is reportedly accused of trafficking a shipment of some 10,000 fentanyl pills to the U.S. last year.

The SSPC said that the suspect was detained at a property in the Casa Blanca neighborhood of Nogales. It said he was subject to an arrest warrant for the purpose of extradition to face organized crime and drug trafficking charges, presumably in the United States. The SSPC said that two firearms and cartridges were seized from Martínez when he was detained.

García Harfuch reported earlier this month that, during the current term of government, more than 52,000 people had been arrested for allegedly committing high-impact crimes. Compared to the previous federal government, the Sheinbaum administration has taken a more proactive approach to combating organized crime. Earlier this year, the Mexican Army carried out an operation that resulted in the death of Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

Since taking office in October 2024, the Mexican government has sent more than 90 organized crime figures to the United States in three separate transfers. Among those sent north is notorious drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero, the convicted murderer of United States DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena.

Who is Isaí Martínez Cepeda? 

While Martínez Cepeda was described as a “nephew” of “El Chapo”, his two surnames indicate that neither his father or his mother is a sibling of Guzmán Loera. It is possible that he is the son of a cousin of Guzmán Loera, but referred to as the drug lord’s “nephew,” a common usage of the word in Spanish.

According to media reports, Martínez Cepeda’s brother is Enoc Martínez Cepeda, a man known as “El Vocho” (a colloquial name for a VW bug) who is also allegedly affiliated with the Sinaloa Cartel.

The media outlet Latinus reported that Isaí Martínez was previously arrested in Culiacán, Sinaloa, in June 2008 when he was 25. Therefore, he would now be in his early 40s.

With reports from El Universal, Reforma, El Financiero and N+

Querétaro’s gender identity law dead on arrival after governor announces veto

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Activists with signs, trans flags and rainbows celebrate the passage of Querétaro's Gender Identity Law in late April.
Activists celebrate the passage of Querétaro's Gender Identity Law in late April. (César Gómez / Cuartoscuro.com)

Querétaro’s state governor Mauricio Kuri González announced on Monday that he was vetoing a law that would allow individuals to change their legal gender in Mexico’s Civil Registry, after the law was approved by the state Congress on April 30.

“This law, promoted by the radical left, allows girls and boys… to change their sex on their birth certificate according to their self-perception,” said Kuri, who represents the conservative National Action Party (PAN).

Kuri said the reform “goes against the values, education and integrity of Querétaro families … It is an ideological issue that they want to impose on our society.”

Pro-life groups linked to PAN and various religious organizations took to the streets to protest reforms related to gender identity and safe abortion on May 16. While the protest’s organizers said the march was not political, several state government officials attended.

LGBT+ Pride and Dignity March organizers responded to news of the veto in a press release on Monday.

“Mauricio Kuri’s remarks regarding the Gender Identity Law are irresponsible and profoundly regressive,” the release stated. “If the governor is going to make the serious decision to restrict rights, he should do so openly and with verifiable arguments.”

They added that “denying recognition of gender identity protects no one; it only increases violence, exclusion, and institutional abandonment … We will not accept that human rights be subjected to personal prejudices or political calculations.”

Meanwhile, the center-left Morena party representative, Andrea Tovar, told the newspaper La Jornada that she believes that the law’s content has been misrepresented and that the dissemination of incorrect information is worrisome.

“The reality is that this is a law that includes these rights for adults,” Tovar explained. “That is how it was voted on and how it was drafted.”

Tovar added, “We need to continue fighting until dignity becomes the norm.”

The proposed reform, a joint effort between the Querétaro Human Rights Ombudsman’s Office and opposition legislators, would establish an administrative procedure at the Civil Registry for adults to be permitted to change their gender identity in the state, according to Tovar.

To date, 24 Mexican states have already adopted similar reforms.

Separately on Monday, the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that parents or guardians subjecting a minor to sexual orientation conversion therapy may be sent to prison.

This was in response to an article in the Guanajuato State Penal Code that allowed for the imposition of a fine and psychotherapeutic treatment rather than prison time, which came into effect in December.

With reports from La Jornada

Narco-blockades shake Colima after two suspected criminals are killed

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The alleged criminals established a roadblock by setting vehicles and cargo trucks on fire, obstructing the Colima-Manzanillo highway. (Screen capture from private citizen's video)

An operation by the Colima State Attorney General’s Office (FGEC) on Monday left two suspected criminals dead and two police officers wounded, one seriously.

State officials said that a U.S. citizen wanted for homicide in the United States was detained by Mexican agents as part of the operation. The authorities also seized a homemade armored vehicle, as well as several rifles, handguns, grenades and drugs.

The FGEC deployment was said to be in response to a 911 call, while the digital publication Aristegui Noticias reported that the agents were targeting a suspected safe house linked to the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG). Colima borders the state of Jalisco.

According to local media outlets, the initial confrontation occurred in the community of Caleras when armed men in a vehicle fired upon the FGEC agents, who repelled the attack. In the initial confrontation, the two law enforcement officers were injured and one of the suspects was killed.

To avoid capture, the criminals established a roadblock by setting vehicles and cargo trucks on fire, obstructing the Colima-Manzanillo highway. Subsequently, the violence spread to other areas of the state.

The shootout triggered national security alarms, prompting the Navy Ministry, the Defense Ministry, the National Guard and State Police to mobilize in support of the FGEC officers.

Members of these federal agencies engaged in clashes with suspected criminals across the state.

Shortly after the original confrontation, the suspects blocked traffic at access points to the city of Tecomán, setting tractor-trailers on fire, with several incidents captured in videos that circulated on social media Monday afternoon.

One of the videos shows a freight train slowly colliding with a tractor-trailer that had been placed across the tracks. The train did not derail and no injuries were reported.

As a result of the violence, Colima Governor Indira Vizcaíno ordered schools in four of the state’s 10 municipalities to conduct remote classes on Tuesday, since security operations are ongoing.

In a press release issued late Monday night, state authorities said FGEC agents were carrying out investigative tasks in the municipality of Tecomán when they were fired upon by armed men in a vehicle.

The authorities added that most of the blockades were cleared and the vehicle fires — including along the Guadalajara-Colima and Manzanillo-Colima highways — were extinguished. Although the highways were cleared for traffic shortly after midnight, some roadblocks remained in Tecomán and Armería.

With reports from Aristegui Noticias, El País, InformadorMX and Infobae

World Cup prep collides with teacher protests at Mexico City’s Zócalo

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Members of the CNTE teachers union march past Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes on Tuesday.
Members of the CNTE teachers union march past Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes on Tuesday. (Andrea Murcia / Cuartoscuro.com)

Riot police on Monday blocked protesting Oaxacan teachers from entering Mexico City’s main square, the Zócalo, where a FIFA World Cup Fan Festival site is being prepared. The clash signals tense weeks ahead, as more teachers prepare to join protests in the capital.

Teachers affiliated with the Oaxaca-based Section 22 of the CNTE teachers union tried to reach the square to set up a protest camp but were unable to get past riot police. They said that the police used tear gas to repel them and claimed that they were pushed and hit by officers.

The Ministry of Public Education (SEP) and the Ministry of the Interior (SEGOB) said in a joint statement on Tuesday that Section 22 CNTE representatives had been advised that it was too dangerous for them to gather in the Zócalo due to the work taking place there.

More teachers affiliated with the CNTE — a union known for combative tactics — are expected to arrive in Mexico City in coming days to join a large protest on June 1 that may coincide with the commencement of a national strike. The teachers are not happy with an offer of a 9% pay increase and are calling for the repeal of the 2019 education reform as well as the 2007 ISSSTE (State Workers’ Social Security Institute) Law, which changed their pension system and will leave them — they say — considerably worse off in retirement.

Teachers continued to protest on Tuesday, reportedly blocking access to a section of Paseo de la Reforma, a busy road that runs into Mexico City’s historic center.

‘They repressed us, they hit us, they pushed us’

Section 22 teachers marched from the Angel of Independence monument on Paseo de la Reforma to the historic center of Mexico City on Monday morning. When they got to Cinco de Mayo Avenue, a Mexico City government deputy minister, Juan José García Ochoa, reportedly told them that they couldn’t enter the Zócalo due to the work taking place to prepare the site as a FIFA Fan Festival, where World Cup matches will be shown live on large screens. “The official argued that it was an issue of civil protection,” the La Jornada newspaper reported.

Nevertheless, some teachers — including a group of CNTE members traveling in a vehicle — attempted to enter the large central square. Clashes with police ensued, during which helmet-wearing, shield-carrying officers appeared to use gas to drive the protesters back.

“They repressed us, they hit us, they pushed us,” Francisca Pérez, a teacher from Oaxaca, told the EFE news agency.

While teachers have set up camps in streets near the Zócalo, Pérez said they will try to reach the square again.

She noted that President Claudia Sheinbaum, before she took office, pledged to repeal the 2007 ISSSTE law. However, that has not happened. As president, Sheinbaum has said there are insufficient resources to return to the previous pension system.

Pérez complained that foreign music groups, such as Korean boy band BTS, have been welcomed to the National Palace by Sheinbaum. However, teachers have been ignored by authorities, she said, although federal officials were scheduled to meet with CNTE representatives on Tuesday.

Public Education Ministry and Interior Ministry respond 

In their statement, SEP and SEGOB said that they have been speaking to Section 22 CNTE representatives since last weekend in order to “guarantee conditions of safety, attention in cases of emergency and the protection of their colleagues” during protests in Mexico City, which are set to continue in coming days.

The two ministries also said that Mexico City government officials “carried out an inspection” of the Zócalo with Section 22 CNTE representatives so the union personnel could “verify” that screens and “metallic structures” were being installed ahead of the start of the World Cup on June 11.

They said that on the recommendation of Civil Protection authorities, the union representatives were told that carrying out activities with large groups of people in the Zócalo would create a “situation of risk.”

Consequently, “various alternative places” of protest were suggested to them, SEP and SEGOB said.

The two ministries also said that a meeting between federal officials and CNTE representatives would take place at the Interior Ministry at midday Tuesday in order to “continue the construction of agreements through a respectful and direct exchange.” They said that Interior Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez, Education Minister Mario Delgado and ISSSTE chief Martí Batres would participate in the meeting.

“The Mexican government reiterates that institutional channels remain open to address … [teachers’] concerns, always within a framework of respect, legality, and the pursuit of consensus,” SEP and SEGOB said.

“Finally, we call for a focus on non-confrontation, dialogue, and institutional channels as mechanisms for making progress in addressing the demands of the national teaching community, for the benefit of the educational community and society as a whole.”

With reports from EFE and La Jornada 

Bowing to citizen pressure, Sheinbaum revokes decree that had opened Loreto to heavy marine traffic

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Loreto por
Before President Sheinbaum's new decree this week, the future of the Pueblo Mágico of Loreto's port would have moved fishing boats and other small craft aside in favor of freighters and cruise ships. (Semar / Cuartoscuro.com)

Responding to weeks-long protests against a federal decree to turn the Baja California Sur port of Loreto into a deep-water harbor, President Claudia Sheinbaum on Monday issued a new order guaranteeing the protection of the flora and fauna of the Loreto Bay National Park. 

The new presidential decree not only revokes the original decree, but also orders the creation of a Working Group comprising federal officials, as well as activists and academics who have demanded the protection of this area.

Loreto, BCS
At sunset Monday, activists celebrated their victory after the president reversed a previous order that would have resulted in enormous expansion of Loreto’s modest harbor. (Unión Loreto BCS)

Sheinbaum issued the original decree — reclassifying Loreto as a deep-sea cabotage port, thereby opening it to large-scale maritime traffic, including cruise ships — on April 10. Residents and activists immediately began protesting the decision, calling on the president to revoke the decree.

This decree overlooked the fact that the port is located within the Loreto Bay National Park, a federally protected Natural Area. As a signatory to the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, Mexico is legally obligated to ensure the protection, conservation and integrity of the park. The protests gained enough traction among the public that Baja California Sur Governor Víctor Manuel Castro agreed to sign onto a change.org petition and formally ask Sheinbaum to revoke the decree.

The new decree indicates official recognition that the Loreto Bay National Park constitutes an ecologically critical area. It acknowledges that the park harbors a diversity of terrestrial and marine ecosystems,  numerous species of flora and fauna, endemic species and species subject to protection.

The waters and islands are home to marine and terrestrial mammals, including the blue whale, humpback whale, sperm whales, dolphins, California sea lion and the fishing bat, considered to be of ecological, environmental and touristic importance to the region.

Article 2 of the new decree calls for the creation of a Working Group within the next 10 days which will be authorized “to update the Management Program of the Protected Natural Area (the Loreto Bay National Park) and address administrative regulations in matters of navigation in the Port of Loreto.”

It also establishes that an official from the Interior Ministry will chair the Working Group, joined by officials from the Navy Ministry, the Environment Ministry, the Tourism Ministry and the National Commission of Natural Protected Areas. 

The officials will be joined by “an agent from the state port administrative service who will serve as teechnical secretary, as well as five citizens from the academic, professional, social, scientific and cultural fields recognized for their trajectory in the defense of the Loreto Bay National Park.”

With reports from El Universal, El Porvenir, VanguardiaMX and Hoy BCS

Monterrey International Airport to undergo US $400M renovation

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Monterrey International Airport
Monterrey International Airport is in for a major remodel, with plans to combine two terminals into one. (Shutterstock)

Nuevo León Governor Samuel García announced a new US $400 million investment for Monterrey International Airport (MTY), to merge and modernize the A and C terminals of the airport.

The announcement came during the final leg of García’s business trip in Europe, during which he announced that the funds would be provided by Vinci Airports, the main shareholder of North Central Airport Group (OMA), MTY’s airport operator.

The remodel aims to create a world-class terminal with automated immigration services, cutting-edge technology and improved access.

According to García, these upgrades would be visible as soon as next month, during the World Cup.

“Today we are announcing another US $400 million [investment] to have a world-class terminal, which is what Monterrey will have in the future,” García said from Paris.

“This investment will be noticeable during the World Cup because we will have automatic migration services,” García said.

Nuevo León Gov. García starts his 27th business tour, this time to Europe

The move adds to the US $400 million Vinci Airports invested in 2024 following its strategic acquisition of OMA, bringing its total recent investments to US $800 million.

In a statement, Nuevo León’s government said this project responds to the economic and industrial growth of the state, driven by nearshoring and the influx of foreign investment, which has increased the demand for air connectivity for passengers and cargo.

Indeed, according to official figures from the Economy Ministry, Nuevo León is the second-largest state in Mexico in terms of foreign direct investment (FDI), just after Mexico City. Moreover, between 2022 and 2025, the northern state received US $ 14.95 billion in FDI, accounting for 9.5% of the total amount that Mexico received.

Nuevo León’s government noted that the airport’s expansion strengthens the state’s position as one of Latin America’s leading logistics, industrial, and business hubs, representing “a vote of confidence” by Vinci Airports in the state’s economic stability and strategic potential.

MTY’s newly-announced investment adds to the various airport renovations currently being carried out in Mexico, specifically in the World Cup host cities.

These airports are expected to receive a large influx of tourists during the month-long tournament, as the country will host 13 matches across its three host cities.

In Mexico City, authorities are in a race against time to complete a thorough renovation ahead of the tournament’s inaugural match on June 11, while Guadalajara International Airport (GDL) has seen ongoing renovations since the end of 2024 with the aim of adding additional capacity and upgrading infrastructure.

With reports from Verificado

MND Local: FIFA World Cup security plans announced for Guadalajara, while real estate prices rise

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Guadalajara Stadium (Estadio Akron)
With the World Cup only weeks away, Guadalajara has announced its security measures for the event, meant to protect visitors and residents alike. (FIFA/Facebook)

Moving around Guadalajara is about to become much more challenging, with several million visitors expected for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which begins in about two weeks. 

An event of this magnitude naturally requires extensive security preparation and protocols to ensure the festivities remain safe. Below are key details to be aware of if you live in the Guadalajara Metro Area (GMA) or have plans to visit during the World Cup in June.

Details emerge on security protocols for the World Cup in Guadalajara 

Plaza de la Liberación, World Cup in Guadalajara
Plaza de la Liberación will be the center of the fan experience in Guadalajara for this year’s World Cup, with increased security measures. (Instagram)

The new government General Security Plan focuses on protecting popular travel routes (including routes to and from the airport), sports venues, equipment, local training camps, fan festivals that broadcast live matches, team hotels and the movements of dignitaries planning to attend matches at Guadalajara Stadium (Estadio Akron).
 
The following four matches will be played at Guadalajara Stadium:

  • June 11 at 8 p.m.: South Korea vs. the Czech Republic
  • June 18 at 7 p.m.: Mexico vs. South Korea
  • June 23 at 7 p.m.: Colombia vs. Democratic Republic of Congo
  • June 26 at 6 p.m.: Uruguay vs. Spain 

The following four areas are the highest priority: the stadium, the Fan Festival, critical travel routes and the Guadalajara Airport. These areas will receive heightened security and resources. Special security teams will also be deployed to hotels used by VIP guests, tourist sites and popular public spaces to help deter crime.

Logistics around Guadalajara Stadium

There are three exclusion zones planned around the Guadalajara Stadium. In these areas, the priority will be to avoid bottlenecks and overcrowding to maintain a steady flow of pedestrians.

Zone 1: Transportation to and from the stadium

In the area between the Pereférico (the outer ring road), the Avenida del Bosque and the Avenida del Bajío (the massive disembarkation point of MiMacro (the bus rapid transit system), public and private transport will be managed by local authorities to avoid interference with pedestrians.

Guadalajara Stadium (Estadio Akron)
The last mile to Guadalajara Stadium (Estadio Akron) will be a walk-only zone. (Visita Jalisco)

Zone 2: The ‘last mile’

The last mile between disembarkation points and the stadium on Bosque de la Primavera Avenue will be a dedicated walk zone that excludes vehicular traffic. 

For guests with limited mobility, the official shuttle bus service “Ride al Estadio” is their best option to reach the stadium. Ride al Estadio operates from ten different pick-up points around the city and drops off riders at the closest FIFA authorized access point to the stadium. 

This service still requires users to walk approximately 800 meters to enter the stadium. Tickets for the shuttle cost 500 pesos, with advance ticket purchase required. For more information on getting to and from the stadium on game days, go to this page from Visit GDL.

Zone 3: Security checkpoints and ticket screening

Around the entrances to the Guadalajara Stadium, there will be physical screening and ticket validation checkpoints before fans are permitted to enter the venue.

FIFA Fan Festival protocol

As reported previously, the FIFA Fan Festival will take place in Plaza de la Liberación in downtown Guadalajara, with a maximum capacity of approximately 40,000 attendees at a time. 

In a change from previous reporting, access to the Fan Festival will be free with no advance registration required. Security at the Fan Festival will be on hand to optimize crowd flow and safety. 

Real Estate prices are surging in Guadalajara

Guadalajara real estate
Guadalajara real estate prices continue to rise, the latest inflation figures show. (Sotheby’s International Realty)

The real estate market in the GMA is experiencing a price surge lately that has outpaced other major cities. According to the most recent Economic Analysis Bulletin from the ITESO Business School, housing inflation in Jalisco has far exceeded the national average in recent years.

Nationwide, house prices were increasing at 8.9% in the third quarter of 2025, with Guadalajara seeing annual home price increases of 12.5%, well above the growth rates in Mexico City (5.1%) and Monterrey (9.5%). 

While home prices in Mexico City and Monterrey are not rising as fast, nominal housing prices in those markets remain higher than in Guadalajara. 

Several factors have put pressure on housing prices in Guadalajara in recent years. First, there has been widespread real estate speculation by wealthy locals and foreign investors, who tie up property in the short-term rental market at prices that are out of reach for most residents. Second, there is a shortage of quality housing in desirable, amenity-rich locations. 

According to The Latin Investor, a real estate research firm, middle-class families in Guadalajara today are smaller and seeking well-priced, low-maintenance properties in walkable neighborhoods, with easy access to mass transit. 

Buying a home in the GMA costs 7.4 million pesos, based on ITESO’s analysis of asking prices, while average rents have risen to nearly 30,000 pesos per month. 

As housing inflation accelerates, affordability declines 

Guadalajara real esate
Wage increases have failed to keep pace with real estate inflation in Guadalajara, making it harder for residents of the city to afford new homes. (Sotheby’s International Realty)

Since wage increases have failed to keep pace with housing inflation in Guadalajara, affordability has worsened. 

According to Jahaziel Castañeda, president of the Guadalajara chapter of the Mexican Association of Real Estate Professionals (AMPI), acquiring a home through savings or cash purchases has become much more difficult for most Mexicans.

“The traditional way is what our parents and grandparents taught us: save up so you can buy your house outright; nowadays that’s extremely complicated,” Castañeda told El Economista.

Reflecting those challenges, the average age of first-time property buyers in Mexico has drifted upward from 30 years in the past to nearly 40 today. 

And though casual observers will notice plenty of homes for sale in Guadalajara, its market suffers a financial mismatch, with homes for sale concentrated at higher price points — and beyond what the average home buyer can afford.

Remedying the situation will require increasing the supply of affordable homes and expanding financing options at lower interest rates, as the current Mexican mortgage averages around 11%.

MND Writer Dawn Stoner is reporting from Guadalajara.

At Oaxaca championship, escaramuzas carry on a revolution’s legacy

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Mexico's "Escaramuza"women are a tribute to revolutionary heroes gone by. (Photos by Anna Bruce)

The sun blazed over Ex-Hacienda Soledad on April 26 as three all-female teams mounted their horses for the state championships of Escaramuzas, the exclusively female branch of charrería — Mexico’s national sport.

Riders wore bright, full-skirted dresses and petticoats as they competed in a tradition rooted in the 19th-century Mexican countryside, one that has survived revolution, cultural upheaval and modernity to earn recognition as a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Escaramuzas on horseback, wearing blue dresses
Costumes are rooted in the traditions of the 19th Century. (Anna Bruce)

Charrería extends beyond horsemanship to encompass costume, music and the transmission of social values — trust, respect and equality. It arose from cattle herding and horse management on haciendas. After the Mexican Revolution dissolved those estates, charros formed associations to preserve the vanishing traditions.

In contemporary competition, male “charros” perform rodeo-style events while female “escaramuza charras” execute choreographed routines akin to dressage. The word escaramuza means skirmish — a nod to the Mexican adelitas, the women who fought in the Revolution.

A tradition takes shape

The Federación Nacional de Charros was founded Jan. 16, 1933, with the objective of unifying the sport, establishing rules and preserving the traditions and values of charrería. In 2016, UNESCO declared it an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. The Chamber of Deputies of the Congress of the Union recognized it as Mexico’s cultural heritage that same year.

Women did not officially begin participating until the 1950s, when they were admitted into the National Association of Charros. The escaramuza charra discipline was created in 1953, according to Trinidad Olvera Rodriguez, an author and competing charro.

“It was promoted by Amalia Hernández — founder of the Ballet Folklórico de México — who sought to incorporate women’s participation in charrería,” Rodriguez said.

Despite centuries of history, the development of the modern escaramuza is relatively recent. (Anna Bruce)

During the 1960s, groups began regularly using the term escaramuza, and by the decade’s end, it was common to see them included in state charro association programs. A major milestone came in 1992 with the publication of the first Official Escaramuza Rulebook by the Mexican Federation of Charrería, which established team size, required maneuvers, attire and the scoring system still in use today.

In 2019, UNAM formed its own women’s charro escaramuza team, opening yet another chapter.

Alicia Guadalupe Jurado Peña, delegate of Escaramuzas at UNAM, traces the discipline’s origins to the daughters of charros who learned to ride alongside their fathers. “Then their wives joined in, and there came a point when the practice became exclusively for women.” Today, competitions run across age categories from children to adults, making escaramuza a lifelong pursuit.

The dress and the discipline

The escaramuza consists of eight women performing choreographed routines on a specialized sidesaddle called an albarda — a style of riding that traces back to the haciendas, when most women rode that way.

Riders wear Adelita or China Poblana outfits: hand-embroidered dresses and petticoats that serve as symbols of historical identity and resistance. Unlike charros, who wear individual outfits despite competing in teams, escaramuzas wear matching team colors. At the recent Oaxaca event, the local team, Real Soledad, wore bright pink; visiting teams competed in blue and red.

The costumes are a layer of national identity. (Anna Bruce)

Male charros wear a closely fitted suit, chaps, boots and a wide-brimmed sombrero. The snug fit is practical as well as decorative — loose clothing can be caught by a bull’s horns.

Rodriguez says both charro and escaramuza “represent Mexican tradition, love for horses, discipline and national pride.”

Inside the competition

Charro competitions are divided into events called suertes, meaning luck. The scoring system applies both positive and negative points based on execution, synchronization and the proper use of traditional tack.

The opening event, the Cala de Caballo or Reining Test, is performed by both male and female teams. It demonstrates the bond between rider and horse: the horse sprints at full speed, then brakes instantly on its hind legs — a move known as the “tip” or pointe — before executing precise turns and walking backward, all within a 20-by-6-meter rectangle called the lienzo.

“In the past, it was used to demonstrate how well-broken a horse was and how skillfully the charro handled it,” Rodriguez said. “It is the foundation of charrería.”

The escaramuza team performs a version of the maneuver as well, though only the opening movement: galloping from the end of the chute until the horse enters the square.

The next generation

Maria Victoria Cortes Lopez, a young escaramuza training with Real de la Soledad in Oaxaca, was drawn to the sport after watching other women compete and being invited to ride in a local charreada, or parade. Her team competed in two categories at the state championship — open and youth. Though they fell short in the open division, they qualified for the National Charro Championship for Children, Youth and Escaramuzas, set for July 15 through Aug. 15 in the state of Puebla.

“It is a very beautiful sport because you connect with the horse, the horse connects with you,” Cortes Lopez said. She says she most loves “participating in events, being with my team, being with the other girls, being with the horses and enjoying the moment no matter what happens.”

Her aspirations, she says, are straightforward: “to have confidence in my horse, in myself, to have confidence in my colleagues, with my instructor, to be able to do the things that I know I am capable of doing.”

On the grounds of Ex-Hacienda La Soledad, between the competition rounds, young girls in escaramuza dresses took turns on a swing set — pumping high, then planting their feet hard in the sand, the motion echoing the dramatic stop of the Cala de Caballo.

Local charro Fernando also trains the escaramuzas, playing his part to keep the old traditions alive.

Watching them, Cortes Lopez smiled. “It is nice to see the little girls doing that — that they are not afraid of it, that they ride a packsaddle, that they can make the horses gallop, do turns with the horses, do pointe with the horses.”

The love for the tradition, Rodriguez says, often begins with music. His own started with the songs of José Alfredo Jiménez and the world of Mexican cinema that made the charro an enduring cultural icon. He has since channeled that devotion into a novel narrated by a charro in love with an escaramuza.

“Amidst horses, charrería and the fields of flowers surrounding the remains of an old hacienda,” he writes, “a story of absence, love and tragedy unfolds.”

Anna Bruce is an award-winning British photojournalist based in Oaxaca, Mexico. Just some of the media outlets she has worked with include Vice, The Financial Times, Time Out, Huffington Post, The Times of London, the BBC and Sony TV. Find out more about her work at her website or visit her on social media on Instagram or on Facebook.