Sonora Business Leaders Demand a Solution to Violence

Members of the organization Comparmex, the “business center of Northern Sonora,” met with public officials on August 13 in Guaymas to demand action to address the extreme violence that has gripped the state.

In addition to Comparmex members, the meeting was attended by Sonora Governor Claudia Pavlovich, state and federal security officials and the municipal presidents of Cajeme, Guaymas, Empalme and Navojoa

According to its website, Comparmex is a politically independent group of employers and entrepreneurs founded in 1929. It seeks to establish social conditions that contribute to the prosperity of all Mexicans, to increase equity and social cohesion.

Sonora newspaper El Imparcial reported that Comparmex President Arturo Fernández Díaz recommended that state and federal governments devote more resources to security forces, to include better training, equipment and salaries.

Anti-government and -police violence

Of particular concern is the level of violence against municipal governments, in particular municipal police officers. Their increasing frequency and levels of violence may indicate signs of social instability in the state of Sonora, Mexico.

On June 20, the comptroller of the city of Guaymas, Daniel Morales Pardini, was gunned down with another municipal employee, Enrique Galarza Núñez, as they were driving on Avenida Serdán, the main street in Guaymas. Both men were killed. Pardini had previously been the municipal police director for Guaymas.

On June 28, the eastern command police headquarters in Guaymas was assaulted by an armed gunman. There were three violent murders in Guaymas earlier in the day, and the presidenta municipal (mayor) of Guaymas, Sara Valle Dessens, announced on the radio that because of the violence, people in Guaymas should not leave their homes if they do not need to.

And in July, after seeing his partner slain in front of an Oxxo convenience store, a Guaymas police officer is quoted as saying “They are going to kill us all.”

An August 4 attack on the palacio municipal (city hall) of the municipality of Mazatan, Sonora. Gunment riddled the building with a fusillade of bullets.

The next day, August 5, an Hermosillo police officer was shot to death in his home. He was the 15th police official killed in Sonora in 2019.

Violence within proximity of children

And unfortunately, children have not been spared from seeing examples of violence in the state.

On July 29, a dismembered body was left outside a primary school in Empalme, just 500 meters from the police station.

On August 3, two men were gunned down outside of an Hermosillo McDonald’s where children were celebrating at a birthday piñata party.

And on the evening of August 4, a man entered the Ballpark restaurant, withdrew a weapon and shot a man who was dining at the restaurant, killing him. At a nearby table, several children dove under their table in terror as the man was murdered.

One week later, the manager of the Ballpark restaurant was kidnapped. He was later released.

Conclusion

By August 24, Hermosillo had experienced 160 violent homicides in 2019, just 15 fewer than all of 2018.

Earlier this year the Mexican federal government announced the deployment of federal national guard troops to establish “security priority areas” in Sonora. It is not clear what specific actions have been taken at the state level to curtail the violence in Sonora, but it has continued. We are especially concerned about growing tensions between armed groups and local governments, in particular against local police officials.

We recommend that you exercise extreme caution when traveling to or driving through the cities of Guaymas – San Carlos, Empalme, Ciudad Obregon and Hermosillo. Nighttime travel is definitely not recommended.

August Is the Deadliest Month of 2019 in Hermosillo

Violent Murders on the Increase in Hermosillo

Sonoran newspaper El Imparcial reported this morning that August is already the most violent month this year in the state capital of Hermosillo. As of yesterday, when two people were murdered in gun violence, 38 people have been killed in Hermosillo in August. That brings the 2019 total of murders in the capital city to 160, just 15 fewer than all of 2018.

There were more “malicious homicides” in the municipality of Cajeme, which includes the city of Ciudad Obregon. Cajeme experienced 167 violent deaths through the end of July. There were 63 murders in that municipality in the month of June.

There were also dozens of bodies recovered earlier this year from killing fields in Cajeme, near Ciudad Obregon. 

There were 537 violent deaths in the state of Sonora, Mexico through the end of July. Most of the violence occurred in the areas of Hermosillo, Ciudad Obregon (Cajeme), Guaymas – San Carlos and Empalme.

We advise that you exercise extreme caution when visiting or driving through those areas, especially at night.

Top Places to See and Things to Do in Sonora, Mexico

Best of Sonora Tourism

Top things to see, do and enjoy in Sonora, Mexico
The Southern Sonora coastal community of Huatabampito, Sonora, Mexico

There is lots to see and do in Sonora – something for everyone

Sonora is the second-largest state in Mexico with respect to size, and the third-largest in terms of population. It has a rich history and offers a diversity of natural environments and ecosystems, fascinating native cultures and loads of fun things to do, all of which make Sonora a fun and enriching tourism destination.

Where to Begin?

With such an immense area of land and variety of travel and tourism options, we recommend that you start at the top. Pick a main area of interest, be it resort travel, border tourism, indigenous culture or the beach – then review and dig down in the information on your favorite topic or two, to get some travel ideas. And if you have any questions, feel free to contact us. Here are some ideas to get you started:

Relax and Enjoy a Coastal Resort City

Sonora has two major tourism resort cities – San Carlos and Puerto Peñasco (also known as Rocky Point).

Rocky Point is closer to the Arizona-Sonora international border and can therefore be accessed more quickly by car (or other vehicle). It is a tourist town, with shopping, bars, sunset cruises and other tourist-centric activities to enjoy within hours of the border.

San Carlos is an eight-hour drive from the border but you can also get there by flying to a regional airport in Hermosillo or Ciudad Obregon, renting a car and driving the rest of the way. San Carlos is known for its deep-sea fishing, wonderful cuisine, luxury hotels and beautiful, scenic beaches. And there are lots of other activities to enjoy there as well.

Experience a Cultural Event

There are many opportunities to observe and participate in Sonora cultural events, from parades and civic celebrations to indigenous religious festivals on events like the feast day of Saint John the Baptist. Check out our quarterly and monthly events calendars to see if you find a special event of interest to you.

Explore the Capital of Hermosillo

Hermosillo, with approximately 650,000 residents, is the cultural, business, governmental and educational center of Sonora. The city has several cultural events during the year, like the annual celebration of its founding, the Festival del Pitic. Enjoy a few days exploring the restaurants, museums, churches, parks and shopping districts of the Sonoran Capital. Read more about exploring Hermosillo.

Hit the Beach

Sonora has hundreds of miles of coastline along the Gulf of California, also known as the Sea of Cortez. Activities include boating, sport fishing, kayaking or just relaxing on the beach. Whether it is a more secluded beach area like Huatabampito or Desemboque, or a more commercialized area like Kino Bay, Rocky Point or San Carlos Bay, you can enjoy a relaxing beach vacation in Sonora. Read more about coastal Sonora.

Visit a Magical Pueblo

Sonora has two towns that have the national distinction of being designated Pueblos Mágicos, or magical towns. In order to receive this prestigious designation, a locale must show that it has charming tourism places to visit, good lodging and restaurants, and other characteristics that make it a special place to visit.

There are two Pueblos Mágicos in Sonora, and they are both very special places to visit. Magdalena de Kino, Sonora is a short drive from the border at Nogales, and Alamos, Sonora is located in the southern region of Sonora.

Visit a Border City

Sonora shares a common border with Arizona, and its border cities are not only very accessible but offer a variety of activities, products and services to enjoy. The main Arizona-Sonora border communities of Nogales, San Luis and Agua Prieta all have their individual flair, but also offer common experiences.

Find beautiful arts and crafts along with creative tourist curio products in border stores, and haggle to get the best price. Enjoy an authentic Mexican meal and get a taste of Mexico (although many claim it is not the “real” Mexico by walking around and seeing churches, statues and plazas. Shop border pharmacies to see if you can find your prescription medications at a discount. And visit a Mexican dentist or doctor to have dental and medical issues treated at a discount. Read more about the Sonora border.

Enjoy a Sonora Ecotourism Experience

Sonora’s variety of climates and ecosystems offer fabulous outdoor experiences for tourists to enjoy. From kayaking and fishing on the coast to hiking, mountain biking, cultural immersion, seeing ancient rock-art petroglyphs and other adventures, there are many options to explore.

The best way to experience Sonora ecotourism is to participate in a tour. See a list of Sonora ecotourism operators. Research the tour company to see if they have insurance and roadworthy vehicles, and whether they offer English-language tours. Read more about Sonora ecotourism.

Whatever you enjoy doing, be it enjoying history and culture, urban exploration or experiencing the natural environment, you can have a great tourism experience in Sonora, Mexico. Questions? Contact us.

Along the Malecon in Rocky Point, Puerto Penasco Sonora
Hacienda de los Santos Resort - Alamos, Sonora, Mexico
Nahuatl performers in a Caborca 6 de abril parade
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Palacio del Gobierno Sonora - Hermosillo, Mexico
Sonoran traditions - Dia de San Juan Bautista in Pueblo Viejo, Navojoa, Sonora
Ancient rock art petroglyphs at Rancho Puerto Blanco, near Caborca

Videos of Dia de San Juan Traditional Fiestas

June 24 - Feast Day of John the Baptist in Sonora

Videos from Yoreme Mayo ceremonies in Navojoa, Sonora
Celebrating the feast day of San Juan Bautista in Navojoa, Sonora on June 24
Celebrations of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist

June 24 is the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist, a major liturgical day in the Catholic, Anglican and Lutheran churches, and a feast day with great religious and cultural significance in Sonora.

In the Yoreme Mayo pueblo of Pueblo Viejo, Navojoa, celebrations begin on the eve of June 24, where dancers and musicians perform all night in the town’s ramada gathering area.

On the morning of June 24, a procession takes the image of Saint John to the River Mayo, led by matachin dancers, paskolas and deer dancers. The saint is then bathed in the river and blessed, which it is believed causes the waters of the River Mayo to be blessed.

Participants then either enter the river or splash each other with water from the river, a refreshing end to the ceremony on this hot summer day.

Following are videos from the 2017 “fiestas tradicionales” in observance of the nativity day of St John the Baptist, in the Yoreme Mayo town of Pueblo Viejo, Navojoa, Sonora.

Read more about celebrations on the feast day of St John the Baptist and see more photos.

Celebrating Dia de San Juan Bautista in the Mayo River - Navojoa, Sonora, Mexico
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June 24 – Feast Day of John the Baptist in Sonora

June 24 - Feast Day of John the Baptist in Sonora

Taking St John the Baptist to the River Mayo in Navojoa, Sonora on June 24
Celebrations of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist

June 24 is the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist, a major liturgical day in the Catholic, Anglican and Lutheran churches, and a feast day with great religious and cultural significance in Sonora.

San Juan Bautista is one of the most revered saints, as the prophet who foretold the coming of the Messiah in the form of Jesus Christ, and who baptized Jesus in the River Jordan.

Where the feast days of saints usually celebrate the day of their death (and birth into the afterlife), the nativity of Saint John the Baptist commemorates his birth, six months before the birth of Christ.

The date is linked to two other major days on the liturgical calendar. It is three months after the annunciation, when the Angel Gabriel informed Mary that she would conceive Jesus, and six months before Christmas.

Saint John also has a feast day on August 29 to commemorate his beheading, around the year A.D 28.

Celebrations in Honor of Saint John

The nativity of Saint John is observed in different ways in different regions of the world.

Europeans light fires on the eve of the nativity and believe that herbs picked on the eve of June 24 have special healing powers, and hidden treasures sit exposed in open places. Some Scandinavian and Slavic countries have ancient beliefs that witches and demons are allowed to roam the earth of the eve of the nativity. Source: Wikipedia.

Observances of Día de San Juan in Sonora

In Sonora, the feast day of St John is revered among the native peoples of the region, especially the indigenous Yoeme Yaqui and Yoreme Mayo.

Instead of fire, the day is celebrated with water, perhaps because Saint John is the patron saint of baptism and the date comes at a time when seasonal summer rains typically begin in this hot, dry desert region. A common belief is that any rains on June 24 will be holy water.

Celebrations typically begin on the eve of the nativity of St John and continue through the night. The day of the 24th is celebrated with religious services, processions, dance and other activities. Most involve lots of water, where participants get wet through sprinkling, throwing water or otherwise getting soaked with water.

Celebrations in Pueblo Viejo, Navojoa, Sonora

In the Yoreme Mayo pueblo of Pueblo Viejo, Navojoa, observances of this special day begin on the 22nd with a traditional canariom ceremony,

Starting on the eve of the Dia de San Juan, traditional paskola, matachin and deer dancers perform with musicians through the night at a gathering in the pueblo’s ramada area.

On the morning of June 24, a procession takes the image of Saint John to the River Mayo, led by matachin dancers, paskolas and deer dancers.

Saint John is then taken in to the river, where the saintly image is bathed. It is a ritual that the faithful believe also blesses the river’s water, making it holy water. Participants on the banks of the River Mayo enter the water and splash each other and collect samples of the holy water.

Celebrating Dia de San Juan Bautista in the Mayo River - Navojoa, Sonora, Mexico
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Celebrating Dia de San Juan Bautista in the Mayo River - Navojoa, Sonora, Mexico
Celebrating Dia de San Juan Bautista in the Mayo River - Navojoa, Sonora, Mexico

Driving from Magdalena to the Rio Sonora

Driving from Magdalena to the Rio Sonora

On the Road in Sonora, Mexico

Drive from Magdalena to the Rio Sonora

Important note: This driving route is outside of the Sonora Free Zone, so a Banjercito vehicle permit (federal or Sonora Only) is required to drive in this territory of Sonora. I was driving a Mexican rental car that did not require a permit. Even though there are no customs stations or signage along the way, be aware that foreign vehicles are not allowed in this area without an importation permit.

There are different ways to reach the Sonora River highway known as the Route of the Rio Sonora. You can start from the north, at Cananea, or from the south from Hermosillo to Ures and on to the Rio Sonora highway.

Another route that is perhaps the most convenient way to explore the Route of the Rio Sonora is via the Kino highway, from Magdalena to Sinoquipe, Sonora.

On a pleasant day in January 2018 with just-right temperatures and abundant sunshine, I sat in my hotel room in Magdalena de Kino and studied the Google map of the area on my phone.

This was the last leg of a driving trip that had started in Navojoa, Sonora, through Southern Sonora, Hermosillo, the Coast of Caborca, Puerto Peñasco, the Golfo de California to San Luis Rio Colorado and the Western Sonoran border region and now to Magdalena. And I wanted to drive the Route of the Rio Sonora before returning my rental car to Southern Sonora.

I had driven Sonora highway 2 from Imuris to Cananea and did not particularly like it, because its sinous mountainside turns combined with heavy traffic could make it a challenging drive.

I once came around a blind turn east of Imuris and had to make a split-second swerve for the shoulder (thankfully there was one) to avoid a head-on collision with a semi hauling a double-wide manufactured home that was driving in the middle of the highway.

With that though still in mind, I considered taking an alternate route. Rather than driving to Cananea and starting the drive along the Rio Sonora where state highway 89 begins, I considered driving from Magdalena to Sinoquipe on Sonora highway 54, a drive of less than two hours that also passes through the pueblo of Cucurpe, which I had never visited.

Everyone I asked said that the road to Cucurpe and Sinoquipe was in good condition, and they were right. It looked to have been repaved recently, and with the exception of the last 12km (five miles) or so at the end of the drive, the highway is in very good condition.

To get to the highway from highway 15, also known as Avenida Niños Heroes as it passes through Magdalena, you can either take a turn to the southeast on the corner where the large Coppel department store is located, or at the intersection where you see the small bell tower monument.

Either street will pass through a residential section of Magdalena before it intersects with the highway. This route is also historically significant, and known as the Kino Highway, because Jesuit priest Father Eusebio Francisco Kino took the route to Magdalena when he left Cucurpe in March of 1687 to begin his significant work in the region.

The drive was very nice – beautiful scenery and very little traffic. The highway has a lot of curves and hills, and there are places where you can park and enjoy the scenery along the way, but do not drive too fast or you will not have enough time to safely pull off the road.

Use the usual precautions when driving on Sonoran rural highways – headlights on, be alert, do not pass other vehicles, keep your eyes on the road and drive at a reasonable speed.

The drive from Magdalena takes about 40 minutes until the road descends into the lovely, historic pueblo of Cucurpe, Sonora. Read more about Cucurpe.

Cucurpe to Sinoquipe

After leaving Cucurpe the road once again ascends into the hills and mountainous curves. Not far from Sinoquipe, there is a roadside parking spot at the Cajon de la Piedra Lisa (Smooth Stone Box Canyon), where Captain Juan Batista de Anza and his expedition were attacked in the middle of the night and barely escaped alive.

This is a first taste of the Spanish presence – from explorers, conquistadors and missionaries – that had such a large influence on the pueblos of the Rio Sonora. In fact, the body of Captain de Anza, who led his expedition to the Northern California region that is now San Francisco, is interred in a marble crypt in the beautiful mission church of Arizpe, Sonora.

The last 12 kilometers (about seven miles) of the highway is in bad condition, though passable. A road crew was doing some minor work, but it did not look like it was going to be finished any time soon. At any rate, the small inconvenience was tolerable, especially considering how good the roads were for most of the drive.

And as you turn the final corner of the highway and see the marvelous rocky cliffs and small town ahead, you have arrived at Sinoquipe, along the Route of the Rio Sonora. Read more about the Rio Sonora.

Scenery from Sonora highway 54 between Magdalena and Cucurpe, Sonora, Mexico
Scenery from Sonora highway 54 between Magdalena and Cucurpe, Sonora, Mexico
Scenery from Sonora highway 54 between Magdalena and Cucurpe, Sonora, Mexico
Scenery from Sonora highway 54 between Cucurpe and Sinoquipe, Sonora, Mexico
Scenery from Sonora highway 54 between Cucurpe and Sinoquipe, Sonora, Mexico
Roadside shrine near Sinoquipe, Sonora, Mexico