the number of people who want to swim with orcas in Baja has risen quickly. Photo by Andrea Izzotti/Alamy

Swimming with orcas is ‘out of control’ | The Guardian, May 2025

Can new rules keep tourists and whales safe in Baja, Mexico?

By Brianna Randall, published May 27, 2025 in The Guardian. Photo by Andrea Izzotti/Alamy.

Just after sunrise in the small village of La Ventana in Baja California Sur, the beach is bustling with wetsuit-clad tourists. They climb into Mexican fishing boats and race out into the windy blue bay, cameras at the ready. The fishers turned tour guides follow a couple of ocean safari yachts, which follow directions from pilots sent up in spotter planes. The goal of this 40-boat cavalcade? To enable swimming with orcas in the wild.

Swimming with orcas in Mexico falls into a legal grey area as it exploits loopholes in two Mexican laws that protect endangered marine wildlife. This has become particularly problematic in the past five years since selfies with the whales on social media have led to an increase in the number of people wanting to try the activity.

“We thought it was a great thing at the beginning but it has become kind of a nightmare,” says Evans Baudin, the owner of Cabo Shark Experience who estimates he has taken 1,500 people to swim with orcas over the past nine years. “It’s completely out of control. Since there are no authorities or rules, anyone can do whatever they want.”

Local fishing boats, some without insurance or the proper licenses, are competing with the bigger foreign-owned companies based in the nearby cities of Cabo San Lucas or La Paz. Some of these companies are guaranteeing tourists the chance to swim with orcas and are pulling out all the stops to keep that promise.

Whoever tourists book with, the result is the same: increasing numbers of people are swimming or freediving with the whales, meaning dozens of boats are zooming around the animals. This is especially problematic in May and June, the busiest months for orca swimming trips.

Georgina Saad, a marine biologist who consults for nonprofit organizations, is worried about where all this may lead. Although no wild orca has ever killed or attacked a human, she says: “They are wild animals. If we don’t give them distance and space, they may, like any animal, defend themselves.”

The constant influx of boats and swimmers may also affect the orcas’ wellbeing. The pods in Baja are usually females with babies and are often feeding on mobula rays, sharks, dolphins, turtles or whales while people are in the water with them. They hunt using sonar to find their prey, and the noise from the motors can disrupt the whales’ ability to capture food.

Erick Higuera, a marine biologist and documentary film-maker based in La Paz, says that no one is regulating the sudden increase in swimming with orcas, which took off in 2019 after a few Instagram posts went viral. “It brings in a lot of money for communities and no one wants to stop.”

Now, however, a proposed plan aims to change all that.

Read the full story here >