Background Image
Table of Contents Table of Contents
Previous Page  28 / 66 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 28 / 66 Next Page
Page Background

Sinaloa

From La Paz, you can take a ferry across the Gulf of California to the mainland.

When you land, you will find yourself in Sinaloa, a long, narrow state that is

sandwiched between the gulf and the foothills of the Sierra Madre Occidental.

Like Baja California, Sinaloa has desert lands, but unlike the rocky peninsula,

this state also has fertile valleys and mountainsides where thick vegetation

thrives. The state has four main rivers—the Fuerte, the Sinaloa, the Mocorito,

and the Piaxtla—and these supply the land with surface water. With the help of

irrigation, the state produces farm products for Mexico, especially mangos,

cotton, and sugarcane. It also has the largest canning factory in Latin America.

One of Sinaloa’s main cities is Mazatlán. This is Mexico’s chief Pacific port,

and the country’s largest shrimp fleet docks there. The residents of the city enjoy

baseball and bullfights, while visitors love the beaches. For a sufficient tip from

tourists, cliff divers will leap 40 to 50 feet into water below.

Mexican Facts and Figures

26

The harbor at Mazatlán,

one of Mexico’s most

important Pacific ports.