La Ventana Histories (Compilation)

Over the years Tom Spradley has written stories about the history of the La Ventana region, based on his research and interviews. What follows is a compilation of these stories. Get comfortable, grab a cup of coffee and enjoy!

A Brief History of the Founding of La Ventana (Part 1) (Part 2) – How La Ventana Bay was shaped long before modern settlement, beginning with the Pericú people, whose lives, beliefs, and subsistence were closely tied to the sea. They describe centuries of intermittent European contact, driven largely by pearling and exploration, including repeated but unsuccessful Spanish attempts to colonize the region. The narrative culminates with 17th-century expeditions, particularly those led by Francisco de Ortega, that mapped the area and documented Indigenous encounters, laying historical groundwork for La Ventana’s eventual founding much later.

Doña María Rieke Verdugo, Ángel de Rancho Las Canoas – Doña María Rieke Verdugo grew up working hard on her family’s remote Rancho Las Canoas—raising cattle, mining gold, and navigating rugged trails to trade and support her family—and later endured hardship and marginalization before finding work and helping her children survive, all while preserving vivid memories of life in the Sierra and the community that once thrived there.

El Sargento’s First Settlers (Part 1) (Part 2) (Part 3) – How the remote fishing village slowly grew as ranch hands, disillusioned miners, and families like the Luceros migrated there in the early 20th century, building homes, eking out a living from the sea and land, and forming a tight-knit community through shared hardship. Follow individuals such as Doña Sostenes and her family, who traded pottery and survived poverty, and later Guillermo Avilés Lucero, whose life as a fisherman and community member reflects decades of change, resilience, and connection to both El Sargento and neighboring La Ventana.

Early Explorers of La Ventana Bay – La Ventana Bay was first used by ancient Pericú peoples and later visited by European pearl explorers, marking the region’s earliest encounters and conflicts.

Salomé León and the Founding of La Ventana – Salomé León was a La Paz pearl diver who, after years at sea and facing the decline of the pearl industry, led his family over rugged terrain to Bahía de La Ventana in the early 20th century and established the fishing settlement that became La Ventana.

History of La Ventana – La Ventana began as a small, resilient settlement founded by families who crossed the desert to live from the sea and land, laying the groundwork for the community that exists today.

La Caballera de Cerralvo (Part 1) (Part 2) – Daphne, remembered as La Caballera de Cerralvo, lived an extraordinary, often perilous life, from riding and exploring Isla Cerralvo largely on her own as a teenager to later surviving hardship and reclaiming her independence.

Snake Breeding Season

Somehow it is already almost spring, at least as far as the reptiles are concerned. We are fast approaching snake breeding season, and that means a few things.

First of all, breeding season is a bit different for each species. Generally, most snakes around here seem to be actively looking for mates from mid March through early May. Since the weather isn’t usually too warm yet during those months, snakes will be out during the day. 

Some people may not love hearing that news, but something to remember is that, of our near 20 species of snakes, only rattlesnakes and extremely rare sea snakes are dangerously venomous. ALL OTHER SNAKES HERE ARE HARMLESS. Even the venomous snakes want nothing to do with people.

My favorite snakes to see in the spring are the Cape Gopher Snakes. These big, beautiful, harmless snakes are usually quite friendly, and offer very good rodent control. They are slow moving, however, and therefore very vulnerable to cars. 

Last spring, I saw a heartbreaking amount of dead gopher snakes on the roads, and I want to help prevent that from happening again. It is a difficult problem to solve, but I want to do my best to help these beautiful endemic snakes continue to call La Ventana home.

There are a few local roads in particular over which gopher snakes and other reptiles often cross: 

  • The roads around Pitaya;
  • The roads near the Bufador;
  • The container house road in El Sargento; and
  • The access road to La Tuna.

I am planning to make “Snake Crossing” signs to put on these roads just for the months of March and April. If you would like to help, or know of a road with a lot of snake activity, please email me at chancestevens123@icloud.com.

Correction from last week: I mistakenly called Western Banded Geckos by the wrong name, Banded House Geckos. I am not sure how I missed that but I just wanted to correct my mistake.