In 1593, the disputed concession for pearl fishing on the western shores of the
Gulf of California was transferred to Vizcaíno. He succeeded in sailing with three ships to
La Paz, Baja California Sur, in 1596. He gave this site (known to
Hernándo Cortés as Santa Cruz) its modern name and attempted to establish a settlement. However, problems of resupply, declining morale, and a fire soon forced its abandonment. In 1601, the
Spanish viceroy in
Mexico City,
Gaspar de Zúñiga, 5th Count of Monterrey, appointed Vizcaíno general-in-charge of a second expedition: to locate safe harbors in
Alta California for Spanish galleons to use on their return voyage to
Acapulco from
Manila. He was also given the mandate to map in detail the
California coastline that
Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo had first reconnoitered 60 years earlier. He departed Acapulco with three ships on May 5, 1602. His flagship was the
San Diego and the other two ships were the
San Tomás and the
Tres Reyes. On November 10, 1602, Vizcaíno entered and named
San Diego Bay. Sailing up the coast, Vizcaíno named many prominent features such as the
Santa Barbara Channel Islands,
Point Conception, the
Santa Lucia Mountains,
Point Lobos,
Carmel River and
Monterey Bay (obliterating some of the names given these same features by Cabrillo in 1542). He was the first person in recorded history to note certain ecological features of the California coast such as the
Monterey cypress forest at Point Lobos. The commander of the
Tres Reyes,
Martín de Aguilar, became separated from Vizcaíno and continued up the coast to present-day
Oregon as far as
Cape Blanco and possibly to
Coos Bay. After Vizcaíno passed
Cape Mendocino, he turned back, with some of his men suffering from
scurvy and starvation. Half of the crew members, some 45 men, died during the expedition. One result of Vizcaíno's voyage was a flurry of enthusiasm for establishing a Spanish settlement at
Monterey, but this was ultimately deferred for another 167 years after the Conde de Monterrey left to become
Viceroy of Peru and his successor was less favorable. A colonizing expedition was authorized in 1606 for 1607, but was delayed and then canceled in 1608. ==Japanese relations==