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Galapagos Tour
(8 days,
7 nights )
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Day 1
Saturday Morning: Arrive at Baltra, Galapagos
The flight from Quito (via Guayaquil) to the Galapagos is approximately
2 ½ hours on a Airbus 320. Upon arrival at Baltra, you will pass
through an airport inspection point to insure that no foreign plants
or animals are introduced to the islands and to pay the park entrance
fee of $100. Guides will meet you, collect your luggage and escort you
on the short bus ride to the harbour. Motorized rafts, called ‘Pangas’
will transport you to the M/V Eclipse and our crew will welcome you
onboard. After departure and lunch, the first island visit is made.
Saturday Afternoon: Santa Cruz (Indefatigable)
Island—Las Bachas Beach or Cerro Dragon
Las Bachas is a white sandy beach that is a major egg-laying
site for sea turtles; Las Bachas in fact refers to the indentations
left in the sand by egg laying turtles and departing hatchlings. On
shore you will see marine iguanas, and, in the lagoon, flamingos are
common. A newer visitor’s site, Dragon Hill offers a brackish
water lagoon, where flamingoes, common stilts, pintail ducks and other
species of birds come to feed. There is a short walk to the hill, which
rewards you with a great view and a nesting site of iguanas.
Day 2.
Sunday Morning: Santiago (San Salvador, James) Island—James Bay
This island has several sites to visit at the western end of James’
Bay. Puerto Egas with its black sand beaches was the site of a small
salt mining industry in the 1960s and a hike inland to the salt crater
is an excellent opportunity to sight land birds such as finches, doves,
and hawks. A walk down the rugged shoreline, especially at low tide,
will turn up many marine species such as iguanas basking on the rocks
and sea lions lazing in the tide pools. At the end of the trail there
is a series of grottos or sea caves where fur seals and night herons
are found resting on the shady ledges. Just north of James’ Bay
is Buccaneer Cove, a particularly scenic area of steep cliffs and dark
beaches.
Sunday Afternoon: Bartolome (Bartholomew) Island
Bartolome is a small island that has beautiful white sand beaches, luxuriant
green mangroves and a colony of penguins. Activities will include swimming
and snorkeling and a climb to the summit of the island for one of the
most breathtaking views in all the Galapagos. From the summit you will
have the best view of the often-photographed Pinnacle Rock.
Day 3.
Monday Morning: Tower (Genovesa) Island—Darwin Bay Beach
Tower is a collapsed volcano and ships sail directly into its large
breached caldera to anchor at the foot of the steep crater walls. Tower
attracts vast numbers of pelagic seabirds that come here to nest and
breed: great frigate birds, red-footed boobies, swallow-tailed gulls
and storm petrels. A trail leads from a coral beach past tidal lagoons
where lava gulls and yellow-crowned night herons are seen, then along
the low shrubs populated by frigates and boobies, and eventually to
a cliff edge where seabirds soar.
Monday Afternoon: Tower (Genovesa) Island—Prince Philip’s
Steps
A second trail called Prince Philip Steps, leads to an open area for
masked boobies, frigates, and red-footed boobies. At the end of this
trail are thousands of band-rumped storm petrels at the cliff's edge,
where they nest in crevices. Short-eared owls can sometimes be seen
here, hunting the storm petrels during daylight hours.
Day 4:
Tuesday Morning: Fernandina (Narborough) Island—Punta
Espinosa
Fernandina is the youngest and most active volcano in the Galapagos
with eruptions taking place every few years. The flat lava of Punta
Espinosa offers a stark and barren landscape, but here flightless cormorants
build their nests on the point, sea lions sprawl on the beach or play
in the tide pools and marine iguanas dot the sand
Tuesday Afternoon: Isabela (Albemarle) Island—Tagus Cove
On the towering cliffs of Tagus Cove, 19th and early 20th century ships’
graffiti can be seen. After hiking beyond Darwin Lake, a saltwater lagoon
above sea level, you will be rewarded with extraordinary views of Darwin
and Wolf volcanoes.
Day 5:
Wednesday Morning: Isabela (Albemarle) Island—Urbina Bay
Urbina Bay is an easy wet landing on a gentle sloping beach. This area
is very interesting in that it is a perfect example of the geological
activities of the islands. In 1954 over 3 miles (5 kilometers) of the
marine reef at the edge of the shore was uplifted by 13 feet (4 meters).
Wednesday Afternoon: Isabela (Albemarle) Island—Elizabeth
Bay
At Elizabeth Bay enjoy a panga ride through the mangrove area to see
the rays, turtles, sea lions, and, circling overhead, Galapagos hawks.
Colonies of penguins inhabit a rocky islet at the entrance to Elizabeth
Bay.
Day 6.
Thursday: Santa Cruz (Indefatigable) Island—Puerto Ayora Town
Santa Cruz is the only inhabited island to be visited during this Galapagos
cruise. Puerto Ayora, with a population of about 10,000 people is the
location of the Charles Darwin Research Station, world famous for its
tortoise breeding programs. After touring the Station, journey by bus
into the highlands to Los Gemelos, the two deep pit craters situated
in the Scalesia forest with lots of interesting bird life. Go for a
walk through the giant lava tubes; visit the Tortoise Reserve to search
for giant tortoises in their natural surroundings. There will be some
free time to explore the town of Puerto Ayora on your own.
Day 7.
Friday Morning: Hood (Española) Island—Gardner Bay
One of the oldest of the islands, Hood is small and flat with no visible
volcanic crater or vent. Gardner Bay is on the eastern shore and has
a magnificent beach. This beach is frequented by a transient colony
of sea lions, and is a major nesting site for marine turtles. Around
the small islets nearby, snorkelers will find lots of fish and sometimes
turtles and sharks. On a trail leading to the western tip of the island
you'll pass the only nesting sites in the Galapagos of the waved albatross,
huge birds with a wingspan over 6-feet in length. These huge birds nest
here from April to December and represent the majority of the world’s
population of this species.
Friday Afternoon: Hood (Española) Island—Punta
Suarez
Punta Suarez is one of the most outstanding wildlife areas of the archipelago,
with a long list of species found along its cliffs and sand or pebble
beaches. In addition to five species of nesting seabirds there are the
curious and bold Hood Island mockingbirds, Galapagos doves and Galapagos
hawks. Several types of reptiles, including the brilliantly colored
marine iguana and the oversized lava lizard, are unique to this island.
When heavy swells are running, Punta Suarez is also the site of a spectacular
blowhole, with thundering spray shooting 30 yards into the air.
Day 8:
Saturday Morning: Santa Cruz (Indefatigable) Island—Black
Turtle Cove
The panga will take you into a tidal lagoon to see three kinds of mangrove
plants, red, white and black. White-tipped sharks, spotted rays, mustard
rays and Pacific marine turtles frequent the waters here. Return to
the airport for your return flight back to the mainland.
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For current availability contact us at info@amazingperu.com
and we will send you the relevant t dossier
along with a 90 day fixed quote, terms and conditions.

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