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Galapagos | ||||||||||||||
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HighlightsSantiago and nearby northern islandsSantiago (James) Island
Sullivan Bay: gives a chance to walk over a recent barren lava flow. The black, basaltic lava is about 100 years old, but looks like it only just cooled into shapes reminiscent of intestines, ropes and ripples on a pond. It has flowed around older cinder cones. Puerto Egas (James Bay): Once a haven to pirates and salt miners. A beautiful natural landscape – the path goes along a rocky shore - where large marine iguanas and sally lightfoot crabs abound. In the tidepools brittle stars, urchins and sea snails hide among anemones. Moray eels slither, octopus keep a wary eye or two on you. The trail ends at the fur seal grottoes; enchanting natural pools where both species of sea lion rest and play. Bartolomé A short walk across dunes takes one to the beach (reef sharks, rays and Ghost crabs). Often a juvenile Galápagos hawk hovering overhead. From January to March you may see marine turtles coming ashore to nest in the sand. Genovesa (Tower) Island Darwin Bay: has a small white coral sand beach, behind is a lagoon which gives the impression of a rock garden. (Herons, white-cheeked pintail ducks, Galapagos doves, lava gulls, swallow-tailed gulls, great frigatebirds, Red-footed boobies, finches, marine iguanas). Prince Philip’s Steps: along the cliffs fur seals in the crevices, Red-billed tropic-birds screech overhead with the greedy frigatebirds in pursuit. The trail has plenty to see (masked boobies, red-footed boobies, storm petrels, owls). Rábida (Jervis) Back on the beach the rocks to the East make a perfect place to learn to snorkel. Schools of reef fish like damsels, surgeons, triggers and larger groupers and puffer fish make it an attractive place to plunge beneath the waves. Sombrero Chino (Chinese Hat) |
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