8 Day Itinerary - Saturday
to Saturday
Day
1
Saturday Morning: Arrive at Baltra, Galapagos
The flight from Quito (via Guayaquil) to the Galapagos Islands
takes approximately 2 hours. Upon arrival at Baltra Airport,
you will be met by your guides, who will escort you on a short
bus ride to the harbor. Motorized
dinghies, known locally as "pangas" will transport
you to the M/Y Eclipse,
where
the captain and crew will welcome you aboard. After departure
there will be a briefing, lunch and a safety drill.
Saturday Afternoon: Santa
Cruz (Indefatigable) Island
Las Bachas Beach
Las Bachas Beach is located in the north of Santa Cruz. Its
soft, white sand is derived from decomposed coral, making it
a favorite nesting site for sea turtles. Behind the beach there
is a small brackish water lagoon, where it is possible to observe
flamingos and other coastal birds, such as black-necked stilts
and whimbrels.
Day 2
Sunday Morning: Santiago (San Salvador, James) Island
Puerto Egas (James Bay)
Puerto Egas (James Bay)
is located on the northwest side of Santiago. The landing is
on a black beach with eroded rock formations in the background.
The trail crosses the dry interior, where the remains of a salt
mining enterprise can still be seen, and then continues along
the coast. Tidal pools are home to a variety of invertebrate
organisms, including sea urchins, octopus and starfish.
The
trail leads to the Fur Seals Grottos, one of the only places
in the islands where they can be seen. After the walk, you will
have time to swim or snorkel off the beach, where you will see
sea lions, fish and maybe some turtles and reef sharks.
Sunday Afternoon: Bartolomé
(Bartholomew) Island
Bartolomé is a small island
that has two visitor sites. At the first site, you can swim
and snorkel around Pinnacle Rock, where penguins are usually
seen. Back on board for a quick change of clothes and then it
is a short dinghy ride to a dry landing for a climb to the highest
point on the island. On the way up, you will encounter different
volcanic formations, including spatter and tuff cones, lava
flow and lava tubes. From the summit you will have a wonderful
view of Sullivan Bay.
Day 3
Monday Morning: Cerro Dragón Santa Cruz (Indefatigable)
Island
The name Cerro Dragon (Dragon Hill) stems from the fact that
it was one of the few sites on Santa Cruz Island where a healthy
population of land iguanas were found in 1975. After landing
at a pier, a hike takes to you to a salt water lagoon behind
the beach, frequented by common stilts, pintail ducks and occasionally
flamingos. A short walk up the hill leads you to a land iguana
nesting site, with breathtaking views of the bay. You will have
the chance to go swimming after the walk.
Monday Afternoon: Rábida
Island
Rábida is a small island with red volcanic rocks surrounding
a beautiful red sand beach, where there is a colony of sea lions
and a pelican nesting site. The trail leads to a salt water
lagoon where shore birds can be seen. Rábida is considered
to be one of the best snorkeling sites in the Galapagos Islands,
and you will also have the opportunity to go kayaking.
Day
4
Tuesday Morning: Tagus
Cove Isabela (Albemarle) Island
Tagus Cove was historically used as an anchoring place for pirates,
buccaneers and whalers. Here you will see the names of hundreds
of ships painted on the high ridges (a practice now forbidden).
Depending on the season, you will go hiking, snorkeling or kayaking.
On the hike, the trail goes through an area of vegetation and
the volcanic landscape of Darwin Volcano. At the top of the
trail, you will enjoy an incredible view of the whole cove and
Darwin Lake.
The morning activity is followed
by a panga ride, where you will have the opportunity to see
a large number of Blue-footed Boobies perched on the ledges
of the cliffs, as well as marine iguanas, penguins, brown pelicans,
brown noddy terns and swallow-tailed gulls. While exploring
the channel between Fernandina and Isabela Islands, you sometimes
encounter dolphins and whales.
Tuesday Afternoon: Elizabeth
Bay Isabela (Albemarle) Island
Elizabeth Bay is one
of the furthest points of the Galapagos that you will visit
on the cruise. A panga ride around two islets called the Marielas
offers a wide variety of bird life, such as flightless cormorants,
herons, and Blue-footed Boobies. Then you will enter a sheltered
cove a wonderful mangrove ecosystem that is a refuge
for sea turtles and rays.
Day 5
Wednesday Morning: Punta Espinoza Fernandina Island
Fernandina last erupted in 1995. La Cumbre Volcano dominates
the landscape, with lava fields stretching towards the ocean
from its base. Punta Espinoza is a narrow piece of land where
some of the most unique Galapagos species can be seen, including
the flightless cormorant, Galapagos snakes, marine iguanas,
penguins and the Galapagos hawk.
Wednesday Afternoon: Punta Moreno
Isabela (Albemarle) Island
Punta Vicente Roca is a wonderful
snorkeling site, where you can usually see turtles as well as
all kinds of fish. After the snorkeling you will go on a panga
ride, which will give you the opportunity to study some of the
Galapagos' spectacular geological rock formations. Nazca boobies,
pelicans, swallow-tailed gulls, marine iguanas, flightless cormorants
and penguins are often seen in the area.
Day
6
Thursday Morning: Charles Darwin Research Station Santa
Cruz (Indefatigable) Island Puerto Ayora Town
On your visit to the
Charles Darwin Research Station you will gain insight into the
huge efforts being made by scientists, guides, rangers and park
managers to preserve this UNESCO World Heritage Site. You will
see the famous Galapagos tortoises that are the islands
namesake. After the visit you will have some free time to explore
the town of Puerto Ayora.
Thursday Afternoon:
Santa Cruz Highlands Santa Cruz (Indefatigable) Island
From Puerto Ayora you
will travel by bus to the lush, green highlands of Santa Cruz,
where you will visit a tortoise reserve to search for giant
tortoises in their natural surroundings. You will have the opportunity
to walk through lava tunnels so take a flashlight if you have
one. Optional activities such as biking, relaxing on the beach
or just strolling in town are available.
Day 7
Friday Morning: Hood (Española) Island Gardner
Bay
Gardner Bay offers the
chance to enjoy a wonderful white sandy beach. It is home to
one of the most important colonies of sea lions, and it is also
a nesting site for sea turtles. After the beach time you will
have a chance to deep water snorkel from the panga or go kayaking.
Friday Afternoon:
Punta Suarez Hood (Española) Island
Punta Suarez is one
of the most popular and attractive sites in the Galapagos. Due
to its isolation from other islands, it has a high proportion
of endemic fauna. A few steps inland from the landing site,
groups of Española marine iguanas bask in the sun. Further
inland, Nazca and Blue-footed Boobies nest almost on the trail,
Galapagos doves peck around unaware of visitors and finches
go about their business. The trail continues towards a blowhole,
which is a fissure in the lava where water spurts high into
the air like a geyser. The cracks in the cliffs are home to
swallow-tailed gulls and red-billed tropicbirds. Further up
the cliff in an area of low-lying trees you will find waved
albatrosses nesting. The 10,000 to 12,000 pairs of albatrosses
on Española represent the entire population of this species
on the planet. They perform one of the most spectacular courtship
rituals of the animal world.
Day 8
Saturday Morning: Black Turtle Cove Santa Cruz (Indefatigable)
Island
Black Turtle Cove is
one of the most beautiful marine sites in Galapagos. It is a
complex maze of tranquil salt-water inlets, surrounded by three
different species of mangrove. Its waters are a resting site
for sea turtles, rays and sharks. This site is only accessible
by panga. Afterwards, departure from Baltra Airport.
Note:
Itineraries may be altered due to prevailing or forecast weather
conditions, for technical or safety reasons, or to meet National
Park regulations. Itineraries may also vary due to force majeure
or according to the need to refule the vessel on certain Saturdays.