Itinerary 8 Days D:
Central Southern Islands
Set sail on a 8-day expedition around the central and southern islands of the Galapagos, observing the unique wildlife of these remote Pacific islands. Be charmed by the native bird species, amazed by an underwater ecosystem of colourful marine life and delighted by its distinct environment. Hike across lava flows, sail through mangroves and snorkel in natural aquariums abundant with fish, sea lions and turtles. This sail features some of the Galapagos’s most picturesque islands, so sit back and relax, because it’s all smooth sailing from here.
Start
Baltra Airport, Galapagos Islands (GPS)
Finish
Baltra Airport, Galapagos Islands (GPS)
Physical rating
Moderate
Style
First Class
Ages
Min 12
Group size
Min 1 – Max 16
Why you´ll love this trip
Learn a thing or two about 18th century whalers at Post Office Bay, and participate by posting a letter at the remote mail drop.
See the contrasting Galapagos landscapes between islands, from the unique formation of Sombrero Chino to the colourful sands of Isla Rabida.
Explore the islands on deck, on foot and in the water, waking to a new view each morning, and keeping an eye out for the next bird sighting or sea turtle passing by.
Experience the benefits of small group travel aboard your vessel, M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz, sailing through the natural beauty of the Galapagos, day and night.
Itinerary
Day 1 Wednesday: Baltra Island: Airport / Santa Cruz Island: Highlands
This morning you will be transferred to the airport for your flight to the Galapagos Islands. Please note the pick-up time will usually be as early as 4am as the airport is a one hour drive and you must allow for delays and check-in times. (Your tour leader will confirm this time with you at the pre-departure meeting on Day 1.
A US$20 per person transit card is payable on departure at Quito Airport and a US$100 per person national park entry fee is payable on arrival on the islands. Please have cash on hand for these transactions as using credit cards can be time consuming.
You will be met in the arrival hall of the airport by a National Park Guide, and transferred to the motor yacht ‘M.Y Grand Queen Beatriz’. Lunch will be served on the boat. This afternoon you will visit Santa Cruz, the second largest island in the Galapagos, here you’ll visit the highlands.
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla Santa Cruz – Highlands Visit (1.5 hours) – Dry Landing
Day 2 Thursday: North Seymour Island & Mosquera Islet
Today you will take a morning excursion to North Seymour. The trail on North Seymour crosses the inland through the island and then explores the rocky coast. Along the way the trail passes colonies of blue footed boobies and frigate birds.
The magnificent frigate bird, a large black bird with a long wingspan, and a hooked beak, is extremely fast and has excellent vision. Frigate birds are known for the large red pouch on their necks. During mating season the males throw back their heads, inflate the pouch (sometimes to the size of a soccer ball), and shake trying to capture the attention of female frigates.
Boobies and frigates have an interesting relationship. Sharing the same nesting area on North Seymour, blue-footed boobies nest on the ground making their nests from the twigs of the palo santos trees, while the frigate birds nest just above them in the saltbushes.
After lunch you will visit the small sandy island of Mosquera, it’s a relaxing, picturesque stop. Along the rocks and in the tide pool, sally lightfoot crabs (red lava crabs) scamper back and forth, skipping across small pools of water in search of food. These crabs with their bright red shell tops and blue under shells are stunning against the black lava.
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla North Seymour – Walk (2 hours) – Dry Landing
- Isla North Seymour – Snorkelling (1 hours)
- Isla Mosquera – Snorkelling (1 hour)
- Isla Mosquera – Beach Walk (1.5 hours) – Wet Landing
Day 3 Friday: Santa Cruz Island: Black Turtle Cove & Dragon Hill
Today you will take a morning excursion to Caleta Tortuga Negra (Black Turtle Cove) – a red mangrove wetland on the north shore of Santa Cruz Island. You will paddle among the cove’s peaceful waters, for your first taste of the underwater riches of this region – it’s a wonderful place to see green turtle and is a nursery for rays and Galapagos sharks.
There is also abundant birdlife, such as the yellow warbler and lava heron. This is also a breeding area for turtles, so it is not uncommon to see them mating. Go for a walk on Cerro Dragón (Dragon Hill) this afternoon, this is one of the best places to see land iguanas in the islands. You’ll walk along the trail from the beach, and along with the land iguanas, other sightings include marine iguanas, flamingos and Sally Lightfoot crabs.
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla Santa Cruz – Black Turtle Cove – Panga ride (1.5 hours)
- Isla Santa Cruz – Cerro Dragon – Walk (1.5 hours) – Dry Landing
- Isla Santa Cruz – Cerro Dragon – Snorkelling or swimming (1 hour)
Day 4 Saturday: Chinese Hat & Rabida Island
Rabida, also known as ‘Jervis’ is a tiny island sitting roughly five kilometers south of Santiago and is one of the most striking of the archipelago. Introduced species were eradicated in 1971, meaning that the indigenous wildlife has now been returned to a state of splendid isolation. Additionally, volcanic activity here has produced vivid, fantastical colors, not least the beaches of red sand and cliffs of scarlet.
From the shore, the trail leads through to what is one of the finest lagoons in the Galapagos for viewing flamingos. Rabida is also a wonderful place to spot nesting pelicans. Elsewhere, pintail ducks, marine iguanas and sea lions are all present. Sombrero Chino is a small islet located near the south-east coast of Santiago. It’s shaped like a Chinese hat (Sombrero Chino) when seen from afar, and is geologically fascinating, with many lava tubes leading from the cone to the coast.
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla Santiago – Sombrero Chino – Snorkelling (1 hour)
- Sombrero Chino – Walk and Panga ride (2 hours) – Wet Landing
- Isla Rabida – Snorkelling (1 hour)
- Isla Rabida – Walk (1.5 hours) – Wet Landing
Day 5 Sunday: Santa Cruz Island: Punta Carrion
Today, take an early morning excursion to Las Bachas, which was so named after the barges abandoned by the American Navy here in the 1940s. The sandy beaches of Las Bachas on the north shore of Santa Cruz are a nesting site for the Pacific green turtle, and home to marine iguanas. The sand here is particularly white and soft as it is made of decomposed coral. The rocks provide great snorkelling and are the perfect habitat for the Sally Lightfoot crabs, which are plentiful on the island. A saltwater lagoon near to the beach is home to flamingo and whimbrel and great blue herons, so keep a look out.
In the afternoon, visit Punta Carrion, located in north-eastern Santa Cruz. This is a shallow and protected cove, ideal for snorkelling. Wildlife is plentiful, so look around for blue-footed boobies, Galapagos herons and great blue herons, and underwater, swim among rays and white-tipped reef sharks.
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla Santa Cruz – Punta Carrion – Snorkelling (1 hour)
- Isla Santa Cruz – Bachas Beach Walk (1 hour) – Wet Landing
- Isla Santa Cruz – Bachas Beach Snorkel (1 hour) – Wet Landing
Day 6 Monday: Isabela Island: Tintoreras Islet, Giant tortoises breeding center & Wall of tears
Today you will wake up on the South Coast of Isabela Island, the largest of the Galapagos Archipelago. Isabela was formed by five giant volcanic craters, all of which are still considered active. The island is located in one of the youngest geological areas in the world, having been formed less than 1 million years ago.
This southern coast of turquoise blue waters has the largest area of beaches in the Galapagos. You will visit Las Tintoreras, where from the viewing walkway you can look down into this narrow channel to see a colony of white-tipped reef sharks swimming and sleeping, and the occasional playful sea lion among them!
Blue-footed boobies and penguins, marine iguanas and crabs also make their home here, and the waters provide further opportunities to swim with turtles. Here you will also visit the Giant Tortoise breeding center and the Wall of Tears, constructed from lava by prisoners of the penal colony here between 1946 and 1959 as punishment. Please note there’s a US$20 fee to be paid upon entering Isabela Island.
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla Isabela – Las Tintoreras visit (1.5 hours) – Dry Landing
- Isla Isabela – Arnolda Tupiza Tortoise Breeding Center including Flamingo Lagoon (2 hours) – Dry Landing
Day 7 Tuesday: Floreana Island: Cormorant Point, Devil´s Crown & Post Office Bay
The island of Floreana is a highlight of any Galapagos cruise, rich in natural wonders and wildlife. You will go ashore at Punta Cormorant where the sand is made up of fine olivine crystals, a glassy volcanic mineral, giving the beach an olive-green color. It is the best place to see Galapagos sea lions.
Today is also one of your finest opportunities to see pink flamingos and other water birds wading in the lagoons, including pintails and stilts. Just offshore, the Devil’s Crown is an old eroded volcanic cone and a popular roosting site for seabirds such as boobies, pelicans and frigates. Red-billed tropicbirds can also be seen nesting in the rocky crevices.
The center of the cone is an outstanding snorkeling spot, perhaps the most remarkable in the entire archipelago, full of sea lions and colorful fish. Floreana is also home to Post Office Bay, where 18th century whalers used a barrel as an unofficial mail drop. This custom continues to this day with visitors to the Galapagos – post one of your own, or see if there are any you could deliver back home!
Accommodation
- M/Y Grand Queen Beatriz (1 night)
Meals
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Included activities
- Isla Floreana – Post Office Bay – Walk (1.5 hours) – Wet Landing
- Isla Floreana – Punta Cormorant walk (1.5 hours) – Wet Landing
- Isla Floreana – Devil’s Crown snorkelling (1 hour)
- Isla Floreana – Post Office Bay snorkelling (45 mins)
Day 8 Wednesday: Santa Cruz Island: Charles Darwin Research Station / BALTRA Island: Airport
As flights to the mainland from Galapagos depart mid-morning, it is an early start for our last morning on the islands. Depending on the time of our flight, our time spent on this final excursion could be limited. The small town of Puerto Ayora is the economic hub of the archipelago and is also home to the Charles Darwin Research Station. The station’s visitor center and museum offer a great insight for anyone interested in the archipelago’s natural and human history, and keen to learn more about conservation efforts to preserve the unique ecosystems of the Galapagos. It also offers our best chance for close-up encounters with giant tortoises, and we can see many newborn and young giant turtles – part of the breeding program to reintroduce them to their natural habitat.
This is your final excursion before you return to the airport in Baltra for your flight back to Quito. As you will be leaving the boat this morning, please remember that if you have enjoyed the services provided by your guide and crew, a tip would be very much appreciated by them. As a guideline we recommend each passenger consider US$15 per day for the crew and US$10 per day for your guide. You can leave tips in envelopes that are placed in your cabin on the last day of your journey.
Meals
- Breakfast
Included activities
- Isla Santa Cruz – Charles Darwin Research Station (1 hour) – Dry Landing
Special Information
Please bear in mind that this and all our yacht’s cruise itineraries are subject to variation without prior notice; itinerary modifications may be made in accordance with the Galapagos National Park’s regulations itemized by the local authorities, weather conditions and/or sea-currents events that may affect the authorized cruise itinerary.
Your guide will inform you of changes (if any) in the regular itinerary on your first briefing on board the Yacht on Day 1 and will explain in detail about the authorized itinerary and visits to be enjoyed during your expedition on board our Yacht.