Urbina Bay and Tagus Cove, Isabela Island
Tuesday, February 19
Urbina Bay and Tagus Cove,
Isabela Island
Isabela Island is by far
the largest island in the archipelago, making up more than half the land
mass. It was formed by the fusion of six
“shield volcanoes” and is shaped like a seahorse. After breakfast, at 8:00 AM, we disembarked
for a hike at Urbina Bay. We set off
after changing into our hiking shoes, as it was a “wet landing” which means we
exited the Zodiacs in about two feet of water.
The major population of
Galapagos Tortoises is on other islands, but we hoped to see some here. Right on the trail was a collection of poop
and we had a briefing on the identification of critters from finding their
poop. Yes, this collection included that
of the tortoise.
The land iguanas are all
over the place; here’s today’s portrait:
The prominent flowering
tree here is the Muyuyo, which has bright yellow flowers:
And we indeed found
tortoises:
Back then to the ship, and
the boys had a Zodiac driving class. The
adults were not involved; it was probably a good thing. Ben has been eating as if he is hollow, quite unbelievably, with three full dinners
on one night. Today at lunch he had four
desserts, a double serving of ice cream, a piece of cake, and a double cookie:
After lunch there was a
profusion of activity—paddle boards, sea kayaks and snorkeling opportunities. Dan and I went kayaking together in Tagus Cove,
a beautiful sheltered harbor. The geology
is remarkable, with undulating layers of rock which have been laid down as
lava:
We came across a female
sea lion lying on a rock shelf nursing her pup:
There were huge crab
colonies:
Without meaning to, we
caused some consternation as we talked and paddled, and without realizing it,
far outpaced our group of five kayaks and wound up joining another group which
was ahead of us. No one figured it out
until the group we had come up on got taken aboard their Zodiac to go back to
the ship and they had two extra people.
Fortunately, all the Zodiac drivers have walkie-talkie radios and they
straightened it all out. There were two
choices for the final afternoon activity, an “invigorating more walking-less
talking, fast-paced uphill hike” to Darwin Lake, or a Zodiac ride along another
shoreline. Joyce and I chose to sit and
ride; all the others took the hike. We saw
a number of penguins on our Zodiac ride.
Galapagos penguins are very small, and very fast in the water, making
photography almost impossible. We did
come across some on the rock ledges above the water—the photo is not good.
There is a daily
pre-dinner cocktail hour (all drinks are included on this trip; the pina
colladas are very good) and at this one, one of the naturalists gave a short
talk on plankton, with a live microscopic projection of all the critters in the
water she had collected. Early to bed,
as tomorrow we leave the boat at 6:30 AM!
Wow, what diverse fauna (and flora)! I'd like a Muyoyo tree in a pot on our balcony. How long would it survive?! Glad you got enough bandwidth or what to share this installment. Good luck with the trip home!
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