Secrets of the world’s most special islands
Glorious Galápagos

A young archipelago

The Darwin connection

In 1835, the islands were visited by British naturalist Charles Darwin as part of a five-year mission to take longitudinal measurements of the globe. But, noticing how certain species (including Darwin’s finches, pictured) varied from island to island, Darwin began to theorise that the animals had adapted to their unique environments. These observations would later form the basis for his theory of natural selection, found in On the Origin of Species (1859), and are one of the reasons why the isles are so famous today.
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Nature and conservation

The giant tortoise

The Galapagos' most famous resident – and namesake (Galapagos is an old Spanish word for tortoise) – these giant creatures live in harmony across 10 of the islands. Having arrived from mainland South America almost three million years ago, there are as many as 12 different species of the giant tortoise (slowly) roaming the archipelago looking for fruits, cactus pads and grasses to guzzle. However, they can survive for a whole year without food or water. You're more likely to spot them on Santa Cruz and Isabela at midday in cool season (June to November) or early morning and late afternoon in hot season (December to May).
Isabela

At 1,803 square miles (4,670sq km), Isabela is the largest member of the archipelago. In fact, it’s bigger than all the other islands combined. Formed by the eruption of six volcanoes, the landscape here is extremely varied, from red mangrove forests to white sandy beaches to lava fields. The Sierra Negra Volcano, pictured, is still active and last erupted in 2018.
Isabela

This scaly little critter is a marine iguana, one of the many species you can spot here. The island’s also home to more Galápagos penguins than anywhere else, plus it’s one of just two members of the archipelago where flightless cormorants nest. The oceans are a hive of activity too. Isabela is home to one of the best deep-water snorkelling spots on the planet, Vicente Roca Point, where sea turtles, seahorses and mola mola (sunfish) can be seen.
Isabela

Santa Cruz

Many visitors choose to base themselves in Santa Cruz, the archipelago’s most populated isle with 18,000 residents. And with a decent smattering of restaurants, hotels and bars, mostly in the principal town of Puerto Ayora, it’s easy to see why. But that doesn’t mean there’s a shortage of wildlife – far from it. The island has six distinct vegetation zones, including higher-elevation zones only found here and on San Cristobal, which are home to the highly-endangered miconia plant.
Santa Cruz

The Charles Darwin Research Station allows visitors to see conservation in action. Situated a short walk from Puerto Ayora, it opened in 1964 and today it provides educational exhibitions about the Galápagos’ unique climate, geography and wildlife. Meanwhile at the Fausto Llerena Tortoise Center, a conservation programme is helping to breed tortoises in captivity and release them into the wild. It was here that the world’s last remaining Pinta Island tortoise, nicknamed Lonesome George, lived for 40 years before he was sadly found dead in 2012.
Santa Cruz

Offering fantasy-movie landscapes within easy reach of Puerto Ayora, Las Grietas is a must-visit location in Santa Cruz. These steep gorges – “grieta” means crack in Spanish – are filled with bluer-than-blue water which has earned them a reputation as one of the best swimming spots on the isles. Jumping off the rocks is advised against however. There’s not much in the way of underwater wildlife here, so for snorkelling off the isle, Gordon Rocks, Carrion Point or Garrapatero Beach are the best bet.
San Cristóbal

One of the Galápagos’ four inhabited islands, San Cristóbal was the first reached by Darwin on his 1835 expedition. Yet it has a darker, little-known history. In the 1880s, the town of El Progreso became home to a penal colony for prisoners from Ecuador, ruled by plantation owner Manuel Cobos, who treated the convicts like slaves. Cobos was killed by the prisoners and they escaped in 1904. Since then, El Progreso has become a sleepy farming town, although it does have a tiny treetop shed, Casa del Ceibo, where novelty-seeking travellers can stay for the night.
San Cristóbal

San Cristóbal

Española

Española

Fernandina

Fernandina

Genovesa

Known as “Bird Island”, Genovesa is the place to be for bird watching. The most northerly point in the Galápagos, its remoteness meant that few land animals ever made their way over here, but their loss is winged creatures’ gain. Frigatebirds and the striking red-footed boobies can be found nesting on the coastline, while flocks or storm petrels, finches and mockingbirds swirl through the skies.
Genovesa

Rábida

The most striking thing about Rábida is its bright red coastlines. Owing their vibrant hue to the way in which iron-rich lava deposits have oxidised, the shores of this small, 1.89 square-mile (4.9sq km) isle foster a variety of species including sea lions, flamingos and marine iguanas. However, the arrival of rats on the island in the past 50 years has presented a threat to native wildlife, and there’s currently a rat eradication programme in place to rid the island of these invasive species.
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North Seymour

Floreana

South Plaza

Darwin and Wolf

Most who venture to the outlying Darwin and Wolf islands go for the diving – it’s considered one of the finest spots in the archipelago and even worldwide. Best visited between June and November, the azure waters are populated with a spectacular array of wildlife: tropical fish, hammerhead sharks, white tipped sharks, manta rays, sea turtles and more. Until recently, there was a stunning natural sea arch called Darwin’s Arch, but in May 2021 it collapsed into the ocean.
Santiago

Bartolomé

Baltra

Also known as South Seymour, Baltra’s flat landscapes contrast with the rest of the Galápagos’ steep volcanic terrain. This seismically-formed isle was chosen by the US government as an air base in the 1930s, thanks to its central location and flat ground. The base was used during the Second World War before being given to the Ecuadorian government. Today, it’s one of just two entry points to the archipelago by plane.
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