Northern & Southern Galapagos Islands
8 Days - Angelito
This 8 day cruise offers a diverse and comprehensive voyage through the northern, central and southern islands of the Galapagos. You can expect to experience the wildlife and scenery of this unique destination with excellent naturalist guides. The Angelito yacht is a charming 16-passenger tourist-superior yacht and offers a comfortable way to see the Galapagos.
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Home » 8 Day Angelito: Northern & Southern Galapagos Islands (A)
Itinerary Highlights
- Individual Air condition in all cabins, social areas and kitchen
- Quality naturalist guide
- Plenty of snorkelling opportunities (equipment included)
- Visit spectacular Pinnacle Rock
- Fantastic wildlife spotting including the chance to see Galapagos penguins
Itinerary in Brief
- Day 1: Baltra - North Seymour
- Day 2: Chinese Hat – Bartolome
- Day 3: Genovesa: Darwin Bay - Prince Phillips Steps
- Day 4: Puerto Egas – Rabida
- Day 5: Darwin Station - Highlands of Santa Cruz
- Day 6: Española Playa Gardner - Punta Suarez
- Day 7: Santa Fe - South Plaza
- Day 8: Black Turtle Cove – Baltra
![map](../../images/image_local/53078/web_standard_Angelito-Northern-and-Southern-Galapagos-Islands-900x.jpg)
Day 1: Baltra - North Seymour
Today you will take a flight from mainland Ecuador to the island Baltra in the Galapagos Islands.
Arriving on the airport, the visitors have first to pay the entrance fee of US$ 100 for the National park. Leaving the arrival hall, the National Park Guide of the is waiting for you and accompanies the whole group to the harbour of Baltra, where your "Yacht Angelito I" is anchored. The cruise can begin!
It’s a flat uplifted island in the "rain shadow" of the island Santa Cruz and for this reason, with dry vegetation of the Arid Zone. Loop trail. The dry landing on a landing peer is often somewhat difficult depending of the swell. The arrival on the rocky coast is full of surprises with the sea lions, swallow-tailed gulls, sally lightfoot crabs and marine iguanas. The trail leads through the nesting area of colonies of blue-footed boobies and frigate bird.
Day 2: Chinese Hat – Bartolome
The dry landing is on a jetty. The summit trail leads to the top of Bartolomé on a wooden foot-bridge and stairs to protect the fragile landscape. The view from the top across Bartolomé, Santiago with Sullivan Bay and the surrounding islands is wonderful. All the secondary cones, lava flows and lava tubes mimick a moon landscape.
There is a possibility that you will be able to snorkel around Pinnacle Rock, the most famous landmark of Bartolome. In the late afternoon we will go out on the dinghy and travel along the coast in search of Galapagos penguins. These penguins live and nest in the lava tubes of this rocky coastline.
Day 3: Genovesa: Darwin Bay - Prince Phillips Steps
Wet landing on a small white beach made of coral sand. The trail follows the shore vegetation of red mangrove and salt bush. The special prickly pear cactus grows on Genovesa often like a hanging cactus with only soft hairy spines. Under the shore vegetation are nesting the swallow-tailed gulls and in the bushes and trees there are the nests of the red-footed boobies and great frigate birds. A few Nazca boobies are nesting on the ground. The trail leads along small tide pools up to the cliff with a spectacular view over the caldera. By low tide there are thousands of Galapagos fiddler crabs in the sandy ground
Dry landing by the cliff. The Prince Phillip's Steps offer the only possibility to climb the steep basaltic cliff. The following easy trail leads first through a small nesting colony of masked boobies and crosses a low and dense forest of palo santo trees where the red-footed boobies have their nests. Arriving on the edge of the island there are thousands of the small petrels nesting in the crevices and tubes of the fragile lava. They are the favourite food of the short-eared owls. On both sides of the trail there is a big Nazca booby nesting colony.
Day 4: Puerto Egas – Rabida
Landmark of Puerto Egas are the tuff formations of the cliffs with the relief structures. The wet landing is on a black beach. The walk with the intertidal life shows during the always changing tide levels an interesting special fauna. Often we can observe lava herons fishing in the isolated tidal pools.
On the whole walk we can see Galapagos sea lions, sally light foot crabs and marine iguanas. Depending of the season, there are also a lot of migrant shore birds, living on these rich coasts during wintertime. On the turning point of the trail is the start of a Galapagos fur seal colony. The Galapagos fur seal has found an ideal living space in the crevices and caves of the rocky lava coast.
Rabida looks red with the lava containing a lot of ferric oxide in the lava. Very special is the red sand of the beach with the saltbush vegetation and the silvery palo santo trees on the slopes. The batch of Rabida had before the last "El Niño) one of the biggest Galapagos sea lion colony. This colony has to recuperate again from the small remainder population. There is a small lagoon behind the zone of saltbush vegetation with (depending of the season) flamingos and white-cheeked pintail ducks.
Day 5: Darwin Station - Highlands of Santa Cruz
The visit to the Charles Darwin Research Station gives the opportunity to get to known the scientific work taking place in the National Park. Especially the raising programs for the different subspecies of the giant tortoises are very well documented. It is also a good opportunity to observe the Galapagos tortoises up-close; the symbol of Galapagos. In the Van Straiten Exhibition Hall, there is great documentation about the Galapagos Islands with photos and diagrams. The vegetation on this hike is exuberant green, and a lot of Darwin's finches are easy to spot.
Drive up to the highlands in a bus. In a short time one can see the transition between the different vegetation zones from the Arid zone to the Transition zone up to the Scalesia zone (and agricultural area), where the problems of introduced animals and plants are quite obvious. On the highest point of the road the National Park starts again. “El Chato”: we visit a farm in the highlands of Santa Cruz to look out for the Galapagos Tortoises in liberty. During their migration routes the spend part of the year in these highlands and can be easily observed.
Day 6: Española: Playa Gardner - Pta. Suarez
Wet landing on a wonderful, long, white beach made of coral sand. For this visit you don't need shoes. Very good place to observe the finches and mockingbirds in the saltbush vegetation, you can also enjoy the beach close to the Galapagos sea lions. You have the opportunity to swim and snorkel from the beach. Loop trail with an easy, dry landing on a jetty. The walk on a stony, rocky ground is long and quite difficult. The visitors can find even on the very beginning of the trail the colourful "Española marine iguana" and Galapagos sea lions. Everywhere the curious Española mockingbird approaches the visitors. The trail leads through the nesting colonies of blue-footed boobies, Nazca boobies and waved albatross. The big Española lava lizards are to be found everywhere.
A resting spot close to a cliff gives the opportunity to watch all the different marine birds flying along the coast. An albatross during his "take off" from the cliff is an amazing event to witness. There is another stop by the blowhole where the seawater is pushed through a fissure in the cliff into the air, depending of the waves and tide level till 80 feet high.
Day 7: Santa Fe - South Plaza
The wet landing is on a beach with a big sea lion colony. The short trail leads from the sea lion colony on the beach through dry vegetation of the Arid Zone to a wonderful forested cliff with high prickly pear cactus and then back to a second beach. Only the very attentive visitors can detect up there the endemic land iguana of Santa Fe, because he is perfectly camouflaged in the same colors of the vegetation and their territories are quiet big.
Easy loop trail with a dry landing on a jetty. It’s a small uplifted island with a cliff 25 metres high on the southern side of the island. The whole flat, rocky northern coast has a big colony of Galapagos sea lions and on the East point is a bachelor sea lion colony. Very attractive are the beautiful prickly pear cactus trees and of course the big colony of land iguanas. Depending on the season, the sesuvium ground vegetation changes its colour from intense green in the rainy season to orange and purple in the dry season.
Day 8: Black Turtle Cove – Baltra
With the dinghy we go into the big protected mangrove cove. In the far away small corners we turn off the motor of the dinghy rowing then noiselessly to observe the marine turtles.
There are a lot of them in the cove during mating and nesting season (December to February), but even out of season there are always some turtles staying back in the mangrove cove to rest. Spotted eagle rays, golden rays, white-tipped reef sharks and young Galapagos sharks can often be spotted.
At the end of the cruise, the passengers leave the Angelito again in the harbour of Baltra and your guide takes care of everything until you fly back to the continent.
Cabin Details
Standard Cabin
Double bed or 2 single beds, private bathroom, window, ocean view, A/C, safe, hairdryer.
Angelito Deckplan
![deck plan](../../images/image_local/7249/web_standard_angelito-deckplan.jpg)
Specifications
- Construction - Puerto Ayora, Galapagos in 1992
- Refurbishment - Guayaquil, Ecuador in 2013
- Category - Tourist Superior
- Gross Tonnage - 152
- Capacity - 16 passengers in 8 double cabins
- Length - 22.3 meters (70 feet)
- Beam - 6.6 meters (22 feet)
- Speed - 12 knots
- Electricity - 110 Volts in the cabins and bathroom and 220 Volt sockets available in Dining area.
- Engines - 2 CUMMINS ( Marine Diesel), 405 HP each and 2100 RPM (new 2013)
- Generators - 2 CUMMINS_CPG (Diesel) with capacity of 65KW/60HZ each (new 2013)
- PureVent (= Fuel cleaner): PureVent is a radical new approach to cleaning the gas vented from engine crankcases by using centrifugal separation technology to remove oil mist and other particles, and help protect the environment.
- Navigation - 2 GPS, Magnetic Compass, radar with range of 36 miles, echo-sounders
- Desalinization machine with capacity for 65 gallons of fresh water per hour
- Individual Air condition in all cabins, social areas, kitchen, and bridge and engine room: Compressors with the newest technology certified for use in protected areas.
- HUNTER - Satellite GPS Monitoring, with digital maps and a real time monitoring program
- Control of all strategic points of the boat like engine rooms with TV cameras and monitor on the bridge
- Safety Classification - SOLAS 74 (safety of life at sea) ISM an ISPS - MARPOL
- Smoke Detectors in each cabin and each area of the Yacht
- Life Jackets - 2 life jackets SOLAS in each cabin and additional several in different strategic points of the Yacht ,
- Life Rafts - in total 2 - one for 16 persons and one for 12 persons
- Zodiacs - 2 with capacity for 10 passenger each for transportation from the boat to the shore
- Outboard motors for zodiacs: Yamaha ecological with 25 hp each and with protectors over the propellers
- Decks - 4 (Sun deck, Upper Deck, Main Deck, Lower Deck
- 8 Crew - captain, first mate (steersman), multilingual naturalist guide, machinist, 2 sailors, cook and auxiliary cook
Whats included?
- On-board accommodation
- All meals during your cruise
- Activities/shore excursions as specified
- Bilingual naturalist guides
- Snorkelling equipment
- Transfers
What’s not included?
- International and internal airfares
- Arrival/departure taxes or reciprocity fees, visa fees where applicable
- Travel insurance
- Fuel surcharges
- Galapagos national park fee US$100
- Transit control card US$20
- Wetsuit rental
- Gratuities
- Any items not mentioned as included