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I first went to the Galapagos Islands in the early 1990s. These islands--which
lie 600 miles off the west coast of Ecuador--are like no others on
earth. The diving is unique, in part because the islands are situated
at the confluence of seven oceanic currents, which create a marine
environment of astonishing wealth and diversity. But it was the unique
terrestrial wonders that defined these islands during my first visit.
Seeing sea lions, marine iguanas and blue-footed boobies in such abundance
was remarkable. I vowed to come back. And return I did, always during
February and March (in the early years of dive tourism, this was the "prime
season"). But as the live-aboards started to stretch their seasons
into summer, they began to have extraordinary encounters, especially
off of remote Darwin Island. Suddenly, the summer season became the
most popular, and live-aboards were booked two years in advance. Last
June, aboard Peter Hughes' Sky Dancer, I had a new opportunity to experience
some of the interactions that this marine wilderness is world-famous
for, both above and below the surface.
The Central Islands
The central islands--Fernandina, Isabela, Santiago and Santa Cruz
among them--are the most accessible and generally offer the calmest
conditions of all the islands in the Galapagos. As the only islands
that offer land tours, here is where you will encounter marine iguanas,
sea lions, Sally lightfoot crabs and the iconic Galapagos tortoise.
These islands were the focus of Charles Darwin's research and they
remain the stars that draw the tourist paparazzi today. Here, a selection
of top dives:
North Seymour Island Cousins Rock
Razor surgeonfish are to the Galapagos what blue-striped grunts are to
the Florida Keys: common on almost every dive. But at North Seymour,
a small island to the north of Santa Cruz, they are especially abundant,
almost obscuring the massive boulders that dot the bottom at 45 feet.
The other iconic species here is the white-tip reef shark, often seen
tucked under ledges and in hidey-holes.
Cousins Rock is one of the most photographically productive dives in
the central islands. Be prepared, because it may offer some of the best
fish and macro opportunities of your whole trip. Along striated ledges
that drop from 15 to below 80 feet, you'll find all manner of marine
life, including seahorses, frogfish and longsnout hawkfish for the macro
enthusiast, and king angel, guineafowl puffer, porcupinefish and giant
hawkfish for fish shooters.
On our dive, I encountered a school of black-striped salema that was
very likely the largest school of fish of any kind that I've ever seen.
I swam up to the leading edge, hoping they wouldn't dart away. Suddenly,
the light went almost black, and I was surrounded by thousands and thousands
of fish. I had a 50mm macro lens with me, but I wished I'd had something
wider to convey the enormity of this congregation.
Isabela & Santiago Islands
The main attractions at Isabela, the largest of the central islands,
are the manta rays that swim just offshore. They are tough to get close
to, however. Isabela is not like Socorro, where you are almost guaranteed
to shoot mantas at close range, but any time you're in the water with
mantas is special indeed. Another photogenic attraction is the sea lions
that play in the white water along the shoreline. During our dives here,
we also encountered large, solitary yellowfin tuna swimming just overhead.
The anglers in our group had traveled the world to try their luck with
these pelagic cruisers, but always in deep water. They were amazed to
see them just off the shore break.
Don't miss the opportunity to take a land tour on Santiago Island. We
hiked along the shoreline among massive numbers of marine iguanas and
crimson Sally lightfoot crabs. Lava herons and American oystercatchers
work the shallows, looking for small crustaceans, and sea lions and Galapagos
fur seals contribute to inspired photographic compositions.
After sunset, we did a night dive off Santiago. We descended to a flat
sea bottom at 45 feet, looking for red-lipped batfish. During the dive
we spotted more small octopuses than I'd ever seen on a single dive.
I kept seeing the divemasters flash their night lights to signal they
had found something special, and I'd swim over to find them pointing
at yet another octopus. There were also fascinating macro critters along
the rubble bottom, but for whatever reason, the batfish were absent from
this portion of seafloor.
Santa Cruz Gordon rock
Gordon Rock stands alone off the east coast of Santa Cruz, a collapsed
volcano where the sea can pass with occasional high-velocity current
and surge. Not so on our dive, but the pelagic life typical of Gordon
Rock was there en masse. A dozen hammerheads kept sweeping the seafloor
at about 105 feet, and eagle rays swam in parallel formation. For me,
the big attraction was the large congregation of king angelfish. We saw
king angels on almost every dive in the Galapagos, but at Gordon Rock
there can be 20 to 30 angelfish in one cluster. Of course, when they
are feeding they are random in posture, making attractive compositions
difficult. Other highlights of Gordon Rock included a school of pelican
barracuda and the omnipresent creolefish.
I wished I'd taken a macro lens with me, because I'd never seen so many
barnacle blennies in a single area before. Without going below 30 feet,
a dive could be well spent just looking at the tiny creatures that inhabit
the rocky walls at Gordon. In fact, a macro shooter could have a terrific
time throughout the Galapagos, but the wealth of bigger, dramatic marine
life makes it tough to concentrate on the tiny cryptic creatures that
inhabit this extraordinary marine wilderness.
The northern Islands
Located a 12- to 14-hour boat ride to the north, remote Wolf and Darwin
are restricted from land tours, but the celebrities are submarine anyway.
Here, you're likely to find concentrations of hammerheads, typically
warmer water, and the Brad Pitt of piscine encounters: the whale shark,
which makes its appearance between April and November.
Wolf Island
We cruised northward overnight, with Wolf Island coming into sight in
the morning's first light. Our first dive was at an area called Landslide,
the best place to find hammerheads. Here, a sloping boulder-strewn reef
drops from 15 to 90 feet, before it plunges to depths way beyond prudent
exploration. Most of our dives were in the 40- to 75-foot range, and
there were plenty of reef fish. The omnipresent king angels and razor
surgeonfish were here, but there was also a large school of bigeye trevally
to lure us into the blue. Along the reef are plenty of guineafowl pufferfish,
giant hawkfish, fine-tooth morays and hawksbill and green sea turtles.
Yet it is the hammerheads we came to see, and we saw them on all four
of our dives here. I found myself wishing for more and closer encounters,
but hammerheads are wary by nature. I had one fly-by close enough to
capture a reasonable image with my 50mm macro lens. Somehow, it always
seemed that the moment I stopped staring off into the blue watching for
hammers and caved into the temptation to photograph the reef life so
tantalizingly near, that would be the exact moment a shark would swim
by.
There is another part of Wolf that is quite interesting. I call it the
Pinnacle, because there is a pinnacle near the end of the dive that tops
out at about 20 feet and plummets to 120 feet. Others call it the Washing
Machine, because you feel like you've been through the spin cycle when
the current spits you out just past the pinnacle. Nearby is a fascinating
wall with a gentle drift past marble rays and a couple of large caverns
populated by a dozen or so white-tip reef sharks.
Darwin Island
At Darwin Island, about two hours north of Wolf, there is really only
one place to dive. Just to the north of the massive arch that defines
Darwin's topography is a submerged ledge in the 50- to 70-foot range.
On any given dive, sightings might include bigeye trevally, creolefish,
moray eels, turtles, king angels, barberfish, triggerfish and Peruvian
grunts. Anyone macro-inclined will see all manner of gobies and blennies
along these rocks as well, but it takes discipline to turn away from
the pelagic creatures patrolling the near blue and peruse the barnacle-encrusted
rock face instead.
We made six dives at Darwin, some with gentle current, but others with
a flow that raged so hard it was difficult to lift a camera into position.
We saw a lot of inspiring life, but we did not see a whale shark. Fair
enough. We knew that whale sharks--the marquee attraction for the Galapagos
this time of year--were not a slam-dunk guarantee. These are semi-random
happenings that can depend on the moon or the current or the water temperature
or personal karma. (And after we got home we learned that the whale sharks
did finally show up at Darwin, but they came later than usual.) Plus,
seeing a whale shark is not the same as getting close to one long enough
to render a quality photograph. So, truth told, I wasn't too disappointed
that we didn't see a whale shark. And what we did see was so spectacular
it made the trip well worth it. And with that rationalization firmly
embedded in my psyche, we began our long journey home, making a final
stop at Wolf to try again for the ultimate hammerhead shot.
InDepth
Water and Weather: Galapagos diving is for intermediate
and advanced divers only due to cool water (60 to 80 degrees), sometimes
challenging visibility, and formidable currents and surge. June to December,
the garua season (garua is the Spanish word for mist), is cooler and
drier above water; air temps average 65 to 75 degrees. Seas tend to be
rougher, and vis lower (20 to 80 feet), but plankton means more big animals,
including whale sharks. It's also peak time for mating birds and sea
lion pups. January to May is the warm season with air temps 75 to 85
degrees. Seas are calmer and vis is better (40 to 100 feet).
Getting There: International flights to Ecuador land
at either Guayaquil or Quito. (The air schedules require an overnight
stay on the mainland at both the front and back ends of a Galapagos tour,
so plan on two nights in hotels.) From either city, it's a two-hour flight
to the Galapagos on one of the domestic airlines, TAME or AeroGal.
Getting Around: With 13 large islands and more than
100 islands and islets scattered over 140 miles north to south, live-aboard
expeditions are the way to dive Galapagos. Peter Hughes Sky Dancer, www.peterhughes.com,
Galapagos Aggressors I & II, www.aggressor.com,
Galapagos Eco Explorer I, www.explorerventures.com.
Travel Reminders: U.S. and Canadian citizens need a
passport, but not a visa. There's a $100 national park entry fee (payable
in cash only), and a $25 departure tax leaving Ecuador.
For More Info: www.galapagos.org and
the Travel section on www.scubadiving.com.
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| Bigeye trevallys, Caranx sexfasciatus. |
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| Marine iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus. |
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| Galapagos sea lion, Zalophus californianus
wollebaeki. |
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| Galapagos penguins, Spheniscus mendiculus. |
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| Razor surgeonfish, Prionurus laticlavius. |
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| Scalloped hammerhead, Sphyrna lewini. |
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| King angelfish, Holacanthus passer. |
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| The Arch, a legendary landmark at Darwin
Island. The diving is typically done to the north of the Arch,
along a submerged drop-off. |
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| Spotted moray eel, Gymnothorax dovii. |
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