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Punta Saurez Highlights:
Known in English as Hood Island, Isla Espanola is the southernmost part of the Galapagos.The Zodiac will glide into a protected cove,
and if we're lucky, sea lions will be bodysurfing in the waves and swimming around the boat to welcome us.
The terrain across the island is highly diverse. The hike will begin on the jetty, where the immediate terrain is low, flat savannah, slightly
sloping up from the shore, with low grasses and plants and sandy beaches dotted with smooth rocks. You will be amazed at the colorful sally
lightfoot crabs and sunning marine iguanas covering the rocks. The trail slowly is rockier toward the ocean side of the island, where enormous
waves crash huge cliffs.
On Isla Espanola, blue-footed boobies, Nazca boobies, Galapagos hawks, and warbler finches are only a few of the birds we will encounter;
the island also is home to the waved albatross. These birds can weigh as much as 40 pounds and are fantastic flyers. Their crash landings,
however, are less than graceful--they come down like bags of soggy clothes thrown hard across the meadow. Farther around the island is its
famous blowhole. The basalt rock at the sea edge has cracked, creating a fissure that, at high tide, fills with pressurized seawater. The
resulting geyser can reach 75 feet in the air. Photo opportunities here are outstanding.
This afternoon, you may attend the first of our Celebrity Xpedition Lecture Series aboard to learn more about the islands' geology.
Afternoon excursions include a high-intensity hike (follow the trail to the very edge of the dramatic southern cliff, where an
impressive blowhole gushes water up to 20 meters/65 feet in the air) or a Zodiac ride along the beautiful coastline with optional
landings for animal observation.
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