Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz is the most important (although not the largest) island in the Galapagos Islands archipelago, in Ecuador.
European and American interest in the Galapagos was stimulated by the publication of William Beebe's book Galapagos: World's End in 1924. This book inspired the beginnings of the eco-tourism that today dominates the Galapagos economy. Tourism began, however, as only a trickle (one of those early tourists was U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who visited the islands in 1938). There was also a trickle of Europeans immigration to the Galapagos around this time. The largest group was 60 Norwegians, persuaded to settle on Floreana in 1927 by several young journalists and a whaler who had written about the Galapagos. Floreana turned out to be anything but the paradise the promoters promised, as the colonists came to realize after the promoters left. Most managed to survive for a difficult year or two there. Some of the survivors eventually returned to Norway, others moved to the settlement on San Cristobal, and others settled on Academy Bay on Santa Cruz, joining another group of Norwegians that had set up a cannery there the year before. Within a few years, most of the colonists left as well, but a few remained. A few years later, other Norwegians came to Santa Cruz, as well as a sprinkling of others from Europe, America, and Ecuador, all seeking a simpler life. Among them were the four Angermeyer brothers from Germany, who settled on Santa Cruz in 1935. Their descendants still live there and operate touring yachts and a hotel in Puerto Ayora.
Wiki travel
Las Grietas
Non seulement la marche pour y aller est très belle, mais c’est un endroit magique : une sorte de fissure dans la roche qui atteint à peine la mer. Ce canyon naturel est rempli d’un eau saumâtre où les gens viennent se baigner. Jusqu’à 11 mètres de profondeur, l’eau est cristalline et vous pourrez voir de nombreux poissons. A ne pas...
Loberia
Certainement le meilleur spot que nous ayons fait à Puerto Ayora. Je n’ai définitivement pas le pied marin, alors c’est idéal. Loberia est à un quinzaine de minutes du port, donc pas le temps d’être malade en bateau, et il y a de nombreux lions de mer qui viennent jouer autour de vous et vous observer. Les guides du tour sont très sympatiques et ont tout l’équipement de snorkeling sur le bateau. L’eau est très claire et il y a des poissons...