Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Galapagos Expedition | Day 6

Genovesa Island: El Barranco – Darwin Bay

Welcome to bird island.

Genovesa, also known as Tower Island (though I’ll always remember it as Bird Island), is quite small but geologically and biologically very interesting. The chemistry of its lavas is identical to lavas that erupt at mid-ocean ridges (a magma type called MORB, or mid-ocean-ridge-basalt) and quite different from most oceanic island lavas.

There are birds everywhere you look here... masked boobies, red-footed boobies, Galapagos owls, frigates, swallow-tailed gulls, lava herons, and the rare lava gulls. Some are in trees on nests, some on the ground. Sometimes there’s a baby sitting all alone on a nest waiting for mom to return with food.

red-footed booby watching

bird watching in The Galapagos

a frigate bird...

female frigate bird

I’ll share a funny story about these frigate birds a little later.

Here’s a baby frigate...

frigate bird chick

and a baby Nazca booby...

Nazca booby chick

This bird is trying out for the part of the villain in a Disney movie...

Genovesa Island

I think he’ll be perfect.

Genovesa Island

After a swim in Darwin Bay, we returned to the Daphne. Our guide Charlie told us to change into our best T-shirts for a group photo on the top deck.

When we arrived, the crew was there dressed in their finest...

Daphne crew

Luis was preparing to serve champagne...

Luis

One of our fellow cruise members was acting a bit giddy, another was dressed in a black dress carrying a book...

wedding on the Daphne

wedding on the Daphne

It looks to me like John and Kendra are getting married...

wedding on the Daphne

wedding

And the capitán married them...

wedding on the Daphne

and the Mother of the Bride wore orange...

wedding on the Daphne

Surprise weddings are the best!

Champagne was served. Inside, dancing and more champagne...

dancing

dancing

This is the night we learned about what an amazing dancer Luis is!

We also learned how it feels to sleep on a moving boat after too much champagne.

I almost forgot to tell you the frigate bird story. Whenever the Daphne was traveling, these birds followed us, hovering just above the boat. One afternoon a bunch of people were sitting on the top deck chatting and laughing. You’ve probably already figured out where this is going. See the guy above who was the groom in the surprise wedding? Yep, right in his open, laughing mouth! Blech! He said it was really bitter.

female frigate bird

2 comments:

Susan said...

I LOVE those babies! Their feathers look so incredibly soft. I'm sure you weren't allowed to touch. I even love the Disney villain bird. He's really adorably homely.

Cindy said...

No touchy the babies! They were hard to resist. You see baby animals left alone all over the Galapagos. I always hoped their mamas hadn't forgotten where they left them.