Thursday, February 16, 2017

Isla de la Plata

Puerto Lopez is more or less surrounded by a National Park called Machalilla -- one of the reasons we chose to go to Puerto Lopez is because the water is cleaner!  Part of the park is an island about 20 miles off the coast called Isla de la Plata (Island of Silver, so called because there was a legend that Sir Francis Drake hid treasure there).  The island is also called the "poor man's Galapagos" because some of the animals found on the Galapagos live there.  Since we are not planning to go to the Galapagos this year, we thought we would take advantage of this opportunity.

We took a day trip to the island, which started with about an hour's boat ride through an amazingly calm Pacific.



There are giant green turtles that make their year-round home here
 Emmett took this shot with his new Christmas camera

Fisherman feeding fish guts to the turtles so the would come to the surface for the gawking tourists (us)
There was a pod of dolphins in the bay

After the boat docked, we started a hike up to the top of the hill -- it was pretty short (maybe 15 minutes) but steep, and it felt long in the heat.




Up at the top of the hill were the nesting grounds of the blue-footed booby (which we first heard about in a children's book, and my kids have been kind of obsessed with seeing them) and the frigate bird.  

 Famous blue feet 
The blue-footed booby is known for doing an elaborate high-kicking mating dance (which we actually got to see) 

This is what their nest looks like -- apparently they poop in a circle?

 A fuzzy white baby nestling under its mom (we got super close up to the birds -- they are very social and used to people -- though of course the moms do not want you close to their babies)

Two young ones, one still fuzzy, the other with more grown up feathers
(Emmet took these great shots -- turns out he is quite he photographer)

This is the frigate bird -- they are larger than gulls, but the same type of scavenger. 
The males have a scarlet throat that they puff out during mating season 

There were a gazillion frigate birds all over the sky 

This is what they look like without the puffy throat

After the hike through the mating grounds, we walked back down the hill to the beach.  By this time it was about 1pm, and we were all super hot and really hungry.

Annalise trying so hard to be patient, waiting for lunch

They fed us fruit and sandwiches on the boat, and then we went to a little reef to snorkel for about 45 minutes.  The snorkeling fair, the equipment was not super clean -- but really, a bad day snorkeling is better than a good day doing lots of other things.

It was a wonderful day.  The Galapagos is on our bucket list, maybe in a few years...

Emmett taking pictures

frigate birds 

More on the coast

As some of you may remember, there was a big earthquake near the coast of Ecuador in April 2016. It was really devastating, with over 650 people killed and thousands injured, and countless buildings damaged.  Ten months later, there is still lots of evidence of the quake -- piles of bricks and rubble where buildings used to stand, cracked buildings patched with concrete.  This was the first time we had really seen the direct effects of it in person.

Space where a building used to be 

This one hasn't been cleaned up yet... it must be kind of overwhelming

The airport tower in the port city of Manta was destroyed (though the runways were apparently OK). They are rebuilding the airport, and the current "provisional" airport building is actually a tent!



On a happier note, here are a few more shots from our week in Puerto Lopez -- it's a beautiful place.

Annalise and Kit Kittredge on the bus from Manta to Puerto Lopez 

This funky mini-taxi is called a "tuk-tuk," I think it's a glorified motorcycle with 2 back wheels  

 Annalise having fun riding in the tuk-tuk

Arriving at the hotel after a rain storm







Free shade tents on the beach! 


This is the skeleton of a beached humpback whale that's on display, to educate people about this threatened species.  The whales migrate through this area in the summer


Tuesday, February 14, 2017

More pictures of our vacation to Puerto Lopez


Puerto Lopez is a town of 15,000 people on the Pacific coast.   Its economy depends on tourists from Ecuador, Columbia and Argentina as well as fishing.   



View of Puerto Lopez from our hotel room 

our hotel

view from our hotel room. 

Annalise and Kate on the hotel deck where we ate breakfast each morning

Puerto Lopez beach at dusk

Puerto Lopez housing

more housing along a canal

view of Puerto Lopez from the water 

mid-morning weighing and selling of shark caught each day 

men carrying a gutted shark to scale

weighing a shark for sale 

men gutting and preparing fish to sell 

fish market at the beach