Our adventures on National Geographic Delfina began with a visit to one of my favorite islands in the world. Genovesa is home to millions of birds, including the largest colony of red-footed boobies, great frigatebirds with their red pouches inflated while looking for mates, and Nazca boobies with their eggs and young ones. There was plenty for us to enjoy today as we explored this special island.
6/23/2025
Read
National Geographic Delfina
Espanola Island
Pre-breakfast outings are the way to go if you want to squeeze every daylight minute out of these twelve-hour equatorial days. Kayakers departed to paddle along the low bluffs of Gardner Bay, and beach walkers and photographers spent time with sea lions, mockingbirds, and finches on this renowned white beach. We saw all three endemic finch species. After breakfast, we snorkeled with young sea lions and Pacific green sea turtles. The afternoon had us walking over, around, and between boulders with marine life nesting, resting, or courting along the way. Espanola is famous for its high percentage of endemic species – inside an archipelago of unique species! Espanola lava lizards and marine iguanas were frequent sightings, but the seabirds drew much of our attention: swallow-tailed gulls, blue-footed boobies, Nazca boobies, and the largest of the locals, the waved albatross.