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View of the yacht

Aida MariaRecommended yacht

Key facts
Class
Tourist
Type
Motor
Pax
16
Cabins
8
Length
20 feet
Speed
9 knots
Nights
3, 4, 7
Sails
Thu(3), Sun(4), Sun(7)
Dive
No
Prices
2008 season
7 nights:
$ 2,200
4 nights:
$ 1,444
Lowest prices per person
 
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Aida Maria started operating in the Galapagos in 1997, offering cruises around the islands on a charter basis as well as for individual travellers.

Aida Maria offers a great combination of comfort, style and economy for cruises around the Galapagos. The design is based in efficiency and comfort with ample social areas and 8 double cabins for 16 passengers: 2 in the main deck, 2 in the upper deck and 2 in the solarium providing optimum comfort for exploring the galapagos. The cabins have private facilities, A/C and hot water. The desalinator provides unlimited water.

Year Service Cabin Cruise length (nights)  
7 4 3
2008 Individuals All $2,200 $1,444 $1,128  
2008 Charter All $35,200 $23,100 $18,040  
* Rates subject to change, without notice
 
Year Seasons
2008

Prices are the same throughout the year unless indicated in the notes.

What's included
Accommodation in double sharing cabins, guided visits to the islands, all meals on board
What's not included
Galapagos National Park fee ($100 per person), TCT/Ingala tax ($10 per person), alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, round trip airfare from Guayaquil or Quito to the Galapagos, gratuities and tips for the crew and staff, airport taxes and personal expenses.
Notes

- Prices are in US dollars, and subject to change without notice
- Prices are per person
- Single supplement: 80% surcharge
- Children under 12 years old 20% discount
- Snorkeling gear available without extra cost
- Galapagos Cruise itineraries are subject to change by the authorities of the Galapagos National Park or acts of providence.

Sun Baltra / Bachas
Mon
Plazas / Santa Fe
Tue
Española
Wed
Floreana
Thu
Santa Cruz: Highlands / Darwin Center
Fri
RabidaSantiago: James Bay 
Sat
Bartolome / Santiago: Sullivan Bay
Sun
North Seymour / Baltra
Sun to Sun or Thu to Thu: 8 days / 7 nights
Sun to Thu: 5 days / 4 nights
Thu to Sun: 5 days / 3 nights

Aida Maria: day by day itinerary

Day 1: Baltra /  Las Bachas Beach
Fly from the Ecuadorian Mainland to the islands on an early morning 90-minute flight. As you prepare to arrive at Baltra, peer out the window. The landscape below will seem otherworldly - and it is for you have come to a place like no other. The Galapagos Islands are unique and you are about to see why. Your bilingual naturalist guide will greet you at the airport and assist you through customs. During lunch he/she will introduce you to the islands and specifically the flora and fauna you will encounter at our first destination: Las Bachas Beach. 

On the sandy white beaches of Las Bachas we will get a close look at a sea turtle nesting area and a lake frequented by leggy pink flamingos and other migratory birds. Afterward, we cool ourselves off with our first dip in the deliciously blue Pacific Ocean. As this is our first evening together, the crew will invite us to a pre-dinner cocktail on the yacht before the welcome dinner. If the night is clear, as it usually is, the stars above will bedazzle; look for the Southern Cross, the Big Dipper (turned up-side down!) and Orion.

Day 2: South Plazas Island & Santa Fe Island
After breakfast we will sail to Plazas Island, where a large colony of sea lions lounges daily in the equatorial sun. Without doubt these gregarious flippered clowns are the “stars” of the archipelago. They inhabit almost every island you’ll visit and they seem to think you are there for their entertainment. In the sea they will pull at your flippers and on shore they are happy to pose for the photographer. Isla Plaza is also peppered with hundreds of land and marine iguanas: Be careful where you step, what you thought was a stone may just be a sun-basking iguana. Soon you will notice their subtly diabolic grins and wonder what they find so humorous; you only hope the joke isn’t on you! Plaza also boasts excellent examples of typical Galapaganean flora such as the towering cacti “trees” that form the principal diet for both the land iguanas and the cactus finch. Other birds that may flutter by include lava gulls, yellow warblers and red-billed tropicbirds with their elaborate tails.

After lunch on the yacht, we continue to Santa Fe Island, a sea journey of 2 1/2 hours. Upon arrival to the island, we will be treated to a noisy welcome by the local sealion colony. Following our naturalist guide on the island paths we will come to Santa Fe’s main attraction, a towering forest of giant cacti. Scattered around the cacti trees you will see a number of the island’s indigenous sun-seekers: marine and land iguanas, the rainbow-streaked lava lizards and, if you are lucky, land tortoises - the namesakes of the islands. After our walk we will plunge into the salty sea and snorkel in the company of sealions, lion fish and sea turtles. Finally, we will return to the yacht for dinner.

Day 3: Espanola Island, Suarez Point & Garner Bay
Espanola is one of the most magical of all the islands. It is a place where the animals reign supreme and we humans are merely guests. As your dingy brings you to shore you will see sea lion pups sunbathing with marine iguanas and blue footed boobies nesting in between. Nearby may be a Galapagos Hawk. If it is boobie mating season watch the bonded pairs do the infamous boobie dance (if it’s not mating season ask your guide to demonstrate - after all it’s his job to teach you about the local fauna). As we follow the foot path around the island, we will pass hundreds of boobie nesting sites including one colony of masked boobies. There is a good chance we will see the thief-like frigate bird (which has the habit of stealing other birds’ food), as well as the stunning red-billed tropicbird and the nocturnal swallow-tailed gull. If it is the right time of the year (mid-April to December) we will also encounter the giant waved albatross. Apart from a few pairs that breed on Isla de Plata off the Ecuadorian mainland, all of the world’s 12,000 waved albatross breed on Espanola Island. At the end of the breeding season, the entire population leaves the island and heads out to sea, where they spend years without touching land. Astonishingly, four or five years may pass before the fledglings return to Espanola. As we make our way around the island we pass by El Soplador, a giant blowhole that explodes to heights reaching 70 feet. In the nearby tide pools you can often find lounging sea lions enjoying the blowhole’s misty spray.

Following lunch on board the yacht, we will visit Garner Bay, a great place for sunbathing, swimming and snorkeling. Lion fish, flycatchers, and Galapagos hawks will keep us company as we relax under the rays of the evening sun. Dinner on the yacht completes our day.

Day 4 Floreana Island, Cormorant Point & Corona del Diablo
Today when you awake and peer out your porthole you will see Floreana, one of the greenest islands in the archipelago. Ask your guide to tell you about its mysterious history laden with rumors of witches, murderous baronesses, blackmail and dubious disappearances.

Our first stop is Punta Cormorant, where we follow a footpath to a lagoon inhabited by flaming-pink flamingos. We will also pass by Carolina Beach, a sea turtle nesting area and a superb spot for watching sea birds and sea rays.
Back on our yacht, we skirt the island’s coast until we arrive at La Corona del Diablo (the Devil’s Crown), a sub-marine crater that offers some of the most spectacular snorkeling in the Galapagos. This is a great spot for seeing the wide array of tropical fish endemic to the islands as well as purple sea stars and spiky sea urchins. The crater’s most thrilling undersea creatures, however, are the white-tipped sharks. As with most of the creatures in the Galapagos they are unperturbed by your presence, so you can swim in their company freely and without fear.

After returning to the boat for lunch we will sail on to Post Office Bay, where the island’s original post office - really only a wooden barrel - was established in 1793. The current system still functions as it did three centuries ago: visitors drop off unstamped letters and postcards AND pick-up whatever mail they can hand deliver themselves when they return home! (Try it, it actually works!).

Day 5: Santa Cruz Island
Charles Darwin Station, Upper Region. After breakfast we sail to Santa Cruz Island, where we visit the world-famous Charles Darwin Station, a non-profit institution that dedicates itself to studying and protecting Galapaganean flora and fauna. This is one of the best places to see land tortoises, including Lonely George, the last survivor of his subspecies.
We will visit the station’s Tortoise Rearing Center. Here we can find itty bitty tortoises, hand-sized between the ages of one and five, and marvel at how they achieve such a large size as adults (500 lbs. or more!). Galapagos tortoises are believed to have a lifespan of over 100 years, so the young ones have a long life ahead of them as long as they receive the protection they need. Aside from the Station headquarters, Santa Cruz boasts the largest town and economic center of the Galapagos, Puerto Ayora. In this port-side town we can buy souvenirs of the islands (postcards, t-shirts, books, etc.). Check-out the uniquely Galapaganean ceramic shop near the entrance of the Charles Darwin Station. After shopping in Puerto Ayora and lunch on the boat (guests may dine in town if they desire), we will explore the upper region (‘parte alta’) of the island, a moisture-rich area with fertile volcanic soils. We will learn about the vegetation and animal life of this zone, often strikingly different than that found at lower elevations. Darwin finches, yellow warblers, and bright red vermillion flycatchers will flit in and out of the moss-covered trees. From this high vantage point we are treated to beautiful views of the surrounding archipelago.

In the late afternoon we return to town. For those who wish to familairize themselves with Galapaganean nightlife, this is your chance: the boat will be docked in port most of the night. (If your tour is a 5 day tour, our visit to Charles Darwin Station will complete our Galapagos adventure. From the station we will take a bus to the airport for departure).

Day 6: Rabida Island, Santiago Island
Wake-up in the morning to the sound of barking sea lions and the lapping of the sea. After breakfast travel by dingy to the seashell-pink sands of Rabida Island. Here we will see a pelican nesting area on the beach, and then we will set off on the short path across the island, gazing at the sea birds whirling overhead. After stopping at two Kodak-worthy viewpoints we will return to the boat for lunch. Two hours of sailing after lunch will bring us to our second stop for the day, Santiago Island. 

Egas Port we disembark and follow a footpath across the island, admiring the grinning marine iguanas, Darwin finches, rainbowed lava lizards, and endemic Galapagos hawks along the way. A special sight on Santiago are the endangered fur seals cooling off in the shade formed by the seashore grottos. These animals were hunted almost to extinction in the 1800’s for their soft furry coats. Fortunately due to the heroic efforts of conservation agencies, the Galapagos fur seal populations are stabilizing. After marveling at these exquisite creatures, we return to the boat for dinner.

Day 7: Santiago Island, Sullivan Bay & Bartolome Island
Our second day on Santiago Island takes us to awe-inspiring Sullivan Bay. At the turn of the century a huge lava flow spilled forth and right down to the sea; today you can stroll across this black volcanic expanse admiring its time-frozen ripples, bubbles and ropes. Our guide will help us distinguish two types of magma, Pahoe-hoe and A-a. You will also be amazed by the persistence of life when you see the hardy pioneer plants - such as crater parasites and cacti - that have managed to colonize this great volcanic desert. On the beach of Sullivan Bay we will encounter a small colony of penguins, and be befuddled by the strange sight of these arctic creatures on a tropical island. Watching their awkward bumbling and stumbling on land, it’s hard to believe they are so graceful in the sea.

After lunch we will visit nearby Bartolome Island, which at its highest point (114m) has one of the most photographed vistas in the archipelago. This island is quite young and quite volcanic. Therefore, it’s relatively unpopulated; only a small handful of die-hard plant and animal speicies have survived long enough to call this otherworldly lava-land home.
After exploring the island you can either head for the beach and snorkel in waters filled with a seemingly impossible mixture of tropical fish, white-tipped sharks, and penguins or hike to the summit. The effort of the climb is rewarded by a panoramic view that is undoubtedly one of the best in the Galapagos. In the evening we will reunite for a good-bye cocktail and dinner, exchanging addresses and stories from our seafaring, island-hopping adventure.

Day 8: North Seymour Island
After an early breakfast we will disembark at our last stop, North Seymour Island. Here we will see frigatebirds, the clownish blue-footed booby, and of course the ubiquitous sea lions. With luck we will witness the striking courtship display of the male frigatebird, in which he inflates a red balloon-like sac below his throat and struts his stuff for all of the young females. After our visit to North Seymour we will sail to Baltra Island to catch our plane back to the mainland.

Aida Maria: terms & conditions


INDIVIDUAL PASSENGERS:
· A 30% deposit must be accomplished within the next 5 days after confirmation to keep spaces. NON REFUNDABLE in case of cancellation.

· COMPLETE PAYMENT must be credited in our bank account 60 days prior sailing date*

LAST MINUTE BOOKINGS (within 45 days prior departure)
· Full payment is mandatory within the next 5 days after confirmation.
· NON REFUNDABLE in case of cancellation.

· In case of cancellation between 31 to 60 days prior sailing date, the penalty fee will be 50% of the cruise rate.
· In case of cancellation within 30 days prior sailing date, the penalty fee will be the TOTAL cruise amount .

CHARTERS & GROUPS:
· A 30% DEPOSIT must be accomplished within the next 5 days after confirmation to keep spaces. NON REFUNDABLE in case of cancellation.
· A 20% ADDITIONAL DEPOSIT must be accomplished 90 days prior cruise date.  NON REFUNDABLE in case of cancellation.
· 90 days prior cruise date confirmation or cancellation is mandatory otherwise spaces will be released.
· COMPLETE PAYMENT must be credited in our bank account 60 days prior sailing date*

· In case of cancellation between 90 to 60 days prior sailing date, the penalty fee will be 50% of the cruise rate.
· In case of cancellation within 30 days prior sailing date, the penalty fee will be the TOTAL cruise amount .

*Failure to receive payment of a confirmed booking base on the time frames given, spaces will be released automatically and consequently the booking cancellation

 PAYMENTS ONBOARD:
•Only cash and travelers checks accepted (USDollars).

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