A collapsed volcanic caldera at the northern edge of the Galapagos, Genovesa — 'Bird Island' — is where millions of red-footed boobies, frigatebirds, and storm petrels nest in complete fearlessness of humans. No hotels, no shops, just one of the world's great wildlife encounters.
Your ship anchors inside Darwin Bay, the island's flooded volcanic caldera — you reach the island by panga (inflatable tender) operated by your cruise crew.
💡 Pro move: Genovesa reopened to tourists in May 2024 after a temporary avian influenza closure. Biosecurity protocols (boot brushing, no outside food/plants) are enforced before each landing.
There is no pier or dock on Genovesa — all ships anchor in Darwin Bay and ferry passengers ashore by panga.
| Cruise Line | Typical Berth / Arrival | Dock or Tender |
|---|---|---|
| Galapagos liveaboard cruises (all operators) | Darwin Bay anchorage📍 | Tendered |
| Expedition ships (Celebrity Flora, Ecoventura, etc.) | Darwin Bay anchorage📍 | Tendered |
All excursions are guided walks and snorkels included in your cruise — there are no independent tours, taxis, or shops on Genovesa.
An easy 1.2 km round-trip walk along a white coral-sand beach and into the tidal rock zone. Red-footed boobies nest at eye level in the shrubs, frigatebirds inflate their red pouches overhead, and sea lions laze on the sand completely unbothered by your presence.
Find Galapagos cruise tours →A strenuous 1.6 km round-trip over cracked basaltic lava. After a steep dry landing and 25-step cliff climb (named after Prince Philip's 1965 visit), the trail crosses a wind-blasted lava plateau where millions of wedge-rumped storm petrels nest in rock crevices — hunted by day-hunting short-eared owls.
Find Galapagos expedition cruises →Snorkel along the steep caldera wall inside Darwin Bay. The drop-off into deep water brings pelagic species close — hammerhead sharks, eagle rays, green sea turtles, and playful Galapagos sea lions are regularly encountered. One of the top snorkel sites in the entire archipelago.
Find Galapagos snorkel cruises →Genovesa hosts the largest red-footed booby colony in the Galapagos, with both brown-morph and white-morph birds nesting in Palo Santo trees and Muyuyo shrubs along the Darwin Bay trail. Unlike blue-footed boobies, red-foots nest in vegetation — their red feet are visible as they land and perch.
Find birding Galapagos tours →All walking on Genovesa is confined to two official National Park trails — no independent wandering is permitted.
From the panga wet landing on Darwin Bay Beach, the trail follows the shoreline past nesting frigatebirds and red-footed boobies, then turns inland over tide pools and coral rock to a turnaround point. The beach itself is a highlight — white coral sand shared with sea lions.
🗺️ See full route in Maps →Dry landing on the volcanic cliff face on Darwin Bay's southern arm, followed by a steep 25-step climb. The trail crosses an exposed lava plateau through a dwarf Palo Santo forest to a clifftop viewpoint over the open ocean, where storm petrels swarm and short-eared owls hunt in daylight.
📍 Open in MapsUpcoming cruises that call at Genovesa Island, Galapagos, Ecuador. Dates, prices, and ports of call change — always confirm with the cruise line before booking.
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