Galapagos - Darwin Research Center, Santa Cruz Island

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Sun 9 Mar 2008 13:43
00:44.827S  90:18.414W
 
On Saturday (3/8), in the midst preparation for our longest sailing leg (2,900 miles), we squeezed in a quick walking tour of the Darwin Research Center, which is just down the road from the town of Puerto Ayora on Santa Cruz Island.
 
The research center is famous for its Galapagos tortoise repopulation project.  Originally, there were fourteen species of the giant tortoise here in the Galapagos Islands.  The early European visitors to the islands (pirates, whalers, fishermen, explorers) loved that the tortoises weren't afraid of humans, and proceeded to decimate the tortoise population by taking as many of them as they pleased to feed the men on their sailing ships while voyaging.  Today there are only eleven species of giant tortoises left.  Three species are completely extinct and one species is hanging on by a thread with only one tortoise living.  This particular tortoise's name is Lonesome George, and he has been living at the research center for years (tortoises live a good, long time as long as we humans let them).  The research center constantly tries to get Lonesome George interested in some closely related (in a genetic sense) females, but he has not been interested in the whole process of reproduction whatsoever.  Cloning will be used as a last resort to save Lonesome George's species, but the center is not very excited about the expense and low probability of success associated with cloning.
 
We did catch a glimpse of Lonesome George, but he was too far away for a good picture.  Instead, we got loads of other marvelous beasts to pose for us.  The center is set up such that visitors like us are allowed to walk directly through the natural tortoise 'corrals' or pens.  It doesn't feel like a pen at all as the walls are barely visible behind the vegetation.  A walk through the tortoise coral felt like a walk through the woods - except that we literally crossed paths with giant reptiles.  
 
Pictures 1 and 2 are of a few girl turtles we ran into along the way.  Pictures 3, 4 and 5 are all of the same gargantuan turtle.  We loved him so much we hung out with him for a while and finished a complete photography session.  We saw quite a few other turtles, but none compared with the subject of pictures 3, 4 and 5.  He was overwhelmingly impressive.
 
The center also studies the indigenous iguanas and picture 6 features the fattest iguana we've seen so far.  He looks a little bit like our fat cat Peaches that my sister Margy and her husband Rick are so kindly looking after for us.  I wonder if Peaches would enjoy having a giant iguana around to play with.  It might make her feel good to have someone around that is chubbier than she is.
 
That's it for giant turtle pictures.
Anne

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