The Galápagos Part 1: Santa Cruz and Bartolomé islands

The trouble with having high expectations is that an impressive experience must necessarily follow lest disillusionment takes hold. I am not sure I had specific expectations about our trip to the Galápagos, but I had an overall expectation that it would be an amazing experience, mostly because everyone says it is. Even now, after having returned, I don’t think I can pinpoint exactly what made the experience so good. Usually it’s the food and people that make a place stand out for me, but neither are particularly noteworthy there. »

The Galápagos Part 2: San Cristóbal and Española islands

Only 3.4% of the Galápagos archipelago is inhabited, only four of the 19 islands have permanent residents and only three have accommodation for visitors. Many islands, and parts of islands, are not accessible at all to tourists and are only visited by research scientists. Two Nazca boobys on a part of Española island where tourists are permitted to visit I was surprised and relieved to see how well tourism seems to be managed and restrained in this fragile place. »

Ecuador: Quito & Mindo Cloud Forest

We flew into Quito, another South American city sprawled along the floor of a high Andean valley, its city extending up the incline in all directions. It is the capital of Ecuador and sits at 2,850m in elevation. Within 24 hours of arriving, our first impression of Quito was that it was a place of such friendly people. From the customs officer who stamped us in with a warm welcome, to the friendly Uber driver, the helpful people at the supermarket and at the pharmacy, and the kind lady who stopped us in the street because we looked lost. »

Costa Rica: slothies and coffees

We stayed for the week in San José, the capital of Costa Rica, situated in the centre of the country. It is not a particularly nice city. The reasons for visiting Costa Rica lie outside of the city: the mountains, tropical rainforests, volcanoes and the beaches of the Pacific and Caribbean coasts. And the wildlife too, particaulrly the birds and the sloths. We went there to meet up with some of Dylan’s colleagues. »

Colombia

We arrived in Medellín and instantly loved it. It is the country’s second largest city after Bogotá and sitting at 1495m in elevation, is the capital of Colombia’s mountainous province Antioquia, which is nicknamed the “City of Eternal Spring” because of its temperate weather. Everyday hovers perfectly between 24°C - 27°C, is mostly sunny, low humidity, and at night it usually rains, breathing life into the city’s green canopies and veil of surrounding mountain forests. »