Puerto Egas

This morning was a hike on the west side of Santiago through the tide pools.

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They were very colourful with pretty blue water and green algae and red crabs.

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In one place there was a bridge and a curved section that was empty when the waves went out.

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But full when the waves came in, terrifying the crabbies.

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We saw a pretty flower.

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We also saw one of the “thingies that runs along the beach”.

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We saw many marine iguanas.

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This one is eating. He scrapes the algae off of the rocks with his teeth.

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They use the side of their face to get in close.

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Sometimes they soak in the tide pools to regulate their body temperature.

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There were lots of galapagos doves. They are kind of pretty, for pigeons.

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We also came across a moulting crab. It was foaming to lubricate itself to make shedding easier.

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After he will pop out of a hole in the back of his shell.

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And leave a case behind, complete with eye covering.

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We found a little scorpion hiding under a rock.

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He looks much more like a scorpion after he wakes up.

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He has to hide under rocks so he doesn’t get eaten by the lava lizards, which are much lighter in colour here.

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There were also fur seals.

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Fur seals are also sea lions, but they have a different head shape and bigger ears than the galapagos sea lions.

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And much more fur, which is why they were hunted almost to extinction.

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They are harder to tell apart in the water.

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One of the big galapagos sea lions was playing with a marine iguana in the tide pool.

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He was holding him by the tail and not letting him swim away.

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He kept tossing him in the air and trying to catch him again.

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I think the sea lion was having more fun than the iguana. He finally escaped.

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While all of the other animals are hard at work, the baby galapagos sea lions are having a nap.

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Sometimes they have nightmares about escaping iguanas.

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