Visitors come to coo at the wildlife – the giant tortoises that lumber across the highlands, the comical blue-footed boobies, the yellow-scaled land iguanas munching the cacti.
But, arguably, the underwater world around these volcanic islands offers even richer pickings for wildlife watchers.
Sea lions flourish all over the archipelago: on shore they flop and lollop in ungainly fashion; see them underwater and they’re lithe, agile – and never-endingly playful.
There’s no need to dive – snorkel near a sea lion-favoured rock or beach and let the fun begin. It’s not uncommon for sizeable families to zip around you, coming close to investigate before darting off at the last moment. They might even take a nibble on your flippers.
The channel between North and South Plaza Islands is home to a large, and curious, population, while on the tiny isle of Mosquera, between North Seymour and Baltra, you can snorkel amid a sea lion creche, inexpert youngsters tumbling all around.
The marine iguana, endemic to the Galápagos, is the planet’s only sea-going lizard. It’s thought to be nine million years old, and looks like an extra from Jurassic Park – which makes swimming with one all the more bizarre.
Though they’re not massive – growing up to 1m long – it’s slightly unnerving sharing the water with a scaly black dragon as it munches on the sub-aqua algae. Pristine Fernandina, the westernmost of the archipelago’s central islands, is a good spot to swim with the lizards in the shallows before watching them emerge to bask on the rocks, where they projectile-snort the saltwater out of their nostrils.
Remember: hammerhead sharks have big heads but small mouths, a fact that might just help you cope when floating in a swirl of 300 to 400 of the fish – not uncommon in the Galápagos waters.
Gordon Rocks, just north of the Plazas Islands, are the remains of an extinct volcano. Where the caldera wall drops off into the abyss, huge schools of hammerheads, as well as eagle rays, whitetip sharks and turtles, gather in the whirling current.
The ultimate hammerhead sites require a bit more effort to reach. The far-flung northern islands of Wolf and Darwin are a long sail, but it’s here that the sharks congregate en masse, where you’ll likely see vast schools of barracuda and jacks, and where the immense whale shark often glides by.
The Galápagos penguin is the most northerly species of the flightless bird. The population is small – only around 1500 – but, with luck, you can still see them speeding about the shallows.
One of the best places to try is around Bartolomé Island. Million-strong schools of silvery salema fish attract hungry predators: watch penguins and sea lions burst through the minnows, as well as scouring the rocks for black coral and large moray eels. On Isabela Island, the waters off Punta Vicente Roca are also home to penguins, as well as the deep-diving flightless cormorant – another Galápagos endemic.
Where to start? The waters are full to bursting. Manta rays, in massive flying squads, can be seen off Mosquera and Seymour, and up around Wolf and Darwin. Turtles, magical to watch underwater, are widespread – try offshore islets around Floreana. For the weird red-lipped batfish head to Tagus Cove on Isabela.