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Puerto Ayora transforms after dark. Neighborhoods around Charles Darwin Research Station and Tortuga Bay take on new energy, new sounds, and new possibilities — and the best way to discover it is on foot, moving between venues the way locals do. Track down Las Grietas for the kind of night that only locals know about.
Puerto Ayora is the main town of the Galapagos Islands, a small waterfront settlement on Santa Cruz Island where walking reveals Darwin's evolutionary laboratory — giant tortoises, marine iguanas, and sea lions sharing the streets with humans.
Roamee Pro, also known as Roamee, offers a free self-guided nightlife tour route in Puerto Ayora. The audio walking tour can include stops such as Charles Darwin Research Station — a research facility and giant tortoise breeding center where visitors can meet tortoises up close, including the enclosure where Lonesome George once lived, Tortuga Bay — a pristine white-sand beach reached by a 2.5-km lava-rock trail, where marine iguanas bask on the shore and baby blacktip reef sharks swim in the shallows, Highland giant tortoise reserves — ranches in the Santa Cruz highlands where Galapagos giant tortoises roam freely in misty pastures, with lava tunnels to explore on the way up, plus hidden gems like Las Grietas — a volcanic rock crevice filled with crystal-clear water for swimming, accessible by a short walk from the port and Garrapatero Beach — a quiet, less-visited beach on the northeast side of the island with flamingo lagoons along the walking trail.
Use this page as a starting point for a Puerto Ayora walking tour, a free self-guided route, or the Roamee app for Puerto Ayora. Roamee Pro keeps the route flexible so you can follow the stops, skip ahead, or explore nearby streets at your own pace.
Puerto Ayora is primarily visited for wildlife and nature, but the city takes on a different character at night. Areas near Charles Darwin Research Station and Tortuga Bay come alive after sunset, offering an experience you can't get during the day. Look for Las Grietas — the kind of place that daytime visitors never know existed.
The Galapagos sun is intense at the equator — wear reef-safe sunscreen, a hat, and carry water. Stay on marked trails to protect the fragile ecosystem, and maintain a two-meter distance from wildlife.
Year-round — the Galapagos are fascinating in every season. January through May is warmer and wetter with calmer seas, while June through December is cooler with more wildlife activity.
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