|

Tour
Portfolio
Wonders
of the Empire
About
Our Tours
Inquiries
Inka's
Empire Tours
Peru
Tours

Legacy of the Incas
Machu Picchu - Lake
Titicaca (11
days/10 nights)

Sacred Sites of the Incas
Machu Picchu - Lake
Titicaca (12 days/11 nights)

Empire of the Sun
Machu Picchu - Lake
Titicaca (14 days/13 nights)

Ancient Civilizations of Peru
Colca Canyon - Machu
Picchu Lake Titicaca (16 days/15 nights)

Archaeological & Ecological Treasures
Galapagos - Machu Picchu Lake Titicaca (or Amazon) (18 days/17
nights)

Grand Tour of the Inca Empire
Colca Canyon - Amazon Machu Picchu - Lake Titicaca (22 days/21 nights)

Ancient & Colonial Capitals
Machu Picchu (10
days/9 nights)

Inca Trail to Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu (13 days/12 nights)

Machu Picchu & Galapagos
Machu Picchu - Galapagos (15 days/14 nights)

Galapagos & Machu Picchu
Galapagos - Machu Picchu (18 days/17 nights)

Amazon
Bio-Trip
Manu National Park (8 days/7 nights)
Galapagos
Cruises

Enchanted
Isles of the Galapagos
Galapagos (11
days/10 nights)

Galapagos
& the Kingdom of Quito
Galapagos - Andes (16 days/15 nights)

Galapagos
& the Amazon
Galapagos - Amazon (16 days/15 nights)
Ecuador
Tours

Historic
Haciendas of the Andes
Cotopaxi - Antisana
- Otavalo (7 days/6 nights)
© 2008
Inka's Empire Corporation. All rights reserved.
|


Quito & the Galapagos
Islands

Coral I and
Coral
II, Galapagos Islands. Photo: KleinTours.
Illuminates the theory of the origin of
species...
-- Kimberly
Fay, LuxuryLink.com, March 2003
Land & Cruise
Price (8 days/7 nights)
Royal US$ 4,725 Imperial US$
4,200 De
Luxe US$ 3,740
Royal and Imperial include a Junior
Suite; De Luxe a Moon Cabin aboard the luxurious yacht Coral
I or Coral II. The prices
and itinerary shown are typical but vary by yacht. Please select
a yacht to view details about each vessel and its itinerary.
Also available with a 7-night
Galapagos cruise, instead of 4 nights.
When considering a Galapagos cruise,
note that the islands are distinct in their flora and fauna.
Certain islands provide a greater or unique opportunity for observing
certain species. Thus, landings on more islands reveal more species
and, importantly, the amazingly different adaptations each species
has made to its own insular world. Accordingly, a 7-night cruise
is preferable. It also offers a greater choice of luxury vessels.
The land and cruise price includes
escorted transfers, private excursions with professional guides
and chauffeurs on the mainland and semi-private excursions with
a certified naturalist in the Galapagos Islands, entrance fees
except Galapagos National Park, indicated category of accommodations,
all meals except beverages, all transportation except air flights,
and travel insurance for
guests through the age of 59 years. Over that age, there is a
supplementary fee. All prices are per person based on two people
sharing a guest room. For a detailed description of our services,
see About
Our Tours.
Map Hotels 10 Nights Galapagos Cruises What You Could
Add in Ecuador
Intra-Tour Air Flights
& Fares
Air fares are in addition
to the land price.
Quito - Galapagos -
Quito: US$ 440

Select a Yacht
4-Night Luxury Galapagos
Cruises
Beluga Coral I Coral II

The 1535 La Iglesia
de San Francisco, Quito, Ecuador. Photo: David Bate.
Upon arrival in Quito, you'll be
escorted to the Villa Colonna, a charming colonial home in the
historic district, then dine at chef Rafael Osterlicht's Blu.
Walking the next morning along the cobblestone streets of Ecuador's
capital, founded in 1534, through centuries-old parks and plazas
to churches filled with gold; you'll contemplate Gothic, baroque,
Moorish and neo-classical art, all blended with the mestizo sentiment,
and imagine you've gone back in time to the astonishing colonial
world. In the evening, take a horse-drawn carriage past the beautifully
illuminated facades of the Spanish monuments, and savor fusion
cuisine at La Belle Epoque.
A flight the next morning takes you
from the peaks of the Andes to the Galapagos Islands. Cruising
for five days aboard an intimate luxury yacht and making twice-daily
landings with a naturalist, you'll encounter the animals that
inspired Charles Darwin. On Bartolome, whose volcanic formations
create a moonlike landscape you'll never forget, hike among marine
iguanas and lava lizards, and have the rare opporunity to snorkel
among penguins and marine tortoises. As you sail to other, unique
isles in this magnificent archipelago, you'll see the adaptations
of the wildlife to their differing environments that led Darwin
to his theory of evolution by means of natural selection.
Returning for your last night in
Quito, experience the finest in French cuisine at Chez Jerome.
For an appreciation of the volcanic splendor, native cultures
and Spanish colonial life of the Andes, consider adding one of
our luxury
hacienda tours. For Ecuador's rainforest
wildlife, consider one of our luxury
Amazon expeditions.
See Galapagos Geology on the Web
for geology, history and related web sites.
What
Luxury Link has to say about
Enchanted Isles of the Galapagos.
What You Could Add: Two or three extra days on Santa Cruz Island.

Typical 7-night itinerary,
Galapagos Islands. Map: Quasar Nautica.
Highlights
Quito
Day 1: Flight to Quito, Ecuador.
International arrival in
the afternoon or evening, reception and transfer to your hotel.
Dine at chef Rafael Osterlicht's Blu. Overnight in the Villa
Colonna.
Day 2: Quito. As you drive to the historic district, La
Basílica is a striking sight to behold. Morning walking
tour in the colonial quarter, highlighted by La Plaza de la Independencia,
the Cathedral, La Compañia de Jesús, La Iglesia
de San Francisco and La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced. At the
City Museum, see what daily life was like in colonial Quito.
Lunch of Ecuadorian-European fusion
cuisine at Octava de Corpus. To complete your insight into the
country's archaeology, history and cultures; investigate the
Central Bank Museum. Continue to El Panecillo. Return to your
hotel. Early this evening, board a horse-drawn carriage for a
romantic ride through the narrow streets of Old Quito. Arrive
at La Belle Epoque to savor gourmet fushion cuisine. Afterward,
return to your hotel. Overnight in the Villa Colonna.
Optionally, you may select the Intiñan
Museum for your afternoon excursion:
Lunch of Ecuadorian cuisine at La Choza.
Afterward, visit the Museo Intiñan. An Inca monument marking
the Equator was discovered on the site, and is more exact than
the position determined by the French Geodesic Mission in the
mid-1700s. The museum features interactive exhibits on how the
Incas located the "middle of the world", and science
experiments. Return to your hotel. Early this evening, board
a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the narrow
streets of Old Quito. Arrive at La Belle Epoque to savor gourmet
fushion cuisine. Afterward, return to your hotel. Overnight
in the Villa Colonna.
Galapagos
Day 3: Quito - Galapagos Cruise.
Transfer to the airport.
Flight to the Galapagos. Entrance into the National Park,
reception and transfer to your yacht. Afternoon island landing
and excursion with a naturalist. Back on board. Guides' briefing
on the next day's activities. Overnight on the Coral
I or Coral II.
Days 4, 5 & 6: Galapagos Cruise.
Morning and afternoon island
landings and excursions with a naturalist. Back on board. Guides'
briefing on the next day's activities. Overnight on the Coral
I or Coral II.
Quito
Day 7: Galapagos Cruise - Quito.
Morning island landing and
excursion with a naturalist. Transfer to the airport. Flight
to Quito. Reception and transfer to your hotel. Dinner of
French gourmet cuisine at Chez Jerome. Overnight in the Villa
Colonna.
Home
Day 8: Quito - Home. Transfer to the airport for your flight home.
Exceptions to the itinerary:
The Galapagos cruise itinerary described
and illustrated below is typical but varies by yacht. Therefore,
it should be used only as a guide for learning about the different
islands and their wildlife.
Royal Class accommodation in Quito
is a Royal Suite in the Hotel Plaza Grande.

Colonial Quito with
El Panecillo in the distance, Ecuador. Photo: Dan Heller.
Day 1: Flight to Quito, Ecuador
International arrival this afternoon
or evening in Quito. Reception and escorted transfer to
the Villa Colonna,
a charming colonial home in the historic district. Dine at Blu, where chef Rafael Osterlicht creates a fusion
of Peruvian and Mediterranean cuisine. Overnight in the Villa
Colonna.
Day 2: Quito
Breakfast. Quito, the capital of Ecuador and a world
heritage site, is located at an elevation of over 9,000 feet
in the Andes mountains. Founded by Spaniards in 1534,
it is one of the oldest cities in South America and has the largest
colonial quarter. Walking along its cobblestone streets
through centuries-old parks and plazas to churches filled with
gold, you'll imagine you've gone back in time to that astonishing
world.
As you drive to the historic district,
the neo-Gothic La Basílica
is a striking sight to behold. Though not of colonial vintage,
it's the place to see bizarre and fascinating gargoyles in
the form of giant tortoises, iguanas, anteaters, monkeys, pumas,
condors and other Ecuadorian fauna. Begin in La Plaza de la Independencia,
where the country's history was written. On one side is the Cathedral (begun
in 1640), considered to be the oldest in South America. Down
the Calle de las Siete Cruces (Street of the Seven Crosses) is
La Compañia de Jesús
(begun in 1605), one of the
great baroque masterpieces of the continent. The oldest of Quito's
and South America's colonial churches is the baroque La Iglesia de San Francisco
(begun in 1535). It was constructed over an Inca temple and decorated
with images of the sun to lure in the native people to their
conquerors' religion. The Moorish style of La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced (begun in 1538 and rebuilt in 1737) is most
likely explained by artists seeking refuge in South America after
the expulson of the Moors from Spain in 1492. At
the City Museum, see
what daily life was like in colonial Quito.

La Plaza de la Independencia,
Quito, Ecuador. Photo:
Mylene d'Auriol Stoessel.
This afternoon at Octava de Corpus,
a lunch of Ecuadorian-European fusion cuisine served in a colonial
home. To complete your insight into the country's archaeology,
history and cultures; investigate Ecuador's ancient past in the
pre-Inca, Inca and colonial galleries of the Central Bank Museum.
Continue to El Panecillo, overlooking
the colonial quarter. The significance of this hill dates back
to Inca times, when it was known as Shungoloma ("hill of
the heart"). Before the Spanish arrived, the local people
used it as a place to worship the sun. Now, its summit is crowned
by a graceful statue of the Virgin. Return to your hotel.
Early this evening, drive to La Basílica
for a magnificent view of the colonial quarter. Continue along
ancient Calle de las Siete Cruces (Street of the Seven
Crosses) to La Plaza de la Independencia,
admiring the beautifully illuminated Spanish monuments. Enjoy
the night view of the historic plaza and the Cathedral, before
boarding a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the
narrow streets of Old Quito, past the splendid facades of La Compañia de Jesús, La Iglesia de San Francisco, La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced
and traditional Calle Cuenca.
Arrive at La Belle Epoque
to savor gourmet fushion cuisine. Afterward, return to your hotel.
Overnight in the Villa Colonna.

Traditional, horse-drawn
carriage, Quito, Ecuador. Photo: Hotel Plaza Grande.
Optionally, you may select the Museo
Intiñan for your afternoon excursion.
Lunch of Ecuadorian cuisine at La Choza. Afterward, visit the Museo Intiñan
("Path of the Sun"), which presents the cosmic vision
and customs of Ecuador's indigenous people. An Inca monument
marking the Equator was discovered on the site, and is
more exact than the position determined by the French Geodesic Mission
in the mid-1700s. The museum features interactive exhibits on
how the Incas located the "middle of the world", and
science experiments, such as balancing an egg on a point and
seeing the effects of the Coriolis force. Return to your hotel.
Early this evening, drive to La Basílica
for a magnificent view of the colonial quarter. Continue along
ancient Calle de las Siete Cruces (Street of the Seven
Crosses) to La Plaza de la Independencia,
admiring the beautifully illuminated Spanish monuments. Enjoy
the night view of the historic plaza and the Cathedral, before
boarding a horse-drawn carriage for a romantic ride through the
narrow streets of Old Quito, past the splendid facades of La Compañia de Jesús, La Iglesia de San Francisco, La Iglesia y Convento de la Merced
and traditional Calle Cuenca.
Arrive at La Belle Epoque
to savor gourmet fushion cuisine. Afterward, return to your hotel.
Overnight in the Villa Colonna.

Land iguana and opuntia
cacti, Galapagos Islands. Photo: Ron Dahlquist.
... we seem to be brought somewhat near
to that great fact
-- that mystery of mysteries --
the first appearance of new beings on this
earth.
The natural history of these islands
is eminently curious, and well deserves attention. Most of the
organic productions are aboriginal creations, found nowhere else;
there is even a difference between the inhabitants of the different
islands; yet all show a marked relationship with those of America,
though separated from that continent by an open space of ocean,
between 500 and 600 miles in width. The archipelago is a little
world within itself, or rather a satellite attached to America,
whence it has derived a few stray colonists, and has received
the general character of its indigenous productions. Considering
the small size of the islands, we feel the more astonished at
the number of their aboriginal beings, and at their confined
range. Seeing every height crowned with its crater, and the boundaries
of most of the lava-streams still distinct, we are led to believe
that within a period geologically recent the unbroken ocean was
here spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be
brought somewhat near to that great fact -- that mystery of mysteries
-- the first appearance of new beings on this earth.
-- Charles Darwin, Voyage of the Beagle, 1845

Male frigate bird displaying,
Galapagos Islands. Photo: Marco Robalino.
... from so simple a beginning
endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful
have been, and are being evolved.
Thus, from the war of nature, from
famine and death, the most exalted object which we are capable
of conceiving, namely, the production of higher animals, directly
follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several
powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a
few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone
cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple
a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have
been, and are being evolved.
-- Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection, 1859

Sea turtle, Galapagos
Islands. Photo:
Bonnie Pelnar.
Northern Islands
Day 3: Quito - Galapagos Cruise (Baltra Island &
Santa Cruz Island)
Breakfast. Early
morning transfer to the airport for the flight to Baltra Island
(27 sq. km.). The flora on this small island include introduced
species of cacti and the native species of palo santo,
susevium and mangrove. Fauna include land iguanas,
marine iguanas and sea turtles. There are no visitors'
sites. Arrival, reception and transfer south to your yacht in
Puerto Ayora, on Santa Cruz Island. Briefing on the ship and
the Galapagos Islands by your guides and staff of the
Galapagos National Park.

Giant tortoise, Galapagos
Islands. Photo:
David Bate.
Santa Cruz Island (986 sq. km.) is the second largest in the
archipelago and the most populated. Home to the Charles Darwin
Research Station, it has many trails, beaches and places for
snorkeling. Flora include cacti, saltbrush and
mangroves. Fauna include
several of the 11 remaining subspecies of giant tortoises,
marine iguanas, sharks and various species of waterbirds
and landbirds, such as vermillion flycatchers and Darwin's
finches. Afternoon excursion to the Santa Cruz Highlands,
where you will observe Los Gemelos, twin volcanic craters,
and Cerro Chato. Chances are good for sighting the famous
giant tortoises that gave these islands their name. Additionally,
you can walk inside the dormant lava tubes. Overnight
on the Coral I or Coral
II.

Red-footed booby, Galapagos
Islands. Photo:
David Bate.
Day 4: Galapagos Cruise (Rabida Island & Santiago
Island)
Rabida Island (5
sq. km.) is small with red-hued beaches and volcanic formations.
Its color is due to the high content of oxidized iron in the
lava. Dry landing at the red beach frequented by sea lions.
A short trail leads to a saltwater lagoon, where we will find
small colonies of flamingos feeding. The brown pelicans
nest in the mangroves found on the far side of the lagoon.
Other island fauna include white-cheeked pintail ducks,
boobies and nine species of Darwin's finches. A
750-meter trail leads to a volcanic peak covered with aromatic
but bare-branched palo santo trees and ends at a great
snorkeling spot. Hike, snorkel and ride out in a dingy to the
reefs.

Goldrimmed surgeonfish,
Galapagos Islands. Photo: Bonnie Pelnar.
Santiago Island
(585 sq. km.) is the fourth largest in the archipelago. The eroded
shapes on its black lava shoreline form pools that house a variety
of wildlife and are wonderful for snorkeling. Wet landing on
the dark-sand beach at Puerto Egas. Most of the landscape
is tuff-stone layers and lava flows; the surroundings are prime
for observing Darwin's finches, Galapagos doves,
Galapagos hawks, hunting herons, great blue
herons, lava herons, American oyster catchers
and yellow-crowned night herons. You'll enjoy the sight
of marine iguanas grazing upon algae beds at low tide,
sharing space with red Sally light-foot crabs.
There is a colony of fur seals swimming
in deep pools of cool water, called "grottos". This
is an excellent place for swimming and snorkeling in search of
octopuses, sea horses, starfishes and other
sea life caught in the small tidal pools. In the ocean, you can
admire moray eels, hammerhead, white-tip and Galapagos
sharks, golden and white-spotted eagle rays,
jacks, wahoos, tunas, groupers, red-tailed
and dog snappers, sea lions, sea turtles
(November to May), black and yellow-black Galapagos
corals, sea fans and sponges. Overnight
on the Coral I or Coral
II.

Juvenile seal lion,
Galapagos Islands. Photo: David Bate.
Day 5: Galapagos Cruise (Fernandina Island & Isabela
Island)
Fernandina Island (642 sq. km.) is the third largest, youngest
and westernmost in the archipelago. Many eruptions have been
recorded since 1813, making Fernandina the island most likely
to become volcanically active. After a dry landing at Espinoza
Point, you'll see the largest colony of marine iguanas
in the islands, mingling with Sally light-foot crabs.
Other fauna include Galapagos penguins, Galapagos hawks
and sea lions. There are also nesting sites of flightless
cormorants. These birds have adapted to their environment
by perfecting their ability to hunt for food in the ocean --
their wings, tails and feet have evolved for swimming. To see
these birds is to witness evolution in action. Among the volcanic
formations, observers will note "pa-hoe-hoe",
other unusual lava formations and recent lava flows. Flora
include brachycereus cacti and mangroves, whose
beds extend into the sea, indicating a healthy and thriving ecosystem.

Swimming Galapagos penguin,
Galapagos Islands. Photo: Bonnie Pelnar.
Isabela Island (4,588 sq. km.) is the largest in the archipelago.
It is formed by five young, active volcanoes, of which Volcano
Wolf is the highest point in the Galapagos (1,707 meters,
or 5,599 feet). On a panga ride along the cliffs of Tagus
Cove, look for Galapagos penguins and other sea birds
before making a wet landing at Urbina Bay. The bay, at
the foot of the Alcedo Volcano, was uplifted from the
sea in 1954. Flightless cormorants and pelicans
nest along the coast, and sea turtles and manta rays
can be seen in the bay. The highlands include large and colorful
land iguanas. Other fauna include the largest population
of giant tortoises (about 4,000 but difficult to spot),
Galapagos hawks, magnificent frigate birds, marine
iguanas, hammerhead, white-tipped and Galapagos
sharks, eels, groupers and snappers.
Continue to Punta Vicente Roca for
dinghy sightseeing, snorkeling and scuba diving. Enjoy the high
cliffs with tuff-stone, ash and other lava formations; caves;
nesting sites for brown noddies and blue-footed boobies;
and up-close encounters with sea lions, fur seals
and the occasional dolphin. Overnight on the Coral
I or Coral II.

Galapagos penguin, Galapagos
Islands. Photo:
David Bate.
Day 6: Galapagos Cruise (Bartolome Island & Santa
Cruz Island)
Bartolome Island (1.2 sq. km.), small and moonlike, has one
of the most famous sights in the archipelago: Pinnacle Rock.
After a dry landing, you will see volcanic formations,
including lava bombs, spatter and cinder cones.
Hike to the summit for an impressive panorama of Sullivan
Bay, including the eroded tuff cone of Pinnacle Rock,
and the surrounding islands. The exotic flora of red mangroves,
tiquilias and cacti all add to the experience.
During the ascent, you'll see a large colony of marine iguanas
and lava lizards. Snorkeling will give you a chance to
cool off and see marine fauna, such as Galapagos penguins,
nesting sea turtles (January to March) and white-tipped
sharks.

Sea turtle, Galapagos
Islands. Photo:
David Bate.
Santa Cruz Island. On an excursion to Black Turtle Cove,
located near Las Bachas Beach in the north of the island, take
a panga ride though the mangroves, during which the outboard
motor of the small boat is turned off, allowing close observation
of sea turtles, white-tipped reef sharks, spotted
eagle rays and yellow rays. Overnight on the Coral
I or Coral II.

Giant tortoise, Galapagos
Islands. Photo:
David Bate.
More about the distinct islands of the
Galapagos
Day 7: Galapagos Cruise (Santa Cruz Island & Baltra
Island) - Quito
Morning visit to the Charles Darwin
Research Station, staffed with international scientists conducting
biological research and conservation projects. Here, you can
admire giant tortoises, part of the program to breed,
rear and reintroduce different subspecies of tortoises back into
their natural habitat. Surrounding the station is an impressive
giant prickly-pear cactus forest with many land birds.
Afterward, some free time to walk around the town of Puerto Ayora.
Transfer to the Baltra Island airport for
the flight to Quito. Arrival, reception and transfer to your
hotel. Dinner of French gourmet cuisine at Chez Jerome. Overnight
in the Villa Colonna.
Important note: This itinerary is
subject to change without notice for various reasons, including
but not limited to safety, weather, mechanical breakdown, unforeseen
emergencies, and the discretion of the captain, guide, yacht
operator and Galapagos National Park.

Magnificent frigate
bird, Galapagos Islands. Photo: David Bate.
Day 8: Quito - Home
Breakfast. Early
transfer to the airport for your flight home.

Thank you for choosing
Inka's
Empire Tours.
© 2008
Inka's Empire Corporation, Luxury Peru Tours & Travel. All rights reserved.
|