After taking the bus to Lima the previous night, I arrived in Paracas around noon. I’d originally intended to stay in Pisco, but the bus company I was on went directly to the more convenient town of Paracas. Located on the coast and adjacent to the Isla Ballestas and Reserva Nacional de Paracas, it was the ideal place to stay for a couple of days. I went against my judgment and followed a tour guide from outside the bus station to his ‘recommended’ hostal, the Brisas de la Bahia, just a block or two from the center of Paracas. After looking at a room and negotiating a decent price (though a little more than I’d wanted to pay), I decided it would be fine for a couple of nights. Paracas is a very small village that was devastated, though not as much as nearby Pisco, two years ago by an earthquake along the coast of Peru. They’ve managed to get back on track and the building boom was on. Besides many small hostals and hotels, larger luxury hotels are being built along the beach. The center of Paracas consists of half a dozen or so restaurants with seating along a wide paved beachfront walkway and the main dock from where boats to the islands leave. After the morning rush of people coming from and returning to Lima, Paracas becomes quite a nice, relaxing beach town.

The Isla Ballestas are known as the ‘poor man’s Galapagos’ and a highlight for anyone visiting Peru that’s interested in wildlife. I’d booked a seat on one of the boats the previous day which would leave around 8am. Waiting at the dock for 10-15 minutes, I boarded the small powerboat along with 20 or so people. There must have been 6-7 boats leaving around the same time, so was lucky to be on the 2nd boat of the morning. I managed a seat near the back of the boat, just out of ear shot of our English guide, but could pick up the key phrases. Cruising out towards the islands at a pretty good speed, our first stop was near the cliffs below the Candelabra, a carving in a sandstone hill in the Reserva Nacional de Paracas. This would be a preview of the Nasca Lines which I’d be seeing later in the week, though they are of no relation.

Just after leaving the Candelabra, I could start to make out the islands and lines moving across the sky. I had no idea what we were about to encounter. Millions of birds flew from island to island creating what looked like giant dark clouds. As we moved closer and wound around and even through arched openings within the islands we were able to see penguins, Peruvian boobies, cormorants, pelicans and sea lions in huge numbers. Sea lions draped over rocks seemed to pose for everyone in the boat as we passed by. Birds of all sorts flew overhead as we all quickly donned the hats we were encouraged to bring in case of falling gifts from the birds. The smell of guano was intense throughout the hour or so we cruised the islands. Every seven years, locals harvest the guano to be used for fertilizer. High above on the rocks, small makeshift buildings are used for 3-4 months during that time by workers.


Having decided against going to the Galapagos Islands during this trip in order to spend more quality time in Peru, I was really happy with the experience of the Islas Ballestas. Towards the end of the tour, we came across a beach full of sea lions, all female except for one large male. Two dozen or so animals that were swimming along the shore began to swim closer to us to see what we were all about. On the way back to port, the sun came out making the trip that much more enjoyable. There’s just something about being out on a boat soaking up the sun. A few hundred yards from the dock our boat came to an abrupt stop and turned back towards open sea. Our captain had spotted 3 dolphins surfacing around some of the fishing boats anchored in the bay. They followed us back towards the dock a bit before spotting another boat behind us to show off to. A great ending to our 2 hour tour.

Following lunch, I waited near some of the restaurants for the second half of the day, a tour out to the Reserva Nacional de Paracas. While I had some idea of what to expect at the islands, I’d not seen photos or read anything about the reserve. Some of the great surprises while traveling happen this way. A group of 10 of us drove 10 km to the entrance to the park where we spotted flamingos from several hundred meters away. The landscape was not as I’d expected it, being mostly sandstone and blowing sand with a constant breeze off the Pacific Ocean to keep things cool. On the ride out I’d met a couple on our van that had just finished a weeklong mission trip in Peru and had a few days to travel before their flight home. Turned out that Marc and Carol Dyke were from Calhoun, Georgia and we had several friends or acquaintances in common. They are both nurses and had worked in Hinsdale, IL for a time at a hospital my mom had worked for a bit as well. Small world, isn’t it? We continued driving out to a few viewpoints which were breathtakingly beautiful, high above on cliffs overlooking the coastline and the islands to the Northwest. We climbed to the top of the highest dune in the area for a panoramic view of the entire reserve and North to Paracas before descending to a small grouping of buildings surrounding a lagoon for lunch. The reserve was quite a surprise and an intriguingly beautiful landscape that I didn’t know existed in Peru. The small pleasures of traveling.

