Salwen's "Galápagos: The Lost Paradise" Homepage
Galápagos: The Lost Paradise
by Peter Salwen
This site offers excerpts and images from Peter Salwen's
1990 book
Galápagos: The Lost Paradise, published
by Bantam-Doubleday-Dell
and illustrated with more than 300 spectacular color photos. To
date, more than 120,000
copies have been sold in English, Spanish, Italian, and German
editions.
Discovery

In the earth's geologic history, the Galápagos Islands are
about twoscore specks of
volcanic rock in the Pacific Ocean, straddling the equator some
600 miles west of Ecuador.
In the history of human thought, however, they represent one of
the great watersheds in
science and philosophy, if for no other reason than their having been
visited in 1835 by a twenty-
six-year-old British naturalist named Charles Darwin.

Darwin observed the islands' uniquely diverse, yet clearly
interrelated animals and plants
(especially the giant tortoises, iguanas, and finches) and used
those observations in building
his epoch-making theory of evolution. Before Darwin's visit,
those who speculated about
man's origins and place in the world groped for a coherent
organizing principle; after it they
would be equipped, however imperfectly, with the concept and
theory of adaptation and
evolution by means of natural selection -- a theory of such
intellectual power that it still guides
students of life a century and a half later.
Throughout the voyage of the Beagle
Darwin suffered horribly
and more or less continuously from seasickness. Nevertheless he
proved himself to be a
tireless, sensitive and observant naturalist. He not only
recorded and described every species
he could lay hands on; he measured, weighed, compared, and
experimented, examining the
feet and guts of land and sea birds, for instance, to learn
exactly how different sorts of seeds
and spores might have been carried to the islands. He rode on a
tortoise and noted its precise
speed (360 yards an hour).
More importantly, he thought deeply about what he saw, for he
recognized that it was not
only the strangeness of the animals that was worthy of notice,
but the obvious family
relationships among the various species and subspecies. His
speculations, transmuted after
another quarter-century of reflection and further study emerged
to shake the foundations of
scientific thought in Darwin's 1859 masterwork, The
Origin of Species by
Means of natural Selection: Or the Preservation of Favored Races
in the Struggle for
Life.
* * *
A long line of voyagers have had little good to report of the
Galápagos, beginning
with their first European discoverer, the Dominican friar
Tomás de Berlanga, Bishop
of Panama. "I do not think there is a place where one might sow
a bushel of corn, because
most of it is full of very big stones, so much so, that it seems
as though sometime God had
showered stones; and the earth there is dross, worthless, because
it has not the power of
raising a little grass."

In 1709, Robinson Crusoe--or rather, his real-life model, the
Scottish castaway Alexander
Selkirk--paid a visit with his rescuer, the buccaneer captain
Woodes Rogers. Later callers
included "Foul-Weather Jack" Byron, grandfather of the poet, and
Captain Amasa Delano, a
maternal ancestor of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
The first
full-time Galápagos
resident was a disagreeable Irish sailor named Patrick Watkins,
who had been put ashore on
Charles Island. Living in a sort of cave scraped out of the
lava, he somehow contrived to
grow a crop of potatoes and tobacco, which he traded for rum when
whalers came a-calling.
A fearsome, "beast-like," half-wild creature with wild red locks
and beard, Watkins captured
stray sailors, holding them until he had amassed a crew capable
of carrying him back to the
mainland in a stolen boat.
* * *
In the 1920s an unscrupulous Oslo promoter named Harry Randall
flooded Norway with
promotional literature touting the Galápagos as having
"soil so rich that 100,000
people could easily find homes" and "thousands of trees of every
type which bear fruit the
whole year around." He succeeded in conning over a hundred of
his countrymen, at six
thousand kroner a couple, into
shipping out for the islands.
Of the first 22 settlers, all but four were gone within six
months, twelve of them dying in
Guayaquil. Still, they kept coming, another hundred or so over
the next two years. Some of
them tried to set up a fish cannery, others a coffee plantation
and a sugar refinery. Within
three years the cannery was gone (boiler explosion) and so were
most of the Norwegians.
By then, the islands had become, in Victor W. von Hagen's
felicitous phrase, "part of a
millionaire's grand tour." William Kissam Vanderbilt, Vincent
Astor, and a whole parade of
wealthy yachtsmen made it their business to drop anchor off Post
Office Bay and bring back
tales (and, too often, specimens) of the local wildlife. Gifford
Pinchot, founder of the U.S.
Forest Service, was particularly delighted when a land iguana
actually crawled up into his lap
to feed on a proffered grasshopper. From then on, Pinchot
insisted on referring to the
creatures as "Lap Dragons."
Wildlife
It was a Flemish mapmaker, Abraham Ortelius, who first affixed
the Spanish term galápago ("tortoise") to the
islands, in 1570, and it has been asserted that without the giant
tortoises of the Galápagos, the Pacific whaling trade of
the nineteenth century would have been impossible.
The islands were a natural larder. Visiting Chatham Island in 1835,
Darwin noted,
In the woods there are many wild pigs and goats;
but the staple article of animal food is supplied by the tortoises.
The people count on two days' hunting giving them food for the rest
of the week. It is said that formerly single vessels have taken
away as many as seven hundred, and that the ship's company of a
frigate some years since brought down in one day two hundred
tortoises to the beach.
These depredations literally emptied
some islands of their tortoises, and brought the tortoise
populations of several others to the brink of extinction.
* * *
Meeting the tortoises is an awesome experience. With their ponderous
movements, great wrinkled necks, the ancient-looking beaks and
dark-ringed, tearing eyes, these antediluvean beasts arouse an
unaccountable sense of awe and pity. They look so ancient, you
could imagine that the individual in front of you had personally
witnessed the predations of the buccaneers and whalers, watched
his fellows carried off by the tens of thousands.

Almost every visitor to the Galápagos expresses
astonishment at the extreme tameness
of the birds, but the mockingbirds are undoubtedly the boldest of
all. Darwin told of lifting a
pitcher while a mockingbird, perched on the rim, drank from it
calmly. Ornithologist Bryan
Nelson found the Hood Island mockers particularly brazen: "If we
averted our eyes from,
much less turned our backs on the breakfast table, they jumped up
and gobbled the butter,
laying their slim beaks sideways to get bigger mouthfuls. Often
a tug at the hand alerted us
to the forty thieves stealing butter from our bread."
* * *
The endearing, clumsy-looking boobies (their name is said to be a
corruption of the Spanish
bobo, "clown") are a tourist
favorite, right up there with the
tortoises. They fish in small groups, plunging from a height of
50-80 feet into the coastal
shallows in a screaming 45-degree power-dive and emerging with a fish
caught in the open bill on
the way to the surface. They breed throughout the year, so we
got to see many of the typical
behaviors of courting and nesting couples: parading, jabbing,
"sky-pointing" with
outstretched, curved wings, and -- most startling of
all--incubating an egg by embracing it in
the webs of those amazing blue feet.

Española's jagged southern shore is eroded by waves into
narrow clefts. One of these,
near Punta Suarez, forms an inverted funnel, where the surf
collects and is forced into a
dramatic blowhole. Even on a quiet day the spume hisses thirty
or forty feet upward. The
island supports a good variety of animal species: the beaches,
curving eastward in a dreamy
arc, are colonized by sea lions, long-billed mockingbirds,
Galápagos doves, short-
eared owls, oyster-catchers and swallow-tailed gulls. Boobies
nest on a broad ledge above
Punta Suarez, and the area is home to a unique tortoise species
with an elegantly curved,
bulbous shell.
* * *
If you could visit just one island, you might want it to be
gem-like South Plaza. Tiny and
delightful, it offers an astonishing diversity literally at arm's
length: a sea lion harem on the
beach, complete with nursing pups, and land iguanas browsing like
ruminative dinosaurs at
the foot of an Opuntia grove. The
cliffs, lit by the slanting
late-afternoon sun, were densely crowded with graceful
swallowtail gulls, boobies (and their
enemies the frigate-birds) petrels, shearwaters, and a handful of
red-billed tropicbirds. The
abrupt tropical dusk descended as we waited for the tenders,
casting the blunt
Opuntia tree-cacti into eerie
silhouette, the dark silence broken
only by the plash of waves and soft cries of sea lion mothers and
pups.

But nothing had prepared us for the enchanting experience of
diving with the fur seals. They
played with each other and with us, scratching at themselves with
a flipper, spiraling --
dancing? -- together in a floating ballet, lithe, silken,
unspeakably winsome and somehow
sexy with their enormous, impassive
dark eyes. Their calm
acceptance seems to put you on a new and companionable footing
with nature -- exhilarating
and at the same time humbling,
Prospect
Since Darwin's day, the Galápagos have been a cynosure for
naturalists from around
the world. They come to study nearly every aspect of nature,
since the archipelago has
something unique to offer in every department: geology,
climatology, ichthyology,
ornithology, herpetology, plant systematics, evolutionary
studies, ethology and more. Over
three dozen major and scores of minor expeditions have focused on
the Galápagos,
and the bibliography of resulting scientific papers by now
numbers in the thousands.
On the purely commercial level, the Galápagos are valued
for their remoteness and the
exotic life forms that make them a fascinating tourist
destination. The same qualities make
them a priceless resource for science as well. But on what might
be called a philosophical or
spiritual level, they have another value. The archipelago
remains one of the few unaltered
ecosystems in the world, and the world needs to have such places.
Or perhaps it is simply
that we need to preserve the Galápagos as an act of
faith.
* * *
A hundred fifty-four years ago, the Galápagos helped
Charles Darwin find the key
to evolution, and thereby became a symbol of our intellectual
mastery of nature. In our time,
the Islands are destined to become a new symbol: either of our
continued heedless plunder of
the planet; or, if we are lucky, of our growing determination to
coexist in harmony with the
natural world.
All contents Copyright © 1989, 1996
by Peter Salwen and Mallard Press
All rights reserved.
Related links:
"Darwin's Illness"
"In Praise of Walking Sticks"
Peter Salwen's Homepage
Peter Salwen's Mark Twain Page
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