Shoes for wet landings in Galapagos
We leave this Tuesday morning for Machu Picchu/Galapagos trip and are very excited despite looks like may be rainy in MP. My question is regarding wet landings in Galapagos. When you wear your wet shoes, do you then remove them and put on dry shoes and socks for the hike? I'm not sure I want to slosh around in wet shoes until they dry out. Thanks for any tips on this.
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Cheers,
Jan
The Tauck website said 1 pr of sturdy walking shoes AND one pair of reef or water sandals. Will Keen or Merrell or any sneaker- type water draining shoe be enough?
You need to work out what works for you and your feet. Do you need socks or not? You need shoes that will allow you to walk in comfort for a couple of hours at a time. You need shoes, or sandals, that are designed to be worn in ankle or knee depth water. That means specially designed water shoes (like water Merrils) or sandals (like Tevas) or rubber reef shoes. (These aren't suitable for hours of walking over dry rocks.) You can mostly get away with bare feet for the landing, as I have described in my earlier post, combined with regular walking shoes, or water Merrils (or similar) or water sandals like Tevas.
How many pairs of shoes you take depends on you & your feet. Most wet landings are on sandy beaches. Other times you can step over the water onto rocks or a landing. I took 1 pair of water Merrils that I wore, mostly, with socks.
This isn't a particularly hard trip to pack for. It is an expedition type trip. What you do need is a good hat with chin strap, bug stuff & sun screen, and lots of Band Aid type things for blisters, brain surgery repairs & other minor scrapes and something like lomotil for possibly tummy troubles. This is not a particularly tummy non-friendly location! It's just if you are away from the ship for some hours and you think you might feel …. um … well, you know …. You will be instantly cured if you have something on hand. Prevention is better!
You will have a wonderful, life changing adventure! Unforgetable.
Cheers,
Jan
This trip is actually the easiest trip to prepare for, one climate, one type of activity! We dd this trip years ago albeit ours was not with Tauck and did not include Macchu Picchu.
We found that the best all-around shoes were the Keene mesh sandals with closed rubber toes. The stay on your feet, the soles are thick and sturdy enough to protect you from any sharp rocks and they dry very quickly in the warm climate or back on the ship. Sneakers are great for the dry landings, but dry landings usually mean sharp rocky shores while navigating on/off a rocking zodiac. All this sounds alot more scary than it actually is. This is a trip of a lifetime.
Everything is casual, so bring comfortable clothing for warm (wet?) sticky weather and you will be fine.