Ecuador

Illa Experience Hotel

A beautifully restored 10-bedroom property that dates back over 300 years, the Illa Experience Hotel flawlessly blends colonial history and contemporary design. The hotel embraces its San Marcos neighbourhood location, famous for the artistic community that has thrived in this part of the city’s Old Town.

Rail Travel - Tren Crucero

Rail Travel - Tren Crucero

Trains are wonderful ... To travel by train is to see nature and human beings, towns and churches and rivers, in fact, to see life. So wrote Agatha Christie and who are we to argue.

Our rating: 
4

Guayaquil and the coast

Guayaquil and the coast

Guayaquil is Ecuador’s largest and most populated city. Sitting on the Pacific coast, the city is also the main entry point to hundreds of miles of stunning coastline. However, there is more to this area that just beautiful beaches. Humpback whales can be seen breaching spectacularly out of the ocean; all three species of Boobies can be found all on one island; rare coastal cloud forests can be explored...and did we mention the beaches?!

Our rating: 
4

Cuenca & the south Sierra

Cuenca & the south Sierra

Ecuador’s southern region is markedly different to the dramatic geography of the other parts of the country. The peaceful, unpopulated southern sierra offers a far more tranquil way of life. The jewel in this bucolic crown is Cuenca, Ecuador’s third largest city. Yet with a population of only 200,000, it is a world apart from Quito and Guayaquil.

Our rating: 
4

Avenue of the Volcanoes

Avenue of the Volcanoes

When the Nazca and South America tectonic plates collided 100 million years ago, it gave rise to the backbone of South America – the Andes. This geological collision also produced a secondary mountain chain within Ecuador’s Andes, the Cordilleras. The result of which was dozens of lofty volcanoes, several of which remain active. When explorer Alexander Van Humboldt visited the valley between the two ranges at the beginning of the 19th century, he coined it “The Avenue of Volcanoes”. The moniker has stuck ever since.

Our rating: 
4

The Amazon

The Amazon

Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest, also known as el Oriente (simply, ‘the East’), covers almost half of the country and spans nearly the entire Andean border with Peru and Colombia. It is difficult to fathom the sheer scale of The Amazon rainforest – it covers an area greater than India and Mexico combined. This makes Ecuador’s small portion of it all the more remarkable- boasting over 1,600 species of bird, 800 species of fish, 350 species of reptiles and 300 species of mammals.

Our rating: 
5

The Cloud Forest

The Cloud Forest

First things first - what’s the difference between a Cloud forest and a Rain forest? We’re not witty enough to offer a punchline, so let’s stick to the science! The key difference is elevation. Cloud forests are found on higher ground, typically between 1,800 – 3,500m. Consequently, they are much less humid, offering a cooler climate that results in the mesmerizing mist layers that shroud the forest for at least a part of each day.

Our rating: 
4

Quito

Quito

At 2,820 metres above sea-level, Quito is the second highest capital city in the world, and the only one to be directly threatened by an active volcano! The narrow city runs along the slopes of Volcan Pichincha, which last spewed an ash-cloud as recently as 1999. Yet Quito has always been the cultural and political centre of Ecuador, dating back to the Inca rulers of the 15th century.

Our rating: 
4

The Galapagos Islands

The Galapagos Islands

This volcanic archipelago is synonymous with both the creature to which it is named after (Galápago is the old Spanish word for the Giant Tortoise) and the inspiration to Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution. Yet there is so much more to these mesmerizing islands than finches and the iconic tortoise. Located 960km off the Ecuadorian coast, The Galapagos consists of 13 islands and dozens of islets – forging a truly unique ecosystem with a dazzling array or wildlife and landscapes.

Our rating: 
5

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Ecuador