Saturday, 11 April 2026

Island Tour - Part 8 - Isla de Lobos

 After dropping off the car, Jayne and I had another two days in Corralejo. We decided to take a trip across to the nearby nature reserve of Isla de Lobos (Lobos Island). It is located just off the island, and requires a short, 10 minute ferry trip across the sea. 

On arrival on the island, you will find a small information centre, with details of the now-extinct Monk Seals, that once inhabited the island. The only toilets on the island are also to be found here. Please note, as well, that your visit is limited to just four hours. A permit is also required to visit, which you can buy for free online. We, however,  travelled across with Water Taxis, and they arranged the permit for us.


We set off to walk around the island, heading first to the volcano La Caldera. It was a good 20 minute walk to the base of the volcano, on well marked paths, but the climb to the top was much trickier than our previous walk to the Hondo Volcano, earlier on the trip. It took us a good 30 minutes to walk to the summit! The wildlife was less than I'd expected, but we did see Berthelot's Pipits, Ravens, Yellow-legged Gulls, Rock Doves and Atlantic Lizards on the walk across. The gulls were breeding on the island, with many pairs on nests, just a few metres from the paths.

Walk to the top of La Caldera

Yellow-legged Gull on nest

After the volcano, we walked across to the lighthouse, at the far end of the island. Again, there were excellent paths, but the walk did take us a good 40 minutes. Two Egyptian Vultures were seen on the walk across, and this is the only (heavily cropped) flight shot I managed.

Egyptian Vulture

We also saw a few butterflies on the walk across, including Painted Ladies, Small White, Greenish Black-tip and this beautiful Clouded Yellow, that posed nicely. Here's an uncropped shot, showing the small plants it landed on as well.

Clouded Yellow

After a quick spot of lunch at the lighthouse (picnic, no facilities here), we had a look at a small pond and added Black-winged Stilts (adults and juveniles), Common Sandpiper and a single Grey Plover (trip tick) to the island list. Our final stop, on the walk back to the "little harbour" (el puertito), was a very beautiful area called Las Lagunitas, which were a set of brackish lagoons. The only addition was a single Whimbrel.

Las Lagunitas

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