Muelle Tijeretas Snorkeling Guide, San Cristobal Island [Rated + Reviewed]

by | Last updated Jun 28, 2026 | Best Snorkeling Galapagos

A juvenile sea lion appeared out of nowhere, inches from my mask, blowing bubbles and spinning upside down like it was showing off just for me. Then it whipped around, stared at me with those enormous dark eyes, and darted off to do it all over again with my husband.

This happened repeatedly. Different sea lions, same playful chaos, the entire time we were in the water.

We are experienced snorkelers who have explored reefs across multiple continents, but sea lions in the Galapagos are unlike any marine encounter we have had elsewhere in the world.

Muelle Tijeretas was our very first taste of it. They were not just present. They seemed to enjoy interacting with us, completely unprompted, simply because they wanted to.

We snorkeled Muelle Tijeretas twice during our time on San Cristobal. Here is my complete snorkeling guide.

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Tijeretas Snorkeling

Rating: 🤿 🤿 🤿 🤿 

Playful sea lions and swimming marine iguanas at a free shore site earn this a confident 4 snorkel masks out of 5.

Galapagos Snorkeling Rating System

For anyone new here, this is the scoring system I use across every snorkeling site review.

Overall Snorkel Rating

🤿 🤿 🤿 🤿 🤿   =   World-class snorkeling and worth traveling for the snorkeling alone!

🤿 🤿 🤿 🤿   =   Incredible snorkeling and should be on your list of top things to do!

🤿 🤿 🤿   =   Decent snorkeling and worth the effort!

🤿 🤿   =   Worth consideration if you are running out of things to do!

🤿   =   Not worth it!

How to Get to Muelle Tijeretas

Map of How to get to Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal Galapagos

Map of how to get to Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal, Galapagos

Muelle Tijeretas is reached on foot from the main town on San Cristobal.

From our amazing San Cristobal Airbnb, the walk took approximately 25 minutes. The route takes you through the Interpretation Center, onto a boardwalk.

How to get to Concha de Perla in Isabela

Hubby and I walking up to the Interpretation Center on San Cristobal

After walking through the Intrepretation Center, we followed a stone pathway through lava rock and cacti. It is well marked with arrows and involves gentle ups and downs. Easy to navigate.

Walking through the mangrove tree tunnel to get to Concha de Perla in Isabela

Following the stone path to Muelle Tijeretas on San Cristobal in Galapagos

EP 2

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There is some shade at the start of the walk but it opens up to full sun for most of it. Sunscreen, a hat, and plenty of water are essential.

Scattered benches line the path and offer shade breaks. Use them.

Parking Lot at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Shade benches on the path to Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Hours: Free entry (quick sign-at the Intrepretation Center), 6 am – 6 pm, but go early.

The most important tip for Muelle Tijeretas: arrive early. On our first visit we arrived at 8:45 AM and had the platform almost entirely to ourselves, with only one other couple just leaving. By 11:30 AM when we left it was noticeably more crowded.

On our second visit we arrived at 8:30 AM and left at 12:30 PM, and the difference in crowd levels between arrival and departure was significant both times.

Best Tide Conditions 

Snorkeling at low tide in the morning at Muelle Tijeretas on San Cristobal

Snorkeling at LOW tide in the morning at Muelle Tijeretas on San Cristobal

As we snorkeled across the Galapagos, some sites are best explored at low tide for ideal conditions, like Concha de Perla, Los Tuneles, and Las Tintoreras on Isabela.

I am not sure if this applies to Muelle Tijeretas as much.

What I can tell you is that we snorkeled this site at low tide in the mornings, and had perfect conditions both times.

Mornings in general tend to be better than afternoons for snorkeling, since winds can pick up later in the day. Combine an early morning with low tide if you can, and you should be in great shape.

Petite Anse Lazio seen from a snorkeler's perspective

Super clear water at Muelle Tijeretas at low tide

Snorkeling Map

Concha de Perla Snorkeling Map Isabela Island

Muelle Tijeretas Snorkeling Map on San Cristobal

Muelle Tijeretas is a rocky cove with excellent visibility thanks to the rock bottom rather than sand. Here is how to navigate it for the best experience.

Right side (as you face the water): This is where the most action happens, by far. Follow the rocks out to the outer point. Little caves with schools of black-striped salemas along the way are where sea lions like to duck in and out, playing and exploring.

We saw the marine iguanas on the rocks right beside the entry platform later in the morning,

Middle: Less eventful. We saw the occasional sea lion passing through or a sleeping turtle on the bottom.

Left side: Snorkel along the reef shelf here. Quieter than the right side but still productive with big schools of yellowtail sergeants and the occasional turtle.

A fun detail: Occasionally a tour boat drops snorkelers into the cove, and the sea lions like to welcome the new arrivals and swim under the boat.

Entry

Cove like area we started from to snorkel the left side of Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Entry platform at Muelle Tijeretas

The platform at Muelle Tijeretas is a large double platform reached by stone steps. You gear up here, then take a few additional lava rock steps down into the water.

Sea lions claim the entry steps for naps. They will not move for you. Do not try to push past them. Just wait. This is their platform before it is yours.

Our safari ranger and tracker at Lion Sands River Lodge

Sea lion blocking the snorkeling entrance spot at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

My husband learned this lesson the hard way.

He tried to quietly tiptoe past a sleeping sea lion to get into the water, thinking he was being sneaky. The sea lion clearly did not agree.

It snapped its head up and let out one sharp, loud bark that basically translated to back off, buddy, I am taking my nap.

Haha, lesson learned. Sea lions are the boss.

Our safari ranger and tracker at Lion Sands River Lodge

A not-so-happy sea lion telling my husband off because his nap was interrupted at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

By late morning, people also sit on the steps. Combined with napping sea lions, getting in and out with fins on requires patience by the time the crowds build up.

The best exit point is the large rock all the way to the left as you face land. Clean and easy, assuming nobody else has claimed it.

Our safari ranger and tracker at Lion Sands River Lodge

Where to exit the water at Muelle Tijeretas at San Cristobal

What to wear: If you are planning a whole morning of snorkeling like we did, wear a rash guard and swim leggings. The sun in the Galapagos is unlike anything else I have experienced. Intense and unforgiving.

We ALWAYS bring our own gear. Here is all the snorkeling gear I personally brought to the Galapagos (and that I’ve tested over 87+ snorkeling sites!).

Our safari ranger and tracker at Lion Sands River Lodge

Posing with my snorkeling gear and a sea lion at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Galapagos Fish Sightings

Sea Lions

The headline act.

Sea lions at Muelle Tijeretas are playful, curious, and completely unbothered by your presence. They blow bubbles, spin upside down, whip around you in tight circles, and stare you down with enormous dark eyes from inches away.

So much personality!

One of the most special wildlife experiences of our entire trip happened right here, repeatedly, for free.

Yes, I’ve included a ton of sea lion photos in this blog post! Each one has so much personality that I could not bring myself to delete a single shot.

If you are curious what I use to capture moments like this underwater, here is my favorite underwater camera I used in the Galapagos.

They also love to play with things, and nibble.

My husband wears Scubapro Go Sport fins with orange accents, and the sea lions were endlessly curious about them, repeatedly trying to nibble at his fins while he swam (seen in the photos below!).

This tracks with other things I have seen. I have come across YouTube videos of sea lions playfully pulling on a whitetip reef shark’s tail, just messing with it for no reason, and even swimming around with an eel in its mouth like a toy.

It is the marine equivalent of that one sibling who will not stop harassing their brother or sister just because they can.

They are so entertaining!

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Curious sea lion at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal, Galapagos

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Baby sea lion saying hello at Muelle Tijeretas 

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lion showing off his back stroke at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Playful sea lions at Muelle Tijeretas

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lion following us around at Muelle Tijeretas 

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lion snorkeling with us at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Amazing action shot of a swimming sea lion at Muelle Tijeretas 

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lion swooping beside me and keeping his eye on me at Muelle Tijeretas

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lion loving my husband’s fins at Muelle Tijeretas at San Cristobal

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Hubby and sea lion snorkel dancing at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lion fascinated by my husband’s snorkeling fins at Muelle Tijeretas

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lions checking us out at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Sea lion with those dark beautiful eyes at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Sea lion with those dark beautiful eyes at Muelle Tijeretas 

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Graceful sea lion at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Snorkeling with a turtle at Anse Lazio

Sea lions contorting their bodies in these crazy position at Muelle Tijeretas

Marine Iguanas

We genuinely did not expect to snorkel with marine iguanas. I thought that only happened on a remote western islands cruise. 

Muelle Tijeretas proved us completely wrong. We later saw them swimming again at Concha de Perla on Isabela Island, so this turned out to be more common than we realized (or maybe we were just lucky? I don’t know?).

We watched two marine iguanas sun themselves on the rocks to the right of the entry platform as you face the water, then dive into the water once warmed up.

They swim with their arms and legs flat against their bodies while their tail sweeps side to side like a rudder.

Then they dive down and scrape and eat algae off underwater rocks with their prehistoric-looking claws.

Watching a marine iguana swim is like watching a tiny dinosaur take up the activity for the first time. Genuinely surreal.

Closeup of a cute turtle at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Marine iguana at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Closeup of a marine iguana swimming at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Closeup of a marine iguana swimming at Muelle Tijeretas 

Marine iguana getting a swim in at Concha de Perla

Marine iguana looking like a baby dinosaur at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

A gorgeous turtle swimming down to the ocean floor at Anse Lazio

Marine iguana munching on algae at Muelle Tijeretas 

A cute black-blotched porcupinefish at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Marine iguana using that long tail to swim at Muelle Tijeretas

Cool lined surgeonfish at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Marine iguana shown as a split shot above and below the water at Muelle Tijeretas

Cool lined surgeonfish at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Marine iguana swimming towards me at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Semicircle angelfish at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Look at those claws on the marine iguana at Muelle Tijeretas

Lined surgeonfish darting among the coral at Anse Lazio in the Seychelles

Marine iguana jumping in for an algae breakfast at Muelle Tijeretas 

Snorkeling with a Bermuda Chub and lined surgeonfish at Anse Lazio

Marine iguana taking a swim break at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Sea lion playing in the mangrove tunnel at Concha de Perla in the Galapagos

Marine iguana warming up before his swim at Muelle Tijeretas 

Fish

So many fish, so many photos. Here is what we spotted across both visits.

  • Bait balls of Black-striped Salemas gathered around the little sea caves
  • Parrotfish, Mexican Hogfish, and schools of Yellowtail Surgeonfish
  • One Pufferfish
  • Giant Hawkfish
  • Panamic Fanged Blenny

The last two were incredibly colorful fish I never would have spotted on my own since they blend in so well with the rocks and coral.

My husband is my water safari guide on every trip, he has an eagle eye for spotting things I swim right past, and he found both of these.

Pretty turtle at Concha de Perla in Isabela

Huge bait ball of black-striped salemas near the sea cave at Muelle Tijeretas 

Pretty turtle at Concha de Perla in Isabela

Beautiful parrotfish at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

School of Moonyfish at Anse Lazio

Giant hawkfish at Muelle Tijeretas 

Navigating through boulders and pockets of coral at Anse Lazio

Large school of yellowtail sergeant fish at Muelle Tijeretas 

Lined surgeonfish darting through brightly colored pockets of coral  at Anse Lazio

Beautiful yellowtail sergeant fish on the reef shelf at Muelle Tijeretas 

Snorkeling with penguins at Playa Isabela

Panamic Fanged Blenny at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal (I can’t believe my husband spotted this fish!)

Lined surgeonfish darting through brightly colored pockets of coral  at Anse Lazio

Front view of a Panamic Fanged Blenny

Other Wildlife Spotted Across Two Visits

  • Blue Sea Star
  • Panamic Horse Conch
  • Orange Cup Coral and Slate Pencil Urchin
  • A few turtles resting on the sea floor and swimming around.

We had even closer encounters with turtles later at Bahia Rosa Blanca during the Kicker Rock 360 Tour, so if turtles are a priority for you, that stop delivers even more.

Lined surgeonfish darting through brightly colored pockets of coral  at Anse Lazio

Blue Sea Star at Muelle Tijeretas

Lined surgeonfish darting through brightly colored pockets of coral  at Anse Lazio

Panamic Horse Conch at Muelle Tijeretas

Orange cup coral and Slate Pencil Urchin at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Orange cup coral and Slate Pencil Urchin at Muelle Tijeretas

Massive school of parrotfish at Concha de Perla in Isabela Island

Sea turtle at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

Practical Tips for Muelle Tijeretas

Marine iguana sunbathing on the boardwalk at Concha de Perla

Sea lion showing off his moves at Muelle Tijeretas in San Cristobal

  • Arrive early. The difference in crowd levels by late morning is significant.
  • The walk from town takes about 25 minutes with very little shade. Bring water, a hat, and sunscreen.
  • Bring your own snorkel gear. Nothing beats a mask that actually fits your face like a glove. Here are my favorite masks after decades of testing.
  • Snorkel the right side first for the most consistent wildlife activity.
  • Wait patiently for sea lions to move off the entry steps. They will not move for you.
  • The large rock on the far left is your best exit point if it is open.
  • Watch behind and beside you in the water, not just in front. Sea lions approach from every direction.

Final Thoughts

Muelle Tijeretas is one of the best free shore snorkel sites in the Galapagos, and we say that as snorkelers who have explored reefs across multiple continents.

The sea lions alone justify the trip. The marine iguanas swimming is a genuine bonus most visitors do not expect.

We snorkeled it twice during our time on San Cristobal and the second visit was just as magical as the first.

If you are staying nearby, go early, go often, and let the sea lions decide how the morning unfolds. They always do.

Sipping on a Selva Cocktail at Selva in Oaxaca scaled

I’m Nichole, the author of all the blog posts on Enriching Pursuits. Think of me as your geeky discerning travel friend who dives deep (Google Page 20, forums, travel groups deep!) to uncover the best ways to enjoy exceptional outdoor adventures and foodie experiences.

My husband and I are experienced snorkelers, day hikers, and casual cyclists who also love delicious street food, an incredible glass of wine, and the occasional Michelin-starred meal.

Balancing full-time careers, we cherish every second of our vacation days and love sharing tips to help you do the same. If this sounds like your kind of travel, subscribe below or drop me a note with any questions. I’d love to hear from you!

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