DiveTheGalapagos
Contributor
Definitely bring gloves with reinforced palms, for protection against barnacle covered rocks you're always grabbing, but not for warmth. Keep them thin for dexterity but again, neoprene palms will shred. I recommend a 1.5-2mm reef type glove with kevlar palms. Same goes for wetsuit knees...need reinforcement as neoprene will get ripped. The boats all provide Dive Alerts and SMBs and most provide the Nautilus Lifeline...though I don't think the Aggressor does yet. Currents are stronger during high season than low season. If you are gluten intolerant, bring snacks. Chefs do pretty good at meals, but rarely with snacks. If you get seasick, definitely bring your own meds as what you can buy in Galapagos is pretty lame.
Something that seems to throw everyone is the recommended 10% tip. But that is split by the entire crew: The guides who 'made' your trip, the captain who sailed you safely through some pretty intense seas, the engineers who always had the Nitrox fill right and tanks ready, the chef who always matters, the first mate at the helm when the captain isn't (called a timonel in Galapagos), the guys driving the Zodiacs that safely pick you up (Zodiacs are called pangas in Galapagos), the cabin boys who clean your cabin every day and the others always assisting all of those mentioned. As I broke it down for someone who thought that was high, if you paid $5000 for a trip and leave a $500 tip being split 10 ways, then you are actually tipping $50 pp for a lot of 24/7 service for 8 days and 7 nights. Granted, there are crew members that might not earn it and tipping is always discretionary and based on service, but assuming that is good, then $7.14 per crew member per day is not a massive tip.
Also, if you run a credit card onboard, anything you charge is subject to 12% tax.
Something that seems to throw everyone is the recommended 10% tip. But that is split by the entire crew: The guides who 'made' your trip, the captain who sailed you safely through some pretty intense seas, the engineers who always had the Nitrox fill right and tanks ready, the chef who always matters, the first mate at the helm when the captain isn't (called a timonel in Galapagos), the guys driving the Zodiacs that safely pick you up (Zodiacs are called pangas in Galapagos), the cabin boys who clean your cabin every day and the others always assisting all of those mentioned. As I broke it down for someone who thought that was high, if you paid $5000 for a trip and leave a $500 tip being split 10 ways, then you are actually tipping $50 pp for a lot of 24/7 service for 8 days and 7 nights. Granted, there are crew members that might not earn it and tipping is always discretionary and based on service, but assuming that is good, then $7.14 per crew member per day is not a massive tip.
Also, if you run a credit card onboard, anything you charge is subject to 12% tax.