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Fauna · West Point Island, West Falkland, FK

Black-Browed Albatross Colony — Falkland Islands

The black-browed albatross (Thalassarche melanophris) colonies at West Point Island and Saunders Island in the Falklands are the most accessible major albatross colonies in the world — landing is straightforward from Zodiac boats, and the colonies of 10,000–25,000 pairs on coastal tussock slopes allow walking among nesting birds that sit on their mud-and-grass pedestal nests with complete equanimity at human approach. The albatross's courtship display — the sky-calling, the mutual bill-clapping, the synchronised wing-spreading that pairs perform facing each other — is one of the most graceful seabird social behaviours in the world, and the surrounding subantarctic landscape of tussock grass, Commerson's dolphins in the coves, and the ever-present westerly wind combine to create one of the South Atlantic's most complete wildlife experiences. The rockhopper penguin colonies sharing the same tussock add a second world-class species to a single landing.

When
Oct — Mar
Best viewing
Arrive by Zodiac to walk freely among thousands of nesting albatrosses on coastal tussock slopes, watching elaborate courtship displays at arm's length alongside rockhopper penguins and Commerson's dolphins below.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

Standing among black-browed albatrosses on the tussock slopes of West Point or Saunders Island is an encounter of extraordinary intimacy. Nesting birds sit at eye level on their tall mud-and-grass pedestal nests, entirely unconcerned by human proximity. Courtship pairs perform their ritualised display just metres away — sky-calling with heads thrown back, bill-clapping in rapid percussion, and synchronised wing-spreading that frames each bird against the pewter South Atlantic sky. The constant westerly wind fills the air with the rush of albatross wingbeats as birds wheel low over the colony before landing. Colonies of 10,000–25,000 pairs produce a continuous hum of vocalisations and the sharp, salt-heavy smell of a dense seabird breeding ground. Rockhopper penguins share the same tussock slopes, adding explosive vitality to the scene. Below the cliffs, Commerson's dolphins may be visible riding swells in the coves. The subantarctic light — shifting from flat grey to luminous gold — rewards photographers at almost any moment of the morning visit.

When to go

Oct — Mar

Getting there

Nearest airport: MPN. Nearest city: Stanley.

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