Macaroni Penguin Colony — South Georgia Rookery
The slopes above Bay of Isles and Cooper Bay on South Georgia host the world's largest macaroni penguin colonies — over 2.5 million pairs on South Georgia alone — creating the densest seabird concentrations on Earth, where the hillsides above the beach are entirely covered with orange-crested penguins packed shoulder to shoulder in a living carpet of yellow and black that extends from the waterline to the skyline. The macaroni's extravagant golden-yellow crest — fanning outward from the centre of the forehead — gives it the most theatrical appearance of any penguin, and at colony density of 3,000 pairs per hectare the combined colour of millions of yellow crests creates a hillside that appears to glow orange from the approaching expedition ship. The noise and activity of a large macaroni colony at peak breeding is overwhelming — the combined calling of millions of birds creates a physical wall of sound, and the constant traffic of birds to and from the sea creates a flow of thousands of penguins moving past observers at close range in both directions simultaneously. South Georgia's extraordinary combined wildlife — king penguins, macaroni penguins, elephant seals, fur seals, wandering albatrosses, and light-mantled sooty albatrosses all within a day's walk — creates the most species-rich sub-Antarctic wildlife experience on Earth, and the macaroni colony is its most numerically overwhelming single component. The ice-capped peaks of South Georgia above the colony amplify the landscape drama considerably.
About this spectacle
Standing at the edge of a macaroni penguin rookery on South Georgia is a full-sensory assault unlike anything else on Earth. The hillsides above Bay of Isles rise in a living mosaic of black-and-white bodies topped with flashing golden-yellow crests — at colony densities of 3,000 pairs per hectare, the combined colour of millions of crests makes the entire slope appear to glow orange from the approaching ship. The noise arrives before the image does: a physical wall of sound produced by millions of simultaneously calling birds. On land, two rivers of penguins move in opposite directions simultaneously — one pressing uphill from the sea, one streaming down — parting calmly around any observer standing still. The air carries the sharp, ammonia-rich scent of a vast colony in full breeding activity. Above the colony, ice-capped peaks frame the scene. Within a day's walk, king penguins, elephant seals, fur seals, and wandering albatrosses add further layers to what is the most numerically and visually overwhelming wildlife experience in the sub-Antarctic.
When to go
Nov — Feb
Getting there
Nearest city: Stanley.
Booking options
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