Stargazing (La Peninsula): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 03:03, 3 June 2026
Stargazing La Península
The western tip of the peninsula faces open ocean with minimal light pollution — La Chocolatera, Punta Blanca, and the Ancón cliffs offer dark skies with the Pacific horizon.
Best Spots
| Spot | Sky quality | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| West end of Salinas (near La Chocolatera) | Good | Faces open Pacific; limited light from the Naval Base side |
| Punta Blanca | Excellent | Remote; almost no artificial light; faces open ocean; very dark by 9pm |
| Ancón cliff paths | Good | Elevated position; Pacific-facing; away from urban glow |
| Chipipe beach (Salinas) | Moderate | Bay side; some light pollution from Salinas and La Libertad |
Conditions
The Santa Elena Peninsula has very low rainfall — clear skies are the norm, especially during the dry season (June–November) when cloud cover is minimal. The ocean horizon is unobstructed to the west. The Milky Way is visible on dark nights away from urban light.
- Best season: June–November (dry season; clearest nights)
- Avoid: Full moon nights (reduces contrast); December–May (more cloud cover possible)
- Direction: Face west over the Pacific for the clearest dark sky
Notes
- The peninsula is on the Equator — both northern and southern celestial hemispheres are accessible
- Bring a red-light torch — white light destroys night adaptation
- Temperature drops to 18–20°C at the tip in dry season nights — bring a layer
See Also
- Outdoor Activities (La Peninsula) — full activities index