Photography (Ruta del Spondylus)
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Dawn & dusk
Best light
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Year-round
Season
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No permits
Required
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West-facing coast
Sunset every night
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Overview
The Ruta del Spondylus is a photographer's route. The west-facing Pacific coast delivers a sunset every night of the year — and the subject matter ranges from dramatic cliffs and fishing boats to painted murals, cloud forest, and wildlife. The route has a photogenic diversity that takes most photographers by surprise.
The light is best in the golden hour before sunset (the coast faces west) and in the first hour after sunrise when the eastern light catches the hills and the fishing boats are coming in.
Best Locations
Las Nuñez — Murals
Las Nuñez is the street art capital of the route. Painted murals cover the sea wall and building facades — colourful, large-scale, and painted by local artists. Best photographed in soft morning or late afternoon light; midday sun creates harsh shadows on the painted surfaces.
La Rinconada — Cliffs & Seabirds
La Rinconada's headlands provide dramatic elevated compositions — cliffs, sea, and sky — with frigatebirds and pelicans as natural foreground subjects. The clifftop faces west; the best light for the cliff face itself is in the afternoon.
Ayangue — Bay & Marine Life
Ayangue bay at low tide, with the horseshoe shape reflected in calm water, is one of the most classically composed landscapes on the route. Dawn is the best time — the bay faces east and catches the first light. Underwater photography (via snorkel) of sea turtles and reef fish is possible with basic waterproof cameras or housings.
San José — Horses & Fishing Boats
San José at low tide in the late afternoon: horses on the wet sand, fishing boats beached in the foreground, the Pacific light coming in low from the west. One of the most genuinely photogenic beach scenes in Ecuador.
Montañita — Surf & Sunrise
The Montañita point break at sunrise, photographed from the headland, is a classic surf photography composition. Best on a moderate swell day with a light crowd in the lineup.
Ayampe — Cloud Forest Edge
Ayampe's forest-meets-Pacific setting, with howler monkeys audible and visible at the canopy edge at dawn, is unusual enough to warrant a dedicated morning.
Tips
- The coast faces west — all sunsets are direct ocean sunsets; plan for this
- Dawn light at Ayangue is exceptional — the bay faces east and the rocky headlands catch the first golden light
- At San José, arrive at the beach 1–2 hours before the tide turns to catch horses and boats simultaneously
- Ask before photographing people — particularly in fishing villages where the work is serious and people are busy; a respectful approach is always appreciated
- Rain during the wet season (December–April) creates dramatic clouds and rainbows over the Pacific
See Also
- Las Nuñez — murals and street art
- La Rinconada — clifftop landscapes
- San José — horses and fishing
- Ayangue — bay and marine life
- Portal:Ruta del Spondylus — route overview