
Moai statues at the edge of the Pacific.
Özel tur — Easter Island?
Easter Island is best experienced with sunrise at Tongariki (5:30 a.m. arrival at the 15-moai ahu), the Rano Raraku quarry at 9 a.m. opening, and Anakena beach for the only palm-shaded ahu. Fly from Santiago, Chile (LAN, 5 hours) — no other international routes. The island needs 3–4 full days; hire a car or quad bike for site access.
Easter Island (Rapa Nui in the Polynesian language of its indigenous people) is the most remote inhabited island on Earth — 3,700 km from Chile's coast, 2,075 km from Pitcairn Island (the nearest inhabited land). Its 163 km² hold 1,000+ moai (monolithic carved human figures, most weighing 10–80 tonnes) and the archaeological evidence of a Polynesian civilisation that collapsed between 1400–1650 CE through a combination of deforestation, inter-clan conflict, and rat predation of the palm seeds that had covered the island. The Rapa Nui National Park (UNESCO World Heritage, covering 40% of the island) manages access to all archaeological sites with entry fees.
Tongariki — 15 moai on a single ahu (ceremonial platform) restored by Japanese crane operator Tadano in 1994–96 after a 1960 Chilean tsunami toppled them — provides the most dramatic moai grouping. Sunrise at Tongariki (the platform faces east) is the canonical Easter Island photograph: the moai silhouetted against the pink sky, then illuminated in golden morning light. Arrive at the site by 5:30 a.m. (the national park gate opens at 5:30 a.m. for sunrise access); the effect lasts 20–30 minutes as the sun climbs. The site is 20 km from Hanga Roa town; hire a car or join a tour the evening before.
Rano Raraku — the volcanic quarry where all moai were carved — holds 400 unfinished and abandoned moai at various stages of completion, embedded in the volcanic tuff. The largest unfinished moai (El Gigante, 21.6 metres, estimated weight 145–270 tonnes) was never moved; it provides the clearest understanding of the carving-and-transport problem that archaeologists have studied for a century. The most photographed moai (the ones appearing to 'just be heads' — they are actually full-bodied figures buried to their chins in volcanic debris) are at Rano Raraku, where 92 moai line the outer slope. The site opens at 9 a.m.; arrive as it opens for the first hour without tour groups.
Önerdiğimiz aylar October–April. Ayda aylık planlama notlarıyla genel bakış.
Yerel operatörlerimizin el seçimiyle belirlediği anlar. Her özel tur bunlardan bir seçki içeriyor — ya da daha iyisini bulursak onu.






İki başlangıç noktası — gerçek rotanız tamamen kişiye özel. Buradan inşa ediyoruz.
Three full days covers the main sites: Tongariki sunrise, Rano Raraku, Anakena, Orongo/Rano Kau, and the museum. Four days adds the secondary sites (Ahu Akivi, petroglyph trails, Tahai at sunset) and a day for weather backup at Tongariki. Five days is the comfortable maximum before site repetition; divers can extend with underwater activities. The flight from Santiago takes 5 hours each way — the minimum round-trip for a meaningful visit is 4 full days on the island (adding 2 travel days to the stay).
The Rapa Nui collapse between 1400–1650 CE involved multiple factors: deforestation (the palm trees that once covered the island were cut for moai transport and cleared for agriculture), soil degradation after forest loss, and the Polynesian rat (introduced by the first settlers) that ate palm seeds and prevented forest regeneration. The population peaked at 10,000–20,000 before declining to approximately 2,000 by the time Europeans arrived in 1722. The 'ecocide' framing (Jared Diamond's 2005 book Collapse) has been partially revised; recent research suggests European-introduced diseases and Peruvian slave raids (1862) caused more deaths than pre-European resource collapse.
The most supported hypothesis is a 'walking' technique using ropes and people — the moai were rocked from side to side in a walking motion along prepared roads. Experimental archaeology in 2012 by archaeologist Carl Lipo and National Geographic demonstrated that a 5-tonne replica moai could be walked by 18 people in a team using this method. The roads from Rano Raraku to the coastal ahu platforms still show the characteristic wear patterns of hundreds of moai moved in this manner. The moai were transported upright (head-first, as the walking motion suggests), not lying down as previously assumed.
The experience is unique — there is nothing comparable to walking among 1,000+ monolithic stone figures on a remote Pacific island where the civilisation that created them collapsed 400 years ago. The closest cultural analogue (Stonehenge, Angkor Wat) lacks both the scale and the isolation. The flight from Santiago is expensive (USD 600–1,200 return, LATAM monopoly on the route) and the island's accommodation and food costs are 30–40% above mainland Chile prices. If the combination of archaeological uniqueness and extreme Pacific isolation is compelling, the cost is justified. If Mesoamerican pyramids or Southeast Asian temple complexes are alternatives, the cost comparison favours those destinations.
No — touching the moai is prohibited under Rapa Nui National Park regulations and actively enforced. The preservation concern is real: skin oils accelerate erosion on volcanic tuff, and the moai have already been significantly damaged by weathering, acid rain, and past tourism without adequate protection. Photography is permitted at all sites; drone photography requires a CONAF permit (available at the park office). The museum's moai replica is touchable; the real moai are not.
Yapay zeka concierge'imizle konuşun — hayalinizdeki seyahati anlatmak için iki dakika yeterli.