Guide to reignite your love affair with desert islands, with picks from across the globe.
As far as you can go in Oz without falling off the map, the Torres
Strait Islands are Australia as it might have been if Europeans had
never arrived. Spilling north from the tip of Cape York, the 274 islands
in the Torres Strait preserve a unique tribal culture that bridges the
divide between Aboriginal Australia and Papua New Guinea. The Great
Barrier Reef is right on the doorstop and there are airstrips and hotels
on Thursday Island and Horn Island, but access to other islands is at
the discretion of local tribal councils.
The idyllic Yaeyama Islands are tucked away at the very southern tip
of the Japanese archipelago. Looking more like the Caribbean, the
islands of Iriomote, Taketomi and Ishigaki serve up generous portions of
sun, sea, sand and sushi. Ishigaki has the best of the beaches, while
Taketomi is famous for its traditional Ryukyuan houses and Iriomote is a
jungle playground with an open-air
(hot springs).
Most people have heard of Devil’s Island, but few would be able to
stick a pin on a map. The smallest of the three Îles du Salut, this
infamous former penal colony is separated from the coast of French
Guiana by 11km of treacherous, shark-infested waters. Steve McQueen
tried to escape the islands repeatedly in
,
but most modern visitors are willing castaways, lured here by waving
palms, chattering macaws and spooky ruins from the penal colony days.
It’s easy to see the appeal of tiny Ulleungdo. Midway between South
Korea and Japan, this rugged volcanic island is said to have no
pollution, no thieves and no snakes – in other words, this is perfect
hiking country. Ferries run daily from the mainland to the tiny port at
Dodong-ri, where trails climb to the rocky summit of Seonginbong Peak
(984m). If you want to really push the boat out, continue to the Dokdo
islands – a tiny collection of outcrops that are hotly disputed between
Japan and South Korea.
Panama probably isn’t the first place that comes to mind when you
think of the Caribbean, but this Central American nation has coral cays
to rival anything in the Caymans or the Virgin Islands. Run as an
autonomous province by the Kuna people, the San Blás Archipelago is a
crescent of 365 tiny islands basking in the warm waters of the southern
Caribbean. Forget luxury resorts – the only hotels are homestays in
village houses and dinner is whatever the fishermen bring home in their
canoes each evening.
If Taiwan is the
China, then the Penghu islands are the Taiwan.
Administered from Taipei, the 90 islands of the Penghu archipelago are –
within Taiwan at least – for their glorious scenery and ‘touching
nostalgia’, which translates to unspoiled traditional Taiwanese culture.
Away from the capital, Makung, this is a land of ox-carts, fish-traps,
stone-walled fields, basalt cliffs and ancient temples dedicated to the
sea goddess Matsu. If sun and sand are more your cup of , the beaches and windsurfing are pretty impressive too.
Forget
–
the sand-dusted islands that float off the coast of Honduras are the
real deal. In their heyday, the islands of Roatán, Utila and Guanaja
were home to 5000 cutthroats, brigands and buccaneers, including the
infamous Henry Morgan (aka Blackbeard). These days, the Bay Islands are
better known for their beaches, diving and laid-back tropical vibe. You
can turn the volume down ever further at the nearby Cayos Cochinos (Hog
Islands) – 13 languorous coral cays and one secluded resort in a sea of
brilliant blue.
Why would a landlocked African nation appear on a list of desert
islands? Thank Lake Victoria. The Ssese Islands tick all the right boxes
for an island paradise – golden beaches, whispering palm trees, exotic
flora and fauna – they just happen to be in the middle of Africa’s
largest lake. Most of the 84 islands in the Ssese group are undeveloped,
but a handful of resorts and beach camps grace the sands of Buggala,
Bukasa and Banda. Aside from basking in the sun, the main activities are
combing the jungle for exotic creatures and canoeing across the lake.
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