North Island, Seychelles

North Island
Nickname: Ile du Nord
North Island
Geography
Location Seychelles
Coordinates 4°23′48″S 55°14′48″E / 4.39667°S 55.24667°E / -4.39667; 55.24667Coordinates: 4°23′48″S 55°14′48″E / 4.39667°S 55.24667°E / -4.39667; 55.24667
Archipelago Inner Islands, Seychelles
Adjacent bodies of water Indian Ocean
Total islands 1
Major islands
  • North Island    
Area 2.01 km2 (0.78 sq mi)
Length 2.1 km (1.3 mi)
Width 1.2 km (0.75 mi)
Coastline 6.66 km (4.138 mi)
Highest elevation 180 m (590 ft)
Highest point Grand Paloss
Administration
Group Inner Islands
Sub-Group Granitic Seychelles
Districts La Digue and Inner Islands
Island Group Silhouette Group
Largest settlement
North village
(population ~130)
Demographics
Demonym Creole
Population 152 (2014)
Pop. density 75.6 /km2 (195.8 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Creole, French, East Africans, Indians.
Additional information
Time zone
Official website www.seychelles.travel/en/discover/the-islands/
ISO Code = SC-15

North Island is a small granitic island (2.01 km²) in the Seychelles.

Geography

The island is one of the Seychelles' 42 inner islands. It is 5.8 km (3.6 miles) north of Silhouette Island, and 27 km (17 mi) north west of Mahé. The island has four beaches; East Beach, West Beach (or Grande Anse), Honeymoon Cove, and Dive Beach. The highest point of the island is 180 m.

History

North Island was the first Seychelles island to record a landing by seafarers. An expedition in 1609 by Captain Sharpeigh and the crew of the English East India Company vessel Ascension reported that the island had a large population of giant land tortoises.

From 1826 until the 1970s, North Island was owned by the Beaufond family from Réunion. During this time, the island had a plantation for growing fruits and spices, as well as producing guano, fish oil and copra. After the plantation was sold in the 1970s, the island fell into disuse, and was taken over by feral animals and alien species of weeds.[1]

In 1981, North Island was given to Marius Maier by his father. He intended to return the island to its former pristine state before human settlers arrived, including the removal of many unwanted animal and plant species, including pigs, rats, coconuts, casuarina, cows, Indian mynah birds, cats and a very intrusive weed called latana.

He re-introduced the Seychelles' natural flora & fauna, including giant tortoises, certain birds, and trees such as takamaka, badamier and the famous coco-de-mer palm. in 1982, Marius Maier and the villagers have established a turtle nest monitoring center.

In 1997, North Island was purchased for US$5 million by Wilderness Holdings Limited, an ecotourism company from South Africa. They have opened a private resort in 2003, aiming at the eco-tourism market, with 11 private villas.[2] The resort has developed the island and increased its population.[3]

In May 2011, it was the site for the royal honeymoon of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.[4]

Politics

The island is part of La Digue and Inner Islands district, it was part of Silhouette district until it was dissolved in 1977 following the decline in copra production on this group of islands.

Economics

Most of the population are employed in the tourism business. Accommodations reserved for the permanent staff are located near the island's center.

Facilities

The buildings of the island are either renovated coral buildings or were built from the removal of the unwanted trees on the island, during Marius Maier plan. The resort has 10 standard villas, and a special excluded (Villa North). A gym is in the village, a huge spa, library, restaurant. The resort also features a boutique, a dive center, a main pool, and a bar.[5][6][7][8][9]

Tourism

The island has many activities. mountain biking, scuba diving, kayaking and deep sea fishing. The resort offers a unique dining concept: the chef discusses guests' likes and dislikes upon arrival and bases available ingredients on this information. All food on North Island is either grown in the organic vegetable gardens, reared on the island, or caught fresh from the sea.

References

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