Mayotte: The Blue, White and Green Archipelago

You hear it before you see it, a crystal-clear murmur rising in crescendo as the red earth path winds between towering bamboo toward the sea. A few more steps, and the path tilts. Down below, Soulou appears, a fairy-tale cove where turquoise waves kiss the sand. Overlooking the beach, a ten-meter cliff, veiled in greenery, lets a bridal veil slip from its summit. Under this delicate cascade, on this scorching November day in 2025, children splash about, laughing.

Soulou, on the northwest coast, is only a prelude. The mangrove labyrinth of Bouéni Bay, the Dziani Dzaha, a crater-lake nestled in a volcanic crater, the vast lagoon… Mayotte is full of wonders too often forgotten, the archipelago – Petite-Terre, Grande-Terre and a handful of islets – generally reduced to migration crises, security issues, or even meteorological crises (cyclone Chido ravaged it in late 2024). An injustice to be urgently repaired.

Amara Nambinga

Amara Nambinga

I write about tourism, culture, and emerging destinations with a Namibian perspective. Through my articles, I try to highlight the places, people, and travel stories that show how Africa and the wider world are changing.