Thursday, January 9, 2020
Mozambique - 5 Reasons to Visit Now
Laurence Grigorov, who is director of a South African based residential property development firm, enjoys travelling around the world. Recently, Laurence Grigorov travelled to Mozambique, a country with amazing natural beauty, for a short stay.
1. Bewitching Beaches and Secluded Islands
If the endless wide tropical beaches of the mainland aren’t enough, head offshore. Private planes and helicopters whisk guests over glorious scenes to the glistening confetti of private islands that bejewel the aquamarine Indian Ocean. The archipelagos of the southern Bazaruto and northern Quirimbas are dazzling dots of milky swirls, where beaches spill into progressively deepening shades of emerald. Eco-luxury and boutique hotels offer stellar landscapes, while unpolluted dark skies come studded with starry constellations.
2. Marine Reserves
World-class snorkeling and diving are a given in the Quirimbas archipelago, the largest protected marine area in Africa. Mangroves, coastal forest, and thriving coral make it one large biodiversity hot spot teeming with marine- and land-based wildlife. See it up close through underwater goggles; over-water, while cruising on a dhow sailboat; or even from the skies. Cessna planes whir through eye-achingly sunny skies to expose a smattering of islets and shards of sand where photogenic models of land show off underwater coral skirts, decorated by pretty puffer fish and parrotfish.
3. True African Culture
Nowhere is the essence of unfettered African life more clearly visible than in Mozambique’s capital, Maputo. The Portuguese were lured here by rumors of pearls in the 17th century, when they founded the city, and it quickly turned trendy, cosmopolitan, and wealthy. Fast-forward several centuries to discover its faded Art Deco glory and golden era has-been charm.
A brutal 16-year civil war, though, which ended in the 1990s, claimed a million lives here, crippling the economy and destroying much architecture. Mozambique is still getting back on its feet, and Maputo is now lined by crumbling colonial antiquities. The legacy of the former shipping port lives on through ostentatious buildings with swirling balconies and outlandish statues, which now stand dilapidated.
4. Rising Star of Africa
Despite a war-ravaged past and unsettled present, Mozambique compensates travelers with their own private corner of paradise. Less developed than Indian Ocean counterparts Mauritius and Seychelles, Mozambique retains exoticism and purity that’s accessible to all. As tourism escalates, prices and development are likely to hike, so now’s the time to see Africa’s undiscovered jewel.
5. Africa’s Top Safari
The country’s flagship reserve, Gorongosa National Park, once attracted more visitors than South Africa and Zimbabwe combined. But the harshness of war left resources depleted. Animals are being restocked in a major restoration program that’s helping Mozambique regain its reputation as a game-viewing destination, with rapidly recovering numbers of hippos, lions, and elephants. It’s already an insider’s choice for off-the-beaten-track safaris.
Words & image courtesy of http://www.fodors.com/
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