
115 granite islands in a turquoise Indian Ocean.
Что такое индивидуальный тур в Seychelles?
The Seychelles is best experienced across three islands: Mahé (Victoria market, coastal trails), Praslin (Vallée de Mai UNESCO forest, Anse Lazio at 7 a.m.), and La Digue (Anse Source d'Argent by bicycle at 7 a.m.). Inter-island ferries or Air Seychelles flights connect all three. Fly into Mahé International (SEZ). Best season: April–May and October–November (calm seas, clearest water).
The Seychelles archipelago — 115 islands in the western Indian Ocean, 1,500 km east of Tanzania — holds the world's most biologically remarkable island ecosystem. The Vallée de Mai on Praslin Island (UNESCO World Heritage) is a primeval palm forest containing the endemic coco de mer palm (Lodoicea maldivica, the world's largest seed at up to 25 kg, the largest-seeded plant on Earth), which grows only on Praslin and Curieuse islands. The coco de mer's female seed is explicitly shaped like the human female pelvis — the Victorian Seychelles governor sent a confiscated nut to Kew Gardens with a covering letter stating it was 'too obscene to exhibit'. The Vallée de Mai is a living Gondwana forest fragment, unchanged since before Africa separated from Antarctica 160 million years ago.
Anse Lazio on Praslin and Anse Source d'Argent on La Digue are consistently ranked among the world's most beautiful beaches. Anse Lazio — a 400-metre arc of white granite-boulder-framed sand with turquoise water — is best at 7 a.m. before the day boats arrive (the water turns from mirror-flat to choppy by 10 a.m. with the Indian Ocean swell). Anse Source d'Argent on La Digue is the most photographed beach in the Indian Ocean: giant pink granite boulders sculpted into archways and corridors on a white sand beach accessible only by bicycle (La Digue has no hire cars, only bicycles, Tue–Sat 7 a.m. is the optimal timing before the day boats from Praslin). The Seychelles' characteristic pink granite formation (the Praslin and La Digue beaches are the only pink-granite tropical beaches in the world — the granite is 750 million years old, a remnant of the Gondwana supercontinent).
The Seychelles marine protected areas — 30% of the territorial waters — protect one of the most intact coral reef systems in the Indian Ocean. The Aldabra Atoll (UNESCO World Heritage, one of the largest atolls in the world, 34,000 giant Aldabra tortoises — the largest population of giant tortoises in the world) is extremely remote (accessible only by chartered vessel or the Island Conservation Society research vessel). On the accessible islands: the St. Anne Marine National Park (10 minutes by boat from Victoria, Mahé), Félicité Island (private island resort with house reef), and Cousin Island (bird sanctuary, 10 minutes from Praslin, the highest density of nesting seabirds in the western Indian Ocean) are the snorkelling and wildlife anchors.
Рекомендуемые нами месяцы April–May, October–November. Помесячный обзор с заметками по планированию.
Тщательно отобранные моменты от наших местных операторов. Каждый тур включает часть из них — или что-то ещё лучше.






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The coco de mer (Lodoicea maldivica) is the world's largest seed-producing plant — the double coconut nut weighs up to 25 kg and takes 7 years to mature. The female nut's explicit shape (resembling the human female pelvis) caused considerable Victorian consternation. The coco de mer grows only on two islands in the world: Praslin and Curieuse in the Seychelles. The Vallée de Mai on Praslin (UNESCO World Heritage) is the primary protected forest of coco de mer palms; the trees can live for 800 years and produce nuts throughout their life. A natural coco de mer nut costs SCR 500–2,000 depending on size and whether it has a permit certificate (required for export — nuts without certificates cannot be taken out of the country).
April–May and October–November are the transition months between the northwest and southeast trade winds — the seas are calmest, the water is at its clearest (25–30 m visibility on reefs), and the beaches are accessible from multiple directions. The northwest monsoon (December–March) brings rain and heavy swells to the western sides of islands but leaves the eastern beaches calm. The southeast trade (May–September) brings strong winds that make the southern beaches rough but the northern beaches excellent. If you are staying on Mahé, the north and west beaches are protected from the southeast trade; on Praslin, Anse Lazio (northwest-facing) is calm in the northeast monsoon season.
Anse Source d'Argent on La Digue is consistently ranked among the world's top 3–5 beaches in major travel publications (Condé Nast, National Geographic), primarily for its combination of pink-orange Gondwana granite boulders sculpted into archways and corridors, white powdery sand, and shallow turquoise water. The beach is genuinely extraordinary in its visual uniqueness — the pink granite is found nowhere else in the tropical world (the granite is 750 million years old, a fragment of the original Gondwana supercontinent). The limitation is size: the beach sections are small between the boulder formations and it gets crowded after 9 a.m. when the ferry boats arrive from Praslin. Arriving at 7–7:30 a.m. gives 1–2 hours before the crowd.
The Seychelles is one of the more expensive destinations in the Indian Ocean — not at Maldives private-island prices, but significantly more than Bali or Thailand. Accommodation: guesthouses start at USD 80–120 per person per night; mid-range hotels USD 200–400; luxury resorts (Four Seasons, Six Senses, Fregate Island Private) USD 800–3,000. Inter-island ferries are affordable (Cat Cocos, SCR 150–400 per leg). The main cost reductions: self-catering accommodation (villas with kitchens are common), the Victoria market for local produce (far cheaper than restaurants), and bicycles over taxis on La Digue. A mid-range 10-day Seychelles visit (guesthouse + ferries + meals) costs approximately USD 3,000–4,000 per person.
Yes — Aldabra giant tortoises (Aldabrachelys gigantea, the world's largest tortoise species) are present on multiple accessible islands in the Seychelles. The largest population (34,000+ animals) is on Aldabra Atoll (remote, accessible by charter vessel). Accessible populations: Curieuse Island (150+ tortoises roaming free, 1-hour boat from Praslin), Bird Island (30+ tortoises in the resort grounds), the L'Union Estate on La Digue (enclosed tortoise pen adjacent to Anse Source d'Argent), and Denis Island. The tortoises at Curieuse are the most naturalistic setting — the animals roam the mangrove and beach areas of the uninhabited island and have no fence.
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