Moyenne Island

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Moyenne Island.
Moyenne Island.
Mahe Island View.
Mahe Island View.

Moyenne Island is a small island (.089 km²) in the Ste Anne Marine National Park off the north coast of Mahé, Seychelles. Since the 1970s it has been a flora and fauna reserve. From 1915 until the 1970s, the island was abandoned until its purchase by Brendan Grimshaw, an English newspaper editor. Presently he is the only permanent resident of Moyenne and is responsible for returning the island to its former natural state.

Brendan Grimshaw purchased the island for GBP 10,000 in the 1960s and set about making the island habitable. He did this with the help of only one other man, Rene Antoine Lafortune. They operate the island as a nature reserve, charging visitors Eur 12 to come ashore, roam the island, dine at the "Jolly Roger" restaurant and relax on the beach. Apart from a wide variety of plant and bird life, the island is home to over 100 land tortoises. The eldest, "Desmond", being 76 years old according to Grimshaw. He named the tortoise after his godson.

Grimshaw is happy to talk about the island's potential as a hiding place of pirate treasure. There are rumours that over GBP 30m of treasure is buried there. He has made two major digs and found some evidence of man-made hiding places, but no gold or other treasure found as yet. There are two graves on the island which have been said to be those of pirates, although this cannot be confirmed.

While Grimshaw lives in a remote location, he is not deprived of the necessities of running water and electricity and he totes a mobile telephone in case of emergencies. The island is 4.5km away from the main island of Mahe.

Moyenne is one of several islands in the Ste. Anne Marine National Park; the others are:

  • Ste. Anne Island: 2.19 km² and has a large luxury resort
  • Cerf Island: 1.27 km² and has a small population
  • Round Island: 0.018 km² and a former leper colony
  • Long Island : 0.212 km²; site of a prison and quarantine area
  • Beacon Island: 5 acres and a nesting site for seabirds

Coordinates: 4°37′S, 55°30′E

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