Tuesday 27 August 2019

NEW AIR LINK AND LUXURY HOTEL WILL TRANSFORM TOURISM ON TINY, REMOTE ST HELENA

NEW AIR LINK AND LUXURY HOTEL WILL TRANSFORM TOURISM ON TINY, REMOTE ST HELENA 

skift.com, 7th October 2017{3}
While it will still be pretty hard to get to (unless you live in Namibia or South Africa), St Helena is likely to see a significant increase in the number of tourists, especially from those keen to go to a place that not many other people have visited.
Jacob’s Ladder | Saint Helena Island Info | Read articles about St Helena (Older): Older articles about St Helena
One of the remotest islands in the world is about to enter the modern tourist age.
When the British exiled Napoleon to St Helena in 1815, it took the conquered emperor a full 10 weeks to reach the island. Two centuries later, it’s still a five-day trip by mail boat - assuming you happen to be starting from somewhere as close as Cape Town, South Africa.
But on Oct. 14, the tiny British overseas territory will get its first-ever scheduled flights. Two weeks later, St Helena’s first luxury hotel, a 30-room property in a trio of Georgian buildings, will open its doors.
Located about 1,200 miles off the western coast of Africa, St Helena is best known (for those who know it at all) as the place where Napoleon was banished after being defeated at the Battle of Waterloo. The house where he lived - complete with the original furnishings - is one of the island’s main tourist attractions.
But it’s not the only draw. The 47-square-mile tropical island offers mountain biking, sport fishing, and scuba diving in waters where visibility is up to 100 feet. St Helena is one of a handful of places in the world where humans can swim with massive (and passive) Whale Sharks. It’s home to a 185-year-old tortoise named Jonathan, the world’s longest straight staircase, and a double-hole golf course that players go around twice, trying not to hit any goats along the way.
Then there’s St Helena distillery, said to be the world’s most remote. Its specialty is Tungi (TOON-jee), a white spirit made from prickly pear and bottled in a bevelled glass flask shaped to evoke the island’s famous (-ish) staircase.
Because of the limited transportation options, only a couple of thousand tourists make it to the island each year. The second RMS St Helena, a combination cargo-passenger ship, makes the trip just a few times a month. And until now, the airport was able to accept only private flights.
The world’s most useless airport, as some have called it, cost 285 million British pounds [more than $400 million] and was meant to push St Helena toward economic self-sufficiency. A month before it opened in 2016, test flights revealed dangerous wind conditions, and commercial flights were put on hold. The airport has been taking only private and medical evacuation flights.
But now, South African airline Airlink will run weekly from Johannesburg to Windhoek, Namibia, and on to St Helena.
The Independent reported that Airlink won’t fill its Embraer jets to capacity. To keep the plane light enough to use less of the runway and avoid the spots with most dangerous winds, it will fill only 76 of the 99 seats. It’s hoping to bump that up to 87 in 2018.
Meanwhile, the new hotel by resort developer Mantis, which owns five-star safari lodges in Africa, Explora resorts in Chile, and other high-end properties, promises to be a game-changer. St Helena’s official tourism website lists just two B&Bs and a half-dozen hotels and guest houses, most of which have no websites.
As relatively speedy as the flights may be, this might actually be the perfect time to reserve a berth to St Helena. Not only is the island on its way to changes, but the mail ship will eventually be decommissioned. Book now, or permanently miss the boat.
Our Comment: This is a strange, un-focussed article - it announces the flights and then recommends coming by ship. It also has some notable errors: there already is a luxury hotel on the island (Farm Lodge); and goats are not loose on the golf course (though they may be tethered nearby). But on the Any publicity is good publicity theory…
The www.nzherald.co.nz on 9th October 2017 reported broadly the same article, but omitting the advice to come by ship.
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