
The Maldives are famous for their incredible beaches and luxury resorts with iconic over water villas – one reporter went to explore these bucket list favourites.
L'assistente di volo Amanda riassume il tutto mentre il nostro Virgin Atlantic Dreamliner atterra all'aeroporto internazionale di Velana, che occupa gran parte della piccola isola maldiviana di Hulhule.
âAll I can say is wow. This is Âsomewhere special,â she tells us, as we roll along a runway surrounded by the azure of the sunlit Indian Ocean.
Amanda isnât wrong. The Maldives are eye-poppingly magical as Iâm about to find out. The spell is cast the minute we take off again from neighbouring Noovilu seaplane terminal, soaring over postcard-perfect islands. The ride is exhilarating and the descent on to sea a total thrill while the co-pilot keeps it casual in flip-flops.
A sud-ovest dello Sri Lanka e dell'India, le Maldive sono un arcipelago di 1.192 isole coralline, di cui circa 200 abitate, e un rifugio consolidato per i viaggi di nozze.
La nostra prima tappa in questa avventura Virgin Holidays a due centri è Sun Siyam Iru Fushi, nell'atollo di Noonu sull'isola di Medhufushi, 45 minuti a nord della capitale Male.
The champagne is chilled and the welcome warm as we step off the resortâs own twin-propellor seaplane on to this 52-acre private island paradise, where we are greeted by singers and dancers in traditional dress.
Itâs very hot and Iâm humbled by their enthusiasm and energy which Âencapsulates the outstanding hospitality Sun Siyam resorts are renowned for. We take a buggy tour of the island which has a distinct boutique vibe despite being home to 221 villas, 15 restaurants and bars and the well-equipped Koamas Kids Club. Paradise, it transpires, is thankfully not exclusive to loved-up couples.
Un'anteprima di una lussuosa villa sulla spiaggia con tetto in paglia, fiancheggiata da alte palme e imponenti alberi di banyan, rivela un bagno all'aperto, una jacuzzi privata e una doccia a pioggia.
But the Maldives is renowned for its âoverwater bungalowsâ so Iâm beyond excited to open the door to my holiday home on one of the islandâs two bridges. Spacious, stylish and perfectly equipped with a vaulted wooden ceiling and a glass floor, there are even panoramic lagoon views from the king-sized bed and bathtub.
In a matter of minutes Iâm clambering down the ladder from my private sundeck and swimming in the sea, the grim winter weather back in Britain just a dim and distant memory.
Leaving this little piece of heaven on earth is a wrench but a sunset dolphin cruise beckons and it turns out to be an early holiday highlight. Sipping champagne and lounging on the deck of a dhoni, a traditional Maldivian fishing boat, at sunset, itâs tempting to think life doesnât get much better. Then the dolphins turn up and it does.
Hundreds surround the boat, the adults so close you can almost touch them, the young further afield still mastering their acrobatics. âTheyâre putting on a show,â says the captain and itâs a real performance. But dolphins are not the only wild show in town. Back on dry land, nurse sharks by the pier attract quite a crowd. Indian fruit bats dart through the trees and I spot eagle rays in the lagoon that laps my bungalow.
Iru Fushi ospita The Spa by Thalgo, pluripremiata e la spa più grande delle Maldive con un menu impressionante di oltre 140 trattamenti. Uno spazio tranquillo, immerso nel verde, dispone di 20 camere, ciascuna intitolata a un fiore e profumata di conseguenza.
My Maldivian spa experience starts with a coconut bath and ends with an oil massage â in between I succumb to 90 glorious minutes of stress-busting bliss as petite therapist Ayu magically makes my knots disappear, and I donât wince once. Itâs frankly the best massage Iâve had and my back is so grateful. The temptation to laze away the days on a lounger is overwhelming, but thereâs so much to do and it seems a shame to miss out.
Nature walks, cocktail making, cookery classes and snorkelling at Nemoâs coral garden surrounded by shoals of clown fish are just some of the options, meaning guests are never bored. As for dining, itâs hard to go wrong. The grilled octopus at Flavours French restaurant, with Indian Ocean views, is a showstopper while Asian eatery Bamboo serves up a mean tuna tartare.
And so I bid a reluctant farewell to Iru Fushi while looking forward to my next adventure at sister hotel Siyam World which is just a short speedboat ride away on the island of Dhigurah and a much more high-octane, action-packed affair. Within minutes of stepping off the boat Iâm on the back of a water scooter bouncing across the sea and clinging on for dear life to a driver Âdetermined to show off his moves.
Itâs an intoxicating start to a fun-filled stay at this large, luxury family-friendly playground, which is home to the first horse riding centre in the Maldives and its largest floating water park. There are tennis courts, football pitches and seemingly every water sport known to man. Want to seabob, e-surf, flyboard or fun tube? Not a problem.
Thereâs even a Âsuper-slippery slide on my private deck which sends you plunging straight into the tub-warm ocean. Itâs the best way to kickstart another idyllic Maldives day. I relax and find my inner Zen at a sunset yoga class on the beach, the colours of the sky kaleidoscopic, our sun salutation spiritual.
Visiting a local island is the ideal way to experience a more traditional Maldivian way of life so I take a 20-minute boat trip to nearby Kudafari, the childhood home of entrepreneur Ahmed Siyam Mohamed who founded Sun Siyam back in 1990. The pace is slow here, the people are welcoming â and itâs a reminder that the Maldives is a Muslim country because the champagne lifestyle Iâve grown accustomed to is confined to resorts.
The village shop is shut, the police station idle, but the beaches are every bit as beautiful as the ones we left behind. Weâre also a welcome distraction to excited pupils at the local school currently undergoing an expansion.
Islanders benefit from the Sun Siyam Cares corporate responsibility programme focused on education, health care and environmental Âconservation. At Siyam World I spend a worthwhile hour helping in some small way to counter the Maldivesâ environmental challenges guided by the resortâs own marine biologist Mariyam. We attach salvaged coral fragments to a frame which is then returned to the reef to regenerate.
Le cose migliori della vita, purtroppo, non sono sempre gratuite, ma valgono tutti i risparmi che devi fare. Perché una vacanza alle Maldive ti lascerà una vita di ricordi meravigliosi e il privilegio di incontrare alcune delle persone più ospitali, amichevoli e accoglienti della terra. È un prezzo, sicuramente, che vale la pena pagare.
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